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Fordítási probléma jelentése
Usually, one slot has PCI-e lanes from the CPU and the other gets it from the chipset
One may not work at x4 speeds, x2 or even x1, if something is connected to specific Sata ports. It could be that the board doesn't share any sata ports, not all do, so it won't be an issue. Just incase it does check the manual or look in the Bios. If you have other available sata ports you can just switch sata connections round so they are not in the ports being affecting the Nvme speeds.
M2_1
the Hyper M.2 Socket supports M Key type 2260/2280/22110 M.2 PCI Express module up to Gen4x4 (64 Gb/s) (with Matisse) or Gen3x4 (32 Gb/s) (with Renoir)
M2_3
M.2 Socket supports type 2242/2260/2280 M.2 SATA3 6.0 Gb/s module and M.2 PCI Express module up to Gen3 x2 (16 Gb/s).
* M2_3 and SATA3_5_6 share lanes. If either one of them is in use, the other one will be disabled.
So the answer seems to be no.
Unless you're encoding videos and things you likely won't notice a difference without running benchmarks anyway
also the only SSD's in the system will be the M.2's
GPU lanes come from the installed CPU.
NVME lanes come from the Motherboard Chipset.
To be honest, if all you doing is gaming, basic work stuff and browsing, multi-media, then you really don't NEED any NVME SSDs, at the very least one is enough. The rest, even if using M2 could just be slower SATA speed M2 model SSDs, they'll still be super fast for such a user.
NVME SSDs are more for content creators and video editors. Or folks who record tons of high quality videos and need a super fast dedicated drive for that.
because i got this board on sale for 80.00 and it does all the things i need it to do.
at any rate i installed both SSD's and 2nd drive runs at 1600mb/sec instead of 2400 so its good enough and boots games on both drives lightning fast
I suspect a bigger issue could be that some sata ports are disabled if the an nvme drive is installed.