nice on the boot guide, made a copy myself. Shows how to at least navigate the bios to get things active/recognized.
Considering going w10/64. I will have to get a license either way, so........
U cannot use the SATAe port with an adapter? This should give you x4????
Also a pcie x4 expansion slot, does that board have one?
What someone needs to make is an adapter that fits the x16 slot, but not 16 lanes. x16 or x1 seems the only existing pci slots now. Sadly NVMe is not backward compatible. Use of it means latest chipsets.
I think its only the m.2 port that's not 32GB/s capable with your particular board. You also could upgrade the mobo??? migrate all the existing stuff to it.
I'll bet it still runs nice tho. Do you get go response from w7?
I made my build choices. Waiting for stocks to be replenished. Seems others think like moi.
The SATAe port cannot be used due to the switch that Gigabyte installed on these 2 lanes ahead of the X99 chipset (switch will enable only 1 device at a time on these 2 dedicated PCI-E 2.0 lanes...if M.2 slot is populated you lose the rest, SATAe port is populated you lose the rest, either SATA4 or SATA5 or both SATA4,5 are populated you lose the rest). Look at the Gigabyte mobo block diagram for my mobo and you'll see this..............
This mobo is a microATX design.....only 3 PCI-E 3.0 x16 CPU-dedicated and 1 PCI-E 2.0 x1 X99 dedicated slot so no PCI-E 3.0 x4 physical slot onboard.
I can still get this Samsung 950 Pro 512Gb NVMe PCI-E SSD up to rated speeds but I will have to put it on a PCI-E-to-M.2 NVMe-compliant adapter card and run it on my spare 2nd PCI-E 3.0 x16 slot (got a PCI-E-to-USB 3.1 adapter card installed in the 3rd PCI-E 3.0 x16 slot and Sapphire R9 Fury X vid card in 1st PCI-E 3.0 x16 slot). These 3 PCI-E 3.0 x16 slots by-pass the X99 chipset, run direct to the Intel LGA 2011v.3 socket and are set by the on CPU-die DMA\PCI-E\mem access controller which IS PCI-E 3.0 spec compliant and WILL set the full 32Gbps bandwidth thru it for the NVMe SSD and since the OS was installed on a UEFI partitioned drive w\ Windows EFI Bootloader and the UEFI BIOS EFI bootloader will also find the NVMe SSD regardless of whether it is mounted so no issue.
It is these dedicated lanes that can allow a NVMe SSD to run on older mobos.......as long as the mobo has PCI-E 3.0 spec tracing (8GT\s), an Intel Ivy-Bridge CPU (these CPU's have full PCI-E 3.0 spec DMA\PCI-E\mem access controllers on die), an available PCI-E 3.0 x4, x8 or x16 dedicated slot that goes direct to the CPU socket and a UEFI BIOS upgrade available that supports NVME.
At 1 time Asus put out a petition to users to see which older platform (Asus X79 or Z87 mobos which both were built w\ PCI-E 3.0 spec 8GT\s lane tracing) users wanted Asus to provide an upgrade UEFI BIOS to bring NVMe SSD support to (I participated in it) and the X79 platform was the runaway winner in the survey but it was taking Asus too long to develop it for my mobo (and I also had broke the locking clip off on the 1st PCI-E x16 slot that secured the back end of my vid card in the slot....all still worked w\o it but this bothered me and I couldn't find ANY replacement Genes for less that $400.00 regardless of condition) so I moved on to this Gigabyte X99M Gaming 5 mobo to fix the slot clip issue, get NVMe M.2 support along w\ a pedestrian CPU upgrade and DDR4 mem....otherwise I would've still been on my ole trusty Asus Rampage IV X79 Gene ROC mobo\Intel I7 4820K IB-E CPU platform as it was still far more than powerful enough to handle games w\ ease and running a NVMe AIC PCI-E SSD.............
I bought this particular Gigabyte X99 mobo as Gigabyte was the ONLY manuf that made a X99 mobo in microATX factor....Asus stopped after the X79....................
Yes it does and yes sir, Win 7 performs very fine now.........................
Nice build list.............you'll be in heaven once all together.
Amazon has the U.2 adapters that support x4 for M.2 cards. Some have mounting solutions (drive shells like) while others do not. I thought the ASUS X99 Strix board is supposed to give straight up M.2 x4 speeds, but I will have to double check to be sure.
I don't think it is really 32GB/s but 32Gb/s? Yeah, bit and not Byte.
https://www.asus.com/us/Motherboard-Accessories/HYPER_M2_X4_MINI_CARD/
Thanks for the link, Chalenge!
I'm definitely gonna go there.........but that new Plextor M8Pe AIC NVMe 512Gb PCI-E SSD is trying.....to.......seduce me.......must resist.............