Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
TheFamilyMan

NVMe PCIe x4 Drive in a Z87 mobo running Win7

Recommended Posts

I've started down the road on this SSD upgrade project: https://www.overclock.net/forum/355-ssd/1718404-nvme-pcie-x4-drive-z87-running-win7.html

I'm going into this with my eyes wide open:  trading a really tiny bit of graphics performance for blistering fast SSD performance (worth it!).

The drive is taking seeming forever to arrive.  I got the Win7 hotfixes installed and a modded bios ready to flash my mobo.  I won't flash until I see that Win7 works with the drive in my mobo; the flash is only needed to make the drive bootable.  I'll post an update when it all comes together.

Edited by TheFamilyMan

Rod O.

i7 10700k @5.0 HT on|Asus Maximus XII Hero|G.Skill 2x16GB DDR4 4000 cas 16|evga RTX 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra|Noctua NH-D15S|Thermaltake GF1 850W PSU|WD Black SN750 M.2 1TB SSD (x2)|Plextor M9Pe .5TB NVMe PCIe x4 SSD (MSFS dedicated)IFractal Design Focus G Case

Win 10 Pro 64|HP Reverb G2 revised VR HMD|Asus 25" IPS 2K 60Hz monitor|Saitek X52 Pro & Peddles|TIR 5 (now retired)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I didnt have any problems with the Z97 booting to an M.2 drive, but all I did was image the old SSD to the new SSD. Despite the specs being nearly identical (I think 100mb/s difference), I saw a good little boost in windows loading. So clearly SATA was a slight bottleneck vs. M2 drives.

The PCI-e X4 drive is faster yet, enjoy, they really scream!

Edited by turboken

Flight Simulator's - Prepar3d V5.3/MSFS2020 | Operating System - WIN 10 | Main Board - GIGABYTE Z390 AORUS PRO | CPU - INTEL 9700k (5.0Ghz) | RAM - VIPER 32Gig DDR4 4000Mhz | Video Card - EVGA RTX3090 FTW3 ULTRA Monitor - DELL 38" ULTRAWIDE | Case - CORSAIR 750D FULL TOWER | CPU Cooling - CORSAIR H150i Elite Push/Pull | Power Supply - EVGA 1000 G+ 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Thanks for the feedback.  I finally got that drive installed.  It was literally plug'n'play to get it to work in my mobo once the Win7 NVMe hotfixes were installed.  CrystalDiskMark claims it's seeing the drive's spec performance in my rig, which is nearly 6x the speed of my fastest sata3 SSD: reads at 3200MB/sec (vs. sata3@512).  Turns out the process to make it bootable with Win7 is considerably more than I initially surmised (may require a new Win7 install to get that smooookin' fast boot time), but ultimately it is (seemingly) doable.  Have yet to see any RL noticeable effects of running my 1070 gtx at PCIe x8, driving a 2k monitor.

Edited by TheFamilyMan

Rod O.

i7 10700k @5.0 HT on|Asus Maximus XII Hero|G.Skill 2x16GB DDR4 4000 cas 16|evga RTX 3080 Ti FTW3 Ultra|Noctua NH-D15S|Thermaltake GF1 850W PSU|WD Black SN750 M.2 1TB SSD (x2)|Plextor M9Pe .5TB NVMe PCIe x4 SSD (MSFS dedicated)IFractal Design Focus G Case

Win 10 Pro 64|HP Reverb G2 revised VR HMD|Asus 25" IPS 2K 60Hz monitor|Saitek X52 Pro & Peddles|TIR 5 (now retired)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 2/1/2019 at 3:47 PM, TheFamilyMan said:

  Have yet to see any RL noticeable effects of running my 1070 gtx at PCIe x8, driving a 2k monitor.

Same here. I ran all benchmarks. Absolutely no difference with my RTX2080.


Flight Simulator's - Prepar3d V5.3/MSFS2020 | Operating System - WIN 10 | Main Board - GIGABYTE Z390 AORUS PRO | CPU - INTEL 9700k (5.0Ghz) | RAM - VIPER 32Gig DDR4 4000Mhz | Video Card - EVGA RTX3090 FTW3 ULTRA Monitor - DELL 38" ULTRAWIDE | Case - CORSAIR 750D FULL TOWER | CPU Cooling - CORSAIR H150i Elite Push/Pull | Power Supply - EVGA 1000 G+ 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

  • Tom Allensworth,
    Founder of AVSIM Online


  • Flight Simulation's Premier Resource!

    AVSIM is a free service to the flight simulation community. AVSIM is staffed completely by volunteers and all funds donated to AVSIM go directly back to supporting the community. Your donation here helps to pay our bandwidth costs, emergency funding, and other general costs that crop up from time to time. Thank you for your support!

    Click here for more information and to see all donations year to date.
×
×
  • Create New...