F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Comparison of motherboard and CPU PCIe lane configurations.

Comparison of motherboard and CPU PCIe lane configurations.

Comparison of motherboard and CPU PCIe lane configurations.

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Bryceypie
Junior Member
3
08-27-2016, 01:41 AM
#1
You have 64 PCIe lanes available. You plan to allocate all CPU lanes first before using any chipset lanes from the motherboard, except for the x4 connection. The distribution depends on your CPU and motherboard configurations—like assigning lanes based on CPU capacity or specific slots such as 8x GPU and 3x M.2. Adding more M.2 slots may require using motherboard lanes for additional connections.
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Bryceypie
08-27-2016, 01:41 AM #1

You have 64 PCIe lanes available. You plan to allocate all CPU lanes first before using any chipset lanes from the motherboard, except for the x4 connection. The distribution depends on your CPU and motherboard configurations—like assigning lanes based on CPU capacity or specific slots such as 8x GPU and 3x M.2. Adding more M.2 slots may require using motherboard lanes for additional connections.

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_LaggyAF_
Junior Member
10
08-27-2016, 07:20 AM
#2
The pathways are set by the motherboard. Channels usually connect either to the chipset or the CPU. For instance, most Ryzen boards feature the primary PCIe x16 port and the first M.2 port linked straight to the CPU, as Ryzen includes four dedicated NVMe lanes plus the x16 for graphics. Moreover, boards supporting SLI typically have a second X16 or X8 port attached to the CPU.
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_LaggyAF_
08-27-2016, 07:20 AM #2

The pathways are set by the motherboard. Channels usually connect either to the chipset or the CPU. For instance, most Ryzen boards feature the primary PCIe x16 port and the first M.2 port linked straight to the CPU, as Ryzen includes four dedicated NVMe lanes plus the x16 for graphics. Moreover, boards supporting SLI typically have a second X16 or X8 port attached to the CPU.

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Xion___14
Junior Member
4
08-27-2016, 11:00 AM
#3
If you have 88 CPU PCIe lanes, manufacturers usually prioritize using those lanes first for the motherboard. They check compatibility before allocating resources. If the board only supports CPUs with 64+ lanes, they’ll aim to utilize as many available lanes as possible. A CPU with 36 direct lanes could be considered important for GPU performance, but the board will still try to maximize PCIe usage based on specs. Yes, using a STVR4-compatible board should focus on leveraging all supported lanes efficiently.
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Xion___14
08-27-2016, 11:00 AM #3

If you have 88 CPU PCIe lanes, manufacturers usually prioritize using those lanes first for the motherboard. They check compatibility before allocating resources. If the board only supports CPUs with 64+ lanes, they’ll aim to utilize as many available lanes as possible. A CPU with 36 direct lanes could be considered important for GPU performance, but the board will still try to maximize PCIe usage based on specs. Yes, using a STVR4-compatible board should focus on leveraging all supported lanes efficiently.

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Skywonder216
Member
171
08-28-2016, 08:47 AM
#4
The process typically prioritizes utilizing all the PCI-E lanes available from the CPU first. If you're considering an AMD ThreadRipper 3950X with an ASUS ROG Zenith Extreme board, check the motherboard specs and consult the user manual—it provides detailed information on PCI-E lane allocation. Online resources are now accessible, so you can often find the manual without purchasing the device. A clear illustration comes from Intel's Extreme lineup (such as X99 or X299). For instance, with an i7-5820K or i7-6800K running on an LGA 2011-v3 CPU, lower-end models had 28 lanes while higher-end ones offered 40. Both configurations shared the same chipset and socket, with lane distribution spread across multiple slots.
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Skywonder216
08-28-2016, 08:47 AM #4

The process typically prioritizes utilizing all the PCI-E lanes available from the CPU first. If you're considering an AMD ThreadRipper 3950X with an ASUS ROG Zenith Extreme board, check the motherboard specs and consult the user manual—it provides detailed information on PCI-E lane allocation. Online resources are now accessible, so you can often find the manual without purchasing the device. A clear illustration comes from Intel's Extreme lineup (such as X99 or X299). For instance, with an i7-5820K or i7-6800K running on an LGA 2011-v3 CPU, lower-end models had 28 lanes while higher-end ones offered 40. Both configurations shared the same chipset and socket, with lane distribution spread across multiple slots.

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vanessa6374
Junior Member
36
08-28-2016, 09:04 AM
#5
Hello! I understand your ASUS X99 Deluxe with an Intel i7 5930K. Could you confirm if your CPU is in lane 40 or 28? Thanks for sharing, Raven!
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vanessa6374
08-28-2016, 09:04 AM #5

Hello! I understand your ASUS X99 Deluxe with an Intel i7 5930K. Could you confirm if your CPU is in lane 40 or 28? Thanks for sharing, Raven!