Explanation of NVME shared bandwidth alongside SATA ports.
Explanation of NVME shared bandwidth alongside SATA ports.
Hello everyone, I'm looking for more details about the motherboard manual regarding NVMe shared bandwidth with SATA ports. Specifically, I need to know how PCIe x4 mode affects SATA6G_1&2 when using M.2_2 in PCle x4 mode. Understood. If I switch M.2_2 to PCIe x2 instead, what maximum speeds should NVMe achieve with a GEN 3 drive (3500mb/s)? Also, what does the SATA table on page 1 show? Any differences in speeds? Thanks.
Half the lanes correspond to reduced speed. M.2 drives support more than just NVMe (PCIe); they can also use SATA. Inserting a SATA M.2 drive keeps both SATA connections active.
When operating in PCIe x2 configuration, performance is capped at 1,000 MB/s. SATA delivers a maximum of roughly 700 MB/s. This was the standard before NVMe. Remember that M.2 refers to a physical design (the compact drive). It can adhere to SATA or NVMe specifications. Additionally, the throughput will be divided between M.2_2 and the first two SATA connections. If you set M.2_2 to 500 MB/s, only 500 MB/s remains for the other ports.
For more details, this setup features SATA data on the left and SATA power on the right. The connection is an M.2 interface: NVMe offers higher speed compared to SATA. M.2 SATA still adheres to SATA performance limits. mSATA is largely obsolete in consumer devices.
They are readily available in business settings. Finding them is uncommon and not typically found in everyday consumer goods, as I suggested in my earlier comment.