F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Intel's 12th generation processors feature PCIe lanes designed for enhanced connectivity and performance.

Intel's 12th generation processors feature PCIe lanes designed for enhanced connectivity and performance.

Intel's 12th generation processors feature PCIe lanes designed for enhanced connectivity and performance.

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chase2694
Member
127
02-05-2016, 05:43 AM
#1
The 12th gen Intel setup features 20 lanes overall, combining 16x5.0 lanes and 4x4.0 lanes. The X8 DMI 4.0 connects CPU to motherboard, adding extra lanes. Placing an NVMe drive in the CPU M2 slot would utilize those lanes, leaving only 12 for the chipset and PCIe. The X8 DMI 4.0 lanes don’t reduce chipset PCIe capacity—they simply expand the CPU’s connection options.
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chase2694
02-05-2016, 05:43 AM #1

The 12th gen Intel setup features 20 lanes overall, combining 16x5.0 lanes and 4x4.0 lanes. The X8 DMI 4.0 connects CPU to motherboard, adding extra lanes. Placing an NVMe drive in the CPU M2 slot would utilize those lanes, leaving only 12 for the chipset and PCIe. The X8 DMI 4.0 lanes don’t reduce chipset PCIe capacity—they simply expand the CPU’s connection options.

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DevilDoggy657
Senior Member
530
02-06-2016, 11:58 PM
#2
Consider it in terms of practical capacity—Alder Lake offers around 28 PCIe lanes, delivering roughly 20 to the user and 8 to the chipset. You can pair an M.2 with its full x4 bandwidth and a GPU with its full x16 lanes, while the chipset retains its full 8 lanes. This setup mirrors AMD CPUs that provide 24 PCIe lanes, allocating 4 for the chipset and the rest for user access. It makes sense to describe its PCIe configuration as 20 plus 8 lanes.
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DevilDoggy657
02-06-2016, 11:58 PM #2

Consider it in terms of practical capacity—Alder Lake offers around 28 PCIe lanes, delivering roughly 20 to the user and 8 to the chipset. You can pair an M.2 with its full x4 bandwidth and a GPU with its full x16 lanes, while the chipset retains its full 8 lanes. This setup mirrors AMD CPUs that provide 24 PCIe lanes, allocating 4 for the chipset and the rest for user access. It makes sense to describe its PCIe configuration as 20 plus 8 lanes.

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Zephyrinius
Member
173
02-07-2016, 01:33 AM
#3
For real results, check the motherboard manual—it explains all the possible setups.
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Zephyrinius
02-07-2016, 01:33 AM #3

For real results, check the motherboard manual—it explains all the possible setups.

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sifumind
Member
137
02-10-2016, 12:53 AM
#4
It clarified my question well—the additional eight lanes exist because they aren't reserved for the chipset. Thank you for the explanation.
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sifumind
02-10-2016, 12:53 AM #4

It clarified my question well—the additional eight lanes exist because they aren't reserved for the chipset. Thank you for the explanation.

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SergiuSG
Member
52
02-10-2016, 05:16 AM
#5
If you're considering an x16 PCIe 5.0 graphics card, it means you'd need four M.2 drives, each requiring eight lanes. This setup is uncommon because motherboards and CPUs are designed to support only a single drive at a time.
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SergiuSG
02-10-2016, 05:16 AM #5

If you're considering an x16 PCIe 5.0 graphics card, it means you'd need four M.2 drives, each requiring eight lanes. This setup is uncommon because motherboards and CPUs are designed to support only a single drive at a time.

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Cefreak113
Senior Member
484
02-11-2016, 08:18 AM
#6
Typically one NVMe device draws power from the CPU, while the remaining ones rely on the chipset.
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Cefreak113
02-11-2016, 08:18 AM #6

Typically one NVMe device draws power from the CPU, while the remaining ones rely on the chipset.