F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop PCIe NVMe cards are compatible with 4th generation boards.

PCIe NVMe cards are compatible with 4th generation boards.

PCIe NVMe cards are compatible with 4th generation boards.

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Daantjeplays
Member
157
03-06-2016, 06:23 AM
#1
I own some budget NVMe cards connected to PCIe, assembled a system using old components for a child, like 4690/R7 265. It’s a bit of retro tech... The likelihood of booting from an NVMe card depends on compatibility—most modern systems don’t support it natively. You might need an SSD instead. Think about upgrading to SATA for better performance and reliability. Cheers!
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Daantjeplays
03-06-2016, 06:23 AM #1

I own some budget NVMe cards connected to PCIe, assembled a system using old components for a child, like 4690/R7 265. It’s a bit of retro tech... The likelihood of booting from an NVMe card depends on compatibility—most modern systems don’t support it natively. You might need an SSD instead. Think about upgrading to SATA for better performance and reliability. Cheers!

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DarkBoy__YT
Posting Freak
898
03-07-2016, 03:12 AM
#2
A practical approach exists. Modify the BIOS settings or try alternative methods such as booting via a USB drive using a program you recall, though you must connect it to an NVMe device.
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DarkBoy__YT
03-07-2016, 03:12 AM #2

A practical approach exists. Modify the BIOS settings or try alternative methods such as booting via a USB drive using a program you recall, though you must connect it to an NVMe device.

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mickblue2
Junior Member
44
03-18-2016, 11:22 AM
#3
SATA is the reason.
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mickblue2
03-18-2016, 11:22 AM #3

SATA is the reason.