F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Are you asking if your Mobo device is compatible with NVMe SSDs?

Are you asking if your Mobo device is compatible with NVMe SSDs?

Are you asking if your Mobo device is compatible with NVMe SSDs?

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Animegirl34
Junior Member
46
05-29-2016, 01:05 PM
#1
Hey there, newcomer! I saw your question while looking into my topic, and it seems you're trying to figure out how your motherboard handles NVMe SSDs. The PCIe lanes can be a bit tricky for you. According to the manual, your board has an M.2 slot plus several PCIe connections—specifically one 3.0 x 16 lane and two 2.0 x 1 lanes. You mentioned thinking M.2 slots have four lanes, but it looks like they’re separate from those other PCIe ports. If you want to use an SSD via the M.2 slot, it should work with just that lane, not needing any of the other slots. The manual also says it can support up to 20 Gb/s in PCIe mode. Regarding NVMe speeds over 3000 Mb/s—your system might be able to handle them if it meets those requirements. I’ve attached the relevant part of the manual for your reference. Let me know if you need more clarification!
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Animegirl34
05-29-2016, 01:05 PM #1

Hey there, newcomer! I saw your question while looking into my topic, and it seems you're trying to figure out how your motherboard handles NVMe SSDs. The PCIe lanes can be a bit tricky for you. According to the manual, your board has an M.2 slot plus several PCIe connections—specifically one 3.0 x 16 lane and two 2.0 x 1 lanes. You mentioned thinking M.2 slots have four lanes, but it looks like they’re separate from those other PCIe ports. If you want to use an SSD via the M.2 slot, it should work with just that lane, not needing any of the other slots. The manual also says it can support up to 20 Gb/s in PCIe mode. Regarding NVMe speeds over 3000 Mb/s—your system might be able to handle them if it meets those requirements. I’ve attached the relevant part of the manual for your reference. Let me know if you need more clarification!

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Ekuliml
Junior Member
43
06-17-2016, 11:23 PM
#2
It appears the device supports M.2 slots in both PCIe and SATA configurations.
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Ekuliml
06-17-2016, 11:23 PM #2

It appears the device supports M.2 slots in both PCIe and SATA configurations.

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clubnci
Member
57
06-29-2016, 01:19 PM
#3
20 gbps equals precisely 2500 MBps. That means speeds above 3000 MBps won’t appear unless the label is incorrect. The PCIe X4 setup has a practical cap around 3940 MBps, just under 32 gbps. If the motherboard advertises 20 gbps, it likely doesn’t match the full X4 rate.
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clubnci
06-29-2016, 01:19 PM #3

20 gbps equals precisely 2500 MBps. That means speeds above 3000 MBps won’t appear unless the label is incorrect. The PCIe X4 setup has a practical cap around 3940 MBps, just under 32 gbps. If the motherboard advertises 20 gbps, it likely doesn’t match the full X4 rate.

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CRAZYMAN4590
Member
164
07-05-2016, 07:04 AM
#4
Hey team. @Light-Yagami your response was really thoughtful. I have a couple more points: If I install an NVMe SSD with around 3000Mbps read speed, would you think it would simply reach a cap of about 2500Mbps due to the motherboard's limits? Wouldn't that mean any higher performance from the SSD wouldn't be utilized? Regarding your earlier question—does the M.2 slot provide its own PCIe lanes or would the SSD have to use the older 3.0 x 16 port? Thanks again!
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CRAZYMAN4590
07-05-2016, 07:04 AM #4

Hey team. @Light-Yagami your response was really thoughtful. I have a couple more points: If I install an NVMe SSD with around 3000Mbps read speed, would you think it would simply reach a cap of about 2500Mbps due to the motherboard's limits? Wouldn't that mean any higher performance from the SSD wouldn't be utilized? Regarding your earlier question—does the M.2 slot provide its own PCIe lanes or would the SSD have to use the older 3.0 x 16 port? Thanks again!

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_CookieMarsh_
Junior Member
29
07-05-2016, 07:39 AM
#5
PCIe 16x slot at the beginning of the stack includes dedicated connections for the CPU. Storage channels are similarly reserved for the CPU and should remain isolated unless specified (varies by board). As you're aware, most consumer CPUs accommodate 20 PCIe lanes—16 for graphics cards and 4 for NVMe drives. If your motherboard supports more than one NVMe slot, bandwidth is often split and reduces when both are used simultaneously. You won’t face bandwidth conflicts as long as the CPU maintains its full 20 lanes. Expect speeds in the range of 2200-2400 MBps (theoretical values aren't realistic; 2500 MBps seems too high). As long as the CPU has enough lanes, performance should be smooth. Thank you for your feedback—I aim to share accurate details and respect users' analytical abilities.
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_CookieMarsh_
07-05-2016, 07:39 AM #5

PCIe 16x slot at the beginning of the stack includes dedicated connections for the CPU. Storage channels are similarly reserved for the CPU and should remain isolated unless specified (varies by board). As you're aware, most consumer CPUs accommodate 20 PCIe lanes—16 for graphics cards and 4 for NVMe drives. If your motherboard supports more than one NVMe slot, bandwidth is often split and reduces when both are used simultaneously. You won’t face bandwidth conflicts as long as the CPU maintains its full 20 lanes. Expect speeds in the range of 2200-2400 MBps (theoretical values aren't realistic; 2500 MBps seems too high). As long as the CPU has enough lanes, performance should be smooth. Thank you for your feedback—I aim to share accurate details and respect users' analytical abilities.

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IsseiKun
Junior Member
12
07-05-2016, 01:34 PM
#6
The response acknowledges your concerns and clarifies the situation. The processor you mentioned, the Celeron G4600, is indeed limited to 16 lanes, which may affect performance depending on your use case. It’s good that it handles single-threading well, but this constraint could influence overall system capabilities. Your question about GPU integration is also relevant—integrated graphics can impact how effectively you utilize the available lanes. Let me know if you’d like more details!
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IsseiKun
07-05-2016, 01:34 PM #6

The response acknowledges your concerns and clarifies the situation. The processor you mentioned, the Celeron G4600, is indeed limited to 16 lanes, which may affect performance depending on your use case. It’s good that it handles single-threading well, but this constraint could influence overall system capabilities. Your question about GPU integration is also relevant—integrated graphics can impact how effectively you utilize the available lanes. Let me know if you’d like more details!

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Ript_Inferno
Member
104
07-05-2016, 02:06 PM
#7
The NVMe M.2 port draws its speed from the H110 chipset. Similar to other 100-series Intel boards, it operates at PCI-E 2.0, not the newer 3.0 or 4.0 standards. Your maximum throughput is capped at 20 Gb/s (about 2500 MB/s) due to this limitation. Even with a future PCI-E 4.0 NVMe drive capable of higher speeds, you're still restricted to 2500 MB/s. The 20 lanes are specific to AMD processors, offering 16 lanes for GPUs and 4 for storage. Intel keeps mainstream designs at 16 PCI-E lanes, reserving dedicated lanes for X16 or X8 slots meant for GPUs. For instance, with an 8th/9th Gen or 10th Gen Intel processor, the NVMe slots rely on the Z390/Z490 chipset, which provides PCI-E 3.0 lanes. ASUS PRIME Z490-A
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Ript_Inferno
07-05-2016, 02:06 PM #7

The NVMe M.2 port draws its speed from the H110 chipset. Similar to other 100-series Intel boards, it operates at PCI-E 2.0, not the newer 3.0 or 4.0 standards. Your maximum throughput is capped at 20 Gb/s (about 2500 MB/s) due to this limitation. Even with a future PCI-E 4.0 NVMe drive capable of higher speeds, you're still restricted to 2500 MB/s. The 20 lanes are specific to AMD processors, offering 16 lanes for GPUs and 4 for storage. Intel keeps mainstream designs at 16 PCI-E lanes, reserving dedicated lanes for X16 or X8 slots meant for GPUs. For instance, with an 8th/9th Gen or 10th Gen Intel processor, the NVMe slots rely on the Z390/Z490 chipset, which provides PCI-E 3.0 lanes. ASUS PRIME Z490-A

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BlueEnder666
Junior Member
17
07-05-2016, 02:16 PM
#8
Thanks for the update, I'm glad to hear the 20 lanes are reserved for AMD only! It seems like you meant to say that earlier. In short, considering my setup with integrated graphics and not a dedicated GPU (though it's unclear if that matters), will my M.2 NVME card work with my Celeron G4600 CPU? I'd appreciate your thoughts on whether I can achieve the 2500 read speeds using this configuration.
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BlueEnder666
07-05-2016, 02:16 PM #8

Thanks for the update, I'm glad to hear the 20 lanes are reserved for AMD only! It seems like you meant to say that earlier. In short, considering my setup with integrated graphics and not a dedicated GPU (though it's unclear if that matters), will my M.2 NVME card work with my Celeron G4600 CPU? I'd appreciate your thoughts on whether I can achieve the 2500 read speeds using this configuration.

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ketman34
Posting Freak
834
07-05-2016, 08:02 PM
#9
The G4600 works well with this motherboard. The CPU offers its own PCIe 3.0 with 16 lanes to the top PCI-E 3.0 X16 port, and it doesn’t interfere with the NVMe M.2 slot. Still, the H110 chip beneath the heatsink limits speeds to around 2500 MB/s.
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ketman34
07-05-2016, 08:02 PM #9

The G4600 works well with this motherboard. The CPU offers its own PCIe 3.0 with 16 lanes to the top PCI-E 3.0 X16 port, and it doesn’t interfere with the NVMe M.2 slot. Still, the H110 chip beneath the heatsink limits speeds to around 2500 MB/s.