I have a previously very stable system consisting of an i7-4790k, gigabyte z97x-gaming-5, 32gb ddr3, 10gbps Mellanox NIC, using integrated video now.
I pulled my 750ti to make room on the main PCIE bus for this Samsung 970 Evo Plus. I'm using it with an m2 x4 adapter here which is a "Lycom DT-120 M.2 PCIe to PCIe 3.0 x4 Adapter (Support M.2 PCIe 2280, 2260, 2242)" adapter.
The Nvme SSD, once the machine boots, works perfectly fine and I'm seeing 3200-3400 MB/s which is amazing.
The problem is that the presence of the card clearly destabilizes the startup process. The machine struggles to even get to the BIOS screen. This is from a cold boot or from a restart, the machine hangs on most attempts at a black screen. If it makes it to the BIOS, then the machine starts into Windows 10 just fine. And continues to work.
I haven't tried the nvme directly in the M.2 slot, mainly because it's performance limited at 10gbps, a mere fraction of the capability.
I upgraded the BIOS weeks ago to the latest version, that's been stable.
My first thoughts go to that $20 adapter card. I'm assuming that even though a newer product, that Samsung has done their due diligence testing --- all their other SSD-related(SATA) products work fine for me, in the same machine. There's really not much happening ON the card M.2 socket is wired into the PCIE interface.
What's the next step? Try it directly in the M.2 interface and eliminate the card? Are there better quality adapter cards?
Thanks
I pulled my 750ti to make room on the main PCIE bus for this Samsung 970 Evo Plus. I'm using it with an m2 x4 adapter here which is a "Lycom DT-120 M.2 PCIe to PCIe 3.0 x4 Adapter (Support M.2 PCIe 2280, 2260, 2242)" adapter.
The Nvme SSD, once the machine boots, works perfectly fine and I'm seeing 3200-3400 MB/s which is amazing.
The problem is that the presence of the card clearly destabilizes the startup process. The machine struggles to even get to the BIOS screen. This is from a cold boot or from a restart, the machine hangs on most attempts at a black screen. If it makes it to the BIOS, then the machine starts into Windows 10 just fine. And continues to work.
I haven't tried the nvme directly in the M.2 slot, mainly because it's performance limited at 10gbps, a mere fraction of the capability.
I upgraded the BIOS weeks ago to the latest version, that's been stable.
My first thoughts go to that $20 adapter card. I'm assuming that even though a newer product, that Samsung has done their due diligence testing --- all their other SSD-related(SATA) products work fine for me, in the same machine. There's really not much happening ON the card M.2 socket is wired into the PCIE interface.
What's the next step? Try it directly in the M.2 interface and eliminate the card? Are there better quality adapter cards?
Thanks