F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop P8P67 Motherboard and adapter fail to identify Samsung NVME 970 EVO device

P8P67 Motherboard and adapter fail to identify Samsung NVME 970 EVO device

P8P67 Motherboard and adapter fail to identify Samsung NVME 970 EVO device

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DeacX
Member
68
10-09-2016, 10:09 PM
#1
I need assistance with my old Sandy Bridge P8P67 for music production. I want to connect Windows 10 to access my Samsung Evo 970 NVMe SSD I recently bought. The card is plugged into the PCIE adapter, which has a brown slot labeled PCIE16x. I have a graphics card (GTX650ti) in the first PCIe slot and a sound card in the first SATA slot. The adapter appears to be working, but when checking in Windows 10, BIOS, and Linux, nothing shows up about the NVMe drive. Here’s the link to the adapter: https://www.glotrends-store.com/glotrend...p0020.html The Asus P8P67 seems to be running the latest firmware (3602), but I haven’t found it in Windows Device Manager or Computer Management. I’ve seen modified versions of the P8P67, but I can’t load them. I only need the drive for quick sample loading from music libraries, not for booting Windows.
D
DeacX
10-09-2016, 10:09 PM #1

I need assistance with my old Sandy Bridge P8P67 for music production. I want to connect Windows 10 to access my Samsung Evo 970 NVMe SSD I recently bought. The card is plugged into the PCIE adapter, which has a brown slot labeled PCIE16x. I have a graphics card (GTX650ti) in the first PCIe slot and a sound card in the first SATA slot. The adapter appears to be working, but when checking in Windows 10, BIOS, and Linux, nothing shows up about the NVMe drive. Here’s the link to the adapter: https://www.glotrends-store.com/glotrend...p0020.html The Asus P8P67 seems to be running the latest firmware (3602), but I haven’t found it in Windows Device Manager or Computer Management. I’ve seen modified versions of the P8P67, but I can’t load them. I only need the drive for quick sample loading from music libraries, not for booting Windows.

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xFqtal_
Senior Member
670
10-13-2016, 09:17 PM
#2
It seems the motherboard isn't compatible with NVMe standards, so you'd need a SATA-based storage device instead.
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xFqtal_
10-13-2016, 09:17 PM #2

It seems the motherboard isn't compatible with NVMe standards, so you'd need a SATA-based storage device instead.

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_Scode
Junior Member
36
10-14-2016, 12:59 AM
#3
You're right, the issue is more about compatibility than a flaw in the PCIE adapter itself.
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_Scode
10-14-2016, 12:59 AM #3

You're right, the issue is more about compatibility than a flaw in the PCIE adapter itself.

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FoxayFella
Member
163
10-14-2016, 07:19 AM
#4
This board lacks a UEFI BIOS setup. It might be unfeasible to make it function properly. You can attempt the process, but results could be limited if the drive isn't recognized. https://www.win-raid.com/t2375f50-Guide-...ethod.html If it fails, you're done. Best of luck. https://www.win-raid.com/t3552f44-OFFER-...e-mod.html
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FoxayFella
10-14-2016, 07:19 AM #4

This board lacks a UEFI BIOS setup. It might be unfeasible to make it function properly. You can attempt the process, but results could be limited if the drive isn't recognized. https://www.win-raid.com/t2375f50-Guide-...ethod.html If it fails, you're done. Best of luck. https://www.win-raid.com/t3552f44-OFFER-...e-mod.html

M
MilckyDreams_
Member
234
10-14-2016, 09:46 AM
#5
Visit the official site for detailed instructions on updating your ASUS Z and P Intel ME motherboards.
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MilckyDreams_
10-14-2016, 09:46 AM #5

Visit the official site for detailed instructions on updating your ASUS Z and P Intel ME motherboards.

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xBryanG_
Member
52
10-14-2016, 10:09 AM
#6
The black/brown slot on the P8P67 operates at PCI-E X4 2.0 speed, originating from the P67 chipset. It measures X16 physically but delivers X4 bandwidth. As noted by @Falkentyne, this could pose a challenge with non-UEFI BIOS support.
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xBryanG_
10-14-2016, 10:09 AM #6

The black/brown slot on the P8P67 operates at PCI-E X4 2.0 speed, originating from the P67 chipset. It measures X16 physically but delivers X4 bandwidth. As noted by @Falkentyne, this could pose a challenge with non-UEFI BIOS support.