i got the H97i-plus. and still going strong. still plays dayz, arma 3, NMS, even star citizen at 25-40fps(on a good day) with the GTX 960 2GB. but it is showing her age with all the new things coming out.
I'm looking to play NMS offline, but idk if pairing my GTX 1080 with an i7 4790 will even be able to keep up with it nowadays. Heard someone mention that they get under 60fps at 1080p on ultra with a 7700K.
Thanks the info. I wonder if the motherboard has an upper limit for transfer speed? For example, if we install a GEN4 7500 MB/s M2 SSD, can it reach this speed?
@@Ace1000ks Thanks. Wow, the upper limit is quite low. In this case, the most logical thing would be to buy a cheap GEN3 M2 (eg Verbatim Vi3000 series). I'm currently using a SATA III SSD + HDD.
@@full-grim If you want a higher bandwidth from your M.2 NVMe then you must get a new motherboard. I tested the same M.2 NVMe SSD on my new computer, and I was getting about 2300 MB/s or 2.3 Gigabytes/second with the same drive.
Thanks for that info! I was doing some digging on transfer speeds, having just picked out this board. ASUS product page mentions something about 10GB/s. I know close to nothing about M.2 and NVME, but knew that didn't sound right as I believe it was a relatively new feature around the time of it's release. Others mentioned it's sequential data transfer speed, which has no effect on gaming or OS stuff. Basically that using a SATA SSD instead is a much better option. But, seeing that it's M.2 speeds can reach up to 850Mb/s, that is a small upgrade from the limitations of SATA SSDs. I suppose it depends on what size data chunks are being transferred.
@@terrapinflyer273 On this board, I am happy to get 850 Megabytes/second with a M.2 NVme. On my new computer, I am getting 2.4 Gigabytes/second or 2400 Megabytes/second with the same M.2 NVMe module. I still use my I7-4790K for work, and I use my I7-10700K to do everything I need to do at home.
So I’ve found that windows attaches itself to your motherboard. So if you try to put an SSD with windows onto a new motherboard, it won’t detect it. I got a fresh SSD and it detected it right away. I ended up having to start from scratch and contact Microsoft to switch my windows over to my new motherboard, since my old SSD will only work with the broken motherboard it was originally tied to.
@@fabiopaiva2306 You can use Gen 4 M.2 NVMe, but you cannot get the full bandwidth of 7.3 gigabytes/second. On the M.2 NVMe slot, you will get about 850 Megabytes/second. If you use a PCI-e to M.2 NVMe Adapter, and put it in the 2nd PCI-e x 16 slot, you will get about 1.6 Gigabytes per second for the Asus H97. On the Asus Z97 Pro, you can use the 2nd PCI-e x 16 slot, and get about 3.4 Gigabytes/second. This computer doesn't have a PCI-e Gen 4 slot, so your bandwidth will be limited by the available slots.
I got Samsung M.2 NVME 980 PRO and 840 EVO and I only able to see M.2 NVME 980 PRO and I can't see my old SSD, (but it's appearing on the windows), Also I can't see SATA Mode Selection on Bios. I got ASUS Prime Z690 P WIFI.
hi, dude. Thanks for the video... I need your help and experience. I plan to get the WD-Black SN770 Nvme and I have a z97-E/USB 3.1 motherboard (which I want to upgrade soon) with a m.2 pci 3.0 slot, so I'm not sure if it would work or if it would boot from the drive . I'm not worried about using the drive's full speed for now, as long as it's as fast as the 2.5" SATA SSD I have now. The BIOS is version 701, from 2016, the last year they updated. The question is, would it work as a boot drive, what do you recommend ?
So ive had my SSD for about 3 years now, and today my PC frooze and kept being stuck in BIOS, ive updated the bios with a usb stick and the ssd still doesnt show up, should i just buy a new ssd?
Hi from Argentina!... I´ve purchaise the WD blue SN570 NVMe SSD 250GB. Is compatible with the Asus h97mplus? the most I got was 850 megabytes/second, but it should run at 3300megabytes/second
It will work, but you will not get a higher bandwidth than what you got. This motherboard doesn't allow for higher speeds with the SSD that you purchased.
@@juanignaciobertero5719 It doesn't matter which M.2 NVMe SSD you use. The frequency will not go higher than 850 MB/second. At least on this motherboard, but if you get a new motherboard, speeds can be as high as 2.4 GB/second to 5 GB/second.
@@juanignaciobertero5719 10 gb/s is 1.25 gigabytes/second . That is a theoretical number, so the real value is 75% of that. You should get about 875 MS/s to 900 MB/s.
You can use any M.2 NVMe SSD, but the only limitation would be the transfer speed. You will be limited to about 850 MB/second. On a more modern motherboard, you could get 2500 MB/second to 3000 MB/second depending on the NVMe SSD.
hello i have a question, im confuse about that between M.2 NVMe and M.2 . we have the same motherboard, does our motherboard suppor NVMe ? ( i have watched ur video but i checked the documentation but could not see something about NVMe)
You can use both M.2 SSDs, and M.2 NVMe SSDs. The only difference is that you need to update your BIOS to use the M.2 NVMe SSD which is about 300 mb/second faster than the M.2 SSD.
The M.2 NVMe SSD doesn't get the full bandwidth with this motherboard. On my new ASUS Prime H470M-PLUS motherboard, I get about 2.4 Gb/second with my Western Digital Blue SN550. On the Asus H97M-Plus motherboard, I get about 850 mb/second or 0.850 Gb/second. It is the a limitation with this motherboard. Never the less, I use a WD Blue SN550 500 GB SSD on this computer.
Thanks for the vid... I plan to upgrade my H97-Plus in a few months to a Z670 13th Gen i5, but, I need drive space now. Planning to get the WD-Black SN770 for the upgrade but might buy it sooner for this system. Wasn't sure if (A) it would work or (B) it would boot off the drive. Not worried about using the full speed of the drive, so long as it's as fast as the 2.5" SATA SSD I have now. BIOS is ver.2603, updated that years ago, looks like 2016 was the last year they made updates.
Hello! I have to install my win7 on new 980 NVMe ssd. For now i got it to be visible in bios but not in windows or disk manager. Any advice? Thank you in advance!
@@Ace1000ks Thank you for the answer. I have updated it (02/24/2016 ver 2906) I don't know if there is later version. Before that it didn't even show in bios.
@@Ace1000ks thanks man! I already wathched it and updated it as you prompted. Forgot to hit like though...:( There it is...:) After I installed the hotfix from lenovo site (cause win site does not contain it anymore) it FIIIIIINALLY showed up. Do you know how to get it to run as fast as it can? Write speed is @800 mb/s and it is stated 3500 on the box?
@@sasapavsic5686 The limitation of this motherboard only allows you to run at 800 MB/second to 840 MB/second. I did use the same M.2 NVMe SSD on my I7-10700KF, I get about 2.4 GB/second for reads, and 1.8 GB/second for writes.
Well, i've tried looking for the bios update. But apparently mine (ASUS H97M-E) have no more updates newer than 2015. So does this mean my motherboard won't be able to use the maximum speed of the nvme? It's detected in my system, but it's transfering 150mb/s from hd to ssd, and from ssd to ssd its 350mb/s at best. Any solutions? I used WD 550 NVME-M2 1 TB on an enclosure nvme adapter which supports only USB 3.1 .
@@Bensonisalsobenz This computer has USB 3.0 which has a maximum bandwidth of 5.0 Gigabits/second or 5000 Megabits/second. That comes out to 625 Megabytes/second of .625 GB/second. You don't have USB 3.1 on this motherboard, so the most you will be able to get out of this would be anywhere from 350 MB/second to 500 MB/second. If you are using this on the motherboard, you could get about 825 Megabytes/second or 6800 Megabits/second. If you want a faster bandwidth of speed, you could get a new motherboard.
@@Ace1000ks I suppose i have to try getting the one for the motherboard instead, i'll get them tomorrow and i'll see if that changes the speed significantly. EDIT: if the adaptor uses PCIE 3.0 x 4 pins, and the ones i have on my board is PCIE 2.0 x 16 . is it possible for me to use this adapter still? What's going to happen?
Picked up this H97M-Plus, 16gb of kingston and an i7-4771 for $20 lol. Grabbed a cheap ssd and a lian li 205m, installed windows but couldn't boot. Had to update the bios like you did and boom. Got pretty lucky I guess on most lga1150 boards the m2 is unbootable. Thanks
All of that for $20 or just the CPU? And where?? I'm eyeballing this board w a 4790 for 85 atm. I really want a Z87 board just for aesthetics and because I bought a Q87 that failed on me within a week of use... Got a free cooler and possibly a working CPU out of the deal tho. Not positive if the cpu is good, but I'm betting the board was the major malfunction. I love the yellow highlights on the ASUS 1150 boards. They really light up the case with blue LEDs shining on them. And I liked the ease of access with the BIOS. Click and drag boot config right there when you jump into BIOS. But, seems that none of the ASUS Z87 boards include on-board M.2 support. So that's a drag.
@@terrapinflyer273 facebook marketplace, dude posted a pic with barely any info. Didn't know what chip it was. Nobody was biting and he cut the price to $20 just to get rid of it and I took a chance. It doesn't look pretty at all, the ram is bare etc. But I knew asus board + kingston x4 = probably decent CPU Yeah the Z87's are pretty old for m2 support. My 2014 H97 is one of the few that did, Z87 is a year older than that. I've also been using a Sabrent M2 adapter that goes into a PCI slot, that's been working well and I don't need any SATA cables + it's faster than SATA
@@Ace1000ks Thanks for sharing it! I guess is about reading speed. How about write speed is there any significant performance drop? I am asking because I have an old Samsung 850 EVO 250GB(40GB used) SATA3 - 13TB Written/3 years usage and it does about 480MB/s Reading now, it was 510MB/s befoure firmware update, I wish I haven't make that mistake :( but there is no turning back, so have wondered to buy a new one but this time want to be M2 SSD 120GB will be more than enought for boot device.
@@rom4o5 A 500 GB M.2 NVMe drive is recommended as a boot drive, but if your budget allows only a 120 GB. A 120 GB is okay, it would work. Just don't install anything on that drive.
@@deletevil I made a video about it . ruclips.net/video/gHQoXaTTpGo/видео.html It is a little bit faster, because the transfer rate has been increased from 540 MB/second with the sata SSD vs. 850 MB/second with the M.2 NVMe SSD. Another difference I found between a sata SSD and a M.2 NVMe SSD was the temperature difference. The M.2 NVMe SSD does run hotter. ruclips.net/video/ii46cjcix5A/видео.html
This is a relatively new computer, you should have M.2 NVMe SSD support. The computer I am using is 8 years old, and M.2 NVMe was a new feature. Your motherboard is different than the one I am using here, the difference is 7 years. You need to find a video that deals with your motherboard not this one.
Tengo un Asus Prime B450M-A2 con un AMD Athlon 3000G y un M.2 Nvme kingston de 500gb y resulta que no pude hacerlo reconocer por la BIOS ya actualizada hasta que un tipo me indicó que había que habilitar una opción en la BIOS el problema es que no recuerdo cual era la opción .. Lo que si recuerdo es que estaba abreviado y no era el modo raid o csm El problema es que RUclips de la nada me baneo mi cuenta y tuve que crearme otra y no se en que vídeo y quien me ayudó sobre eso
@@ramiro5850 tengo el mismo problema con los mismos componentes. Lo único que se es que hay una opción en opciones avanzadas y hay que habilitar el cpu pcie lanes unlock. Pero no me sale esa opción en mí tarjeta madre
It cannot utilize the full potential of the M.2 NVMe SSD I am using. The highest bandwidth I get on this motherboard is about 850 MB/sec. On my new I7-10700kf based computer, I get about 2.4 GB/s or 2400 MB/s. ruclips.net/video/IJyQijomOHo/видео.html The Asus H97M-Plus MB has bandwidth limitations, but the newer 10th and 11th generation core I3/I5/I7 motherboards have much higher bandwidths for M.2 NVMe SSDs.
@@Ace1000ks I am now installing the OS on such a computer, I saw the M.2 connector, inserted NVME, but the BIOS did not detect it, then I watched your video and realized that this is possible. THANK YOU SIR! sms from a resident of the North Caucasus, google translation 👍👍
This helped my friend and me with his pc thank you a lot.
What we did was advanced/PCH storeage configuration/sata mode selection should be on AHCI
The problem is i cant see my M2 SSD in the bios, how do i install the window ?
If you have this motherboard then you have to update your bios first.
@@Ace1000ks that's work !!! Thanks !
i got the H97i-plus. and still going strong. still plays dayz, arma 3, NMS, even star citizen at 25-40fps(on a good day) with the GTX 960 2GB. but it is showing her age with all the new things coming out.
I still use this computer to edit videos, work, and gaming along with my new I7-10700KF based computer.
I'm looking to play NMS offline, but idk if pairing my GTX 1080 with an i7 4790 will even be able to keep up with it nowadays. Heard someone mention that they get under 60fps at 1080p on ultra with a 7700K.
Thanks the info. I wonder if the motherboard has an upper limit for transfer speed? For example, if we install a GEN4 7500 MB/s M2 SSD, can it reach this speed?
On this motherboard, the maximum bandwidth is about 850 Megabytes/second, and there is no way to make it faster on this board.
@@Ace1000ks Thanks. Wow, the upper limit is quite low. In this case, the most logical thing would be to buy a cheap GEN3 M2 (eg Verbatim Vi3000 series). I'm currently using a SATA III SSD + HDD.
@@full-grim If you want a higher bandwidth from your M.2 NVMe then you must get a new motherboard.
I tested the same M.2 NVMe SSD on my new computer, and I was getting about 2300 MB/s or 2.3 Gigabytes/second with the same drive.
Thanks for that info! I was doing some digging on transfer speeds, having just picked out this board. ASUS product page mentions something about 10GB/s. I know close to nothing about M.2 and NVME, but knew that didn't sound right as I believe it was a relatively new feature around the time of it's release. Others mentioned it's sequential data transfer speed, which has no effect on gaming or OS stuff.
Basically that using a SATA SSD instead is a much better option. But, seeing that it's M.2 speeds can reach up to 850Mb/s, that is a small upgrade from the limitations of SATA SSDs. I suppose it depends on what size data chunks are being transferred.
@@terrapinflyer273 On this board, I am happy to get 850 Megabytes/second with a M.2 NVme. On my new computer, I am getting 2.4 Gigabytes/second or 2400 Megabytes/second with the same M.2 NVMe module.
I still use my I7-4790K for work, and I use my I7-10700K to do everything I need to do at home.
What do I do if I just installed the m.2 and my old ssd doesn't show up at all.
My old ssd already has windows installed
What is your old SSD?
Same issue reply if you found a solution
@@xesly2113 any luck? I’m having the exact same problem
Check if it's installed on port 5 or 6, if so move it to another port. M.2 on this board disables port 5 and 6.
So I’ve found that windows attaches itself to your motherboard. So if you try to put an SSD with windows onto a new motherboard, it won’t detect it. I got a fresh SSD and it detected it right away. I ended up having to start from scratch and contact Microsoft to switch my windows over to my new motherboard, since my old SSD will only work with the broken motherboard it was originally tied to.
Thanks for the video work with my H97 pro, but i cant find information what gen this m.2 running, 1.0? 2.0? 3.0?
Generation 3 M.2 NVMe, but I can't get Gen 3 speeds with this motherboard.
@@Ace1000ks will gen 4 work? in theory it should as it says backward compatibility
@@fabiopaiva2306 You can use Gen 4 M.2 NVMe, but you cannot get the full bandwidth of 7.3 gigabytes/second.
On the M.2 NVMe slot, you will get about 850 Megabytes/second.
If you use a PCI-e to M.2 NVMe Adapter, and put it in the 2nd PCI-e x 16 slot, you will get about 1.6 Gigabytes per second for the Asus H97. On the Asus Z97 Pro, you can use the 2nd PCI-e x 16 slot, and get about 3.4 Gigabytes/second.
This computer doesn't have a PCI-e Gen 4 slot, so your bandwidth will be limited by the available slots.
Thank you!
Installing BIOS v.2903 solve it for my Z97M-Plus
Hello! Can you please tell me how to update or install newer bios? Thanks a lot!
I got Samsung M.2 NVME 980 PRO and 840 EVO and I only able to see M.2 NVME 980 PRO and I can't see my old SSD, (but it's appearing on the windows),
Also I can't see SATA Mode Selection on Bios.
I got ASUS Prime Z690 P WIFI.
That is a different motherboard, and a completely different chipset.
so if the speed of the mother is around 700 to 800 mbs, is unecesary to get an m2, right?, with a simple ssd is enough?
With a sata SSD, you can only get 500 MB/second to 550 MB/second. The M.2 NVMe SSD is about 300 MB/second faster on this motherboard.
hi, dude. Thanks for the video... I need your help and experience. I plan to get the WD-Black SN770 Nvme and I have a z97-E/USB 3.1 motherboard (which I want to upgrade soon) with a m.2 pci 3.0 slot, so I'm not sure if it would work or if it would boot from the drive . I'm not worried about using the drive's full speed for now, as long as it's as fast as the 2.5" SATA SSD I have now. The BIOS is version 701, from 2016, the last year they updated. The question is, would it work as a boot drive, what do you recommend ?
I don't know if you can use a 4th gen M.2 NVMe SSD on this thing.
So ive had my SSD for about 3 years now, and today my PC frooze and kept being stuck in BIOS, ive updated the bios with a usb stick and the ssd still doesnt show up, should i just buy a new ssd?
It doesnt show up in NVMe either
Maybe, your SSD died.
May I know if it applies to NVMe interface or just SATA interface of the M2 drive?
This relates to M.2 NVMe only.
@@Ace1000ks thanks!
Hi from Argentina!... I´ve purchaise the WD blue SN570 NVMe SSD 250GB. Is compatible with the Asus h97mplus? the most I got was 850 megabytes/second, but it should run at 3300megabytes/second
It will work, but you will not get a higher bandwidth than what you got.
This motherboard doesn't allow for higher speeds with the SSD that you purchased.
@@Ace1000ks Thanks for the answer!! Last question, Wich M.2 Ssd can reach higher speed in this motherboard?
@@juanignaciobertero5719 It doesn't matter which M.2 NVMe SSD you use. The frequency will not go higher than 850 MB/second. At least on this motherboard, but if you get a new motherboard, speeds can be as high as 2.4 GB/second to 5 GB/second.
@@Ace1000ks Thank you!! Very useful information!! I misunderstood the manual of the motherboard, it says that this socket could reach 10gb/s.
@@juanignaciobertero5719 10 gb/s is 1.25 gigabytes/second . That is a theoretical number, so the real value is 75% of that. You should get about 875 MS/s to 900 MB/s.
Hi
I have a questions
Can i use Adata legend 700 on h97m-e ? (nvme pci 3 x4)
You can use any M.2 NVMe SSD, but the only limitation would be the transfer speed. You will be limited to about 850 MB/second. On a more modern motherboard, you could get 2500 MB/second to 3000 MB/second depending on the NVMe SSD.
@@Ace1000ks bro , i will sub you right now . This is the fastest answer ive ever seen .
hello i have a question, im confuse about that between M.2 NVMe and M.2 . we have the same motherboard, does our motherboard suppor NVMe ? ( i have watched ur video but i checked the documentation but could not see something about NVMe)
You can use both M.2 SSDs, and M.2 NVMe SSDs. The only difference is that you need to update your BIOS to use the M.2 NVMe SSD which is about 300 mb/second faster than the M.2 SSD.
The M.2 NVMe SSD doesn't get the full bandwidth with this motherboard. On my new ASUS Prime H470M-PLUS motherboard, I get about 2.4 Gb/second with my Western Digital Blue SN550.
On the Asus H97M-Plus motherboard, I get about 850 mb/second or 0.850 Gb/second. It is the a limitation with this motherboard. Never the less, I use a WD Blue SN550 500 GB SSD on this computer.
@@Ace1000ks i see, if u do not mind i wanna ask u one more question. What is the highest MB/S that our motherboard supports up to ?
@@Ace1000ks i see , ur answers r so helpful for me, thank u so much :))
@@yigitklc474 For M.2 NVMe, the most I got was 850 megabytes/second.
Thanks for the vid... I plan to upgrade my H97-Plus in a few months to a Z670 13th Gen i5, but, I need drive space now. Planning to get the WD-Black SN770 for the upgrade but might buy it sooner for this system. Wasn't sure if (A) it would work or (B) it would boot off the drive. Not worried about using the full speed of the drive, so long as it's as fast as the 2.5" SATA SSD I have now. BIOS is ver.2603, updated that years ago, looks like 2016 was the last year they made updates.
Hello! I have to install my win7 on new 980 NVMe ssd. For now i got it to be visible in bios but not in windows or disk manager. Any advice? Thank you in advance!
If you have the same motherboard then update your bios.
@@Ace1000ks Thank you for the answer. I have updated it (02/24/2016 ver 2906) I don't know if there is later version. Before that it didn't even show in bios.
@@sasapavsic5686 I made a video about updating the BIOS for the Asus H97 MB. ruclips.net/video/L76Zv-Xf3B8/видео.html
@@Ace1000ks thanks man! I already wathched it and updated it as you prompted. Forgot to hit like though...:(
There it is...:) After I installed the hotfix from lenovo site (cause win site does not contain it anymore) it FIIIIIINALLY showed up.
Do you know how to get it to run as fast as it can? Write speed is @800 mb/s and it is stated 3500 on the box?
@@sasapavsic5686 The limitation of this motherboard only allows you to run at 800 MB/second to 840 MB/second. I did use the same M.2 NVMe SSD on my I7-10700KF, I get about 2.4 GB/second for reads, and 1.8 GB/second for writes.
Well, i've tried looking for the bios update. But apparently mine (ASUS H97M-E) have no more updates newer than 2015. So does this mean my motherboard won't be able to use the maximum speed of the nvme? It's detected in my system, but it's transfering 150mb/s from hd to ssd, and from ssd to ssd its 350mb/s at best. Any solutions? I used WD 550 NVME-M2 1 TB on an enclosure nvme adapter which supports only USB 3.1 .
You are saying that you used a NVMe SSD in a USB enclosure?
@@Ace1000ks yeah, it says in the pack it can. orico m.2 nvme ssd enclosure.
@@Bensonisalsobenz This computer has USB 3.0 which has a maximum bandwidth of 5.0 Gigabits/second or 5000 Megabits/second. That comes out to 625 Megabytes/second of .625 GB/second.
You don't have USB 3.1 on this motherboard, so the most you will be able to get out of this would be anywhere from 350 MB/second to 500 MB/second.
If you are using this on the motherboard, you could get about 825 Megabytes/second or 6800 Megabits/second. If you want a faster bandwidth of speed, you could get a new motherboard.
@@Ace1000ks I suppose i have to try getting the one for the motherboard instead, i'll get them tomorrow and i'll see if that changes the speed significantly.
EDIT: if the adaptor uses PCIE 3.0 x 4 pins, and the ones i have on my board is PCIE 2.0 x 16 . is it possible for me to use this adapter still? What's going to happen?
There is a v2702 from 2016...but that still doesn't seem to help.
Hi
Can i use the Samsung 980 MZ-V8V1T0BW NVMe M.2 on this motherboard? (Asus H97m-e)
I think so, but you cannot use the full bandwidth of your M.2 NVMe drive, because this board doesn't support it.
Picked up this H97M-Plus, 16gb of kingston and an i7-4771 for $20 lol. Grabbed a cheap ssd and a lian li 205m, installed windows but couldn't boot. Had to update the bios like you did and boom. Got pretty lucky I guess on most lga1150 boards the m2 is unbootable. Thanks
All of that for $20 or just the CPU? And where?? I'm eyeballing this board w a 4790 for 85 atm. I really want a Z87 board just for aesthetics and because I bought a Q87 that failed on me within a week of use... Got a free cooler and possibly a working CPU out of the deal tho. Not positive if the cpu is good, but I'm betting the board was the major malfunction.
I love the yellow highlights on the ASUS 1150 boards. They really light up the case with blue LEDs shining on them. And I liked the ease of access with the BIOS. Click and drag boot config right there when you jump into BIOS. But, seems that none of the ASUS Z87 boards include on-board M.2 support. So that's a drag.
@@terrapinflyer273 facebook marketplace, dude posted a pic with barely any info. Didn't know what chip it was. Nobody was biting and he cut the price to $20 just to get rid of it and I took a chance. It doesn't look pretty at all, the ram is bare etc. But I knew asus board + kingston x4 = probably decent CPU
Yeah the Z87's are pretty old for m2 support. My 2014 H97 is one of the few that did, Z87 is a year older than that. I've also been using a Sabrent M2 adapter that goes into a PCI slot, that's been working well and I don't need any SATA cables + it's faster than SATA
For me PCH Storage configuration is grey out … and I installed my M.2
good.
@@Ace1000ks thanks , now it works .
Does Samsung Evo 970 Evo Plus NVme Gen 3,, fit into H97?
It would fit, but you will not be able to use the maximum bandwidth of it.
What is maximum spped tested whit M2-NVMe? Any clue or somewhere to find it?
I got about 850 Megabytes/sec.
@@Ace1000ks Thanks for sharing it! I guess is about reading speed. How about write speed is there any significant performance drop?
I am asking because I have an old Samsung 850 EVO 250GB(40GB used) SATA3 - 13TB Written/3 years usage and it does about 480MB/s Reading now, it was 510MB/s befoure firmware update, I wish I haven't make that mistake :( but there is no turning back, so have wondered to buy a new one but this time want to be M2 SSD 120GB will be more than enought for boot device.
@@rom4o5 A 500 GB M.2 NVMe drive is recommended as a boot drive, but if your budget allows only a 120 GB. A 120 GB is okay, it would work. Just don't install anything on that drive.
@@Ace1000ks thanks for the video. Is there any noticeable difference in OS boot time when you use SATA SSD vs NVMe based SSD?
@@deletevil I made a video about it .
ruclips.net/video/gHQoXaTTpGo/видео.html
It is a little bit faster, because the transfer rate has been increased from 540 MB/second with the sata SSD vs. 850 MB/second with the M.2 NVMe SSD.
Another difference I found between a sata SSD and a M.2 NVMe SSD was the temperature difference. The M.2 NVMe SSD does run hotter.
ruclips.net/video/ii46cjcix5A/видео.html
I have asus rog zephyrus m16 and the bios is basic compared to that even in advanced and i can't find those options
This is a relatively new computer, you should have M.2 NVMe SSD support. The computer I am using is 8 years old, and M.2 NVMe was a new feature.
Your motherboard is different than the one I am using here, the difference is 7 years. You need to find a video that deals with your motherboard not this one.
@@Ace1000ks ok thanks it's worrying me because it should be plug and play really
@@Bikeadelic I got a new computer last year, and I didn't have any problems getting my M.2 NVMe SSD to work. It was pretty much plug and play.
@@Ace1000ks hmmm maybe i got a duff unit or maybe there's somthing wrong with the laptop.
@@Bikeadelic Just search for a video about your computer, I am sure someone made a video about adding a M.2 NVMe SSD in your brand of computer.
hi friend, I can't find TMP option in the bios, can you do a tutorial how to enable TMP option? I need to install windows 11
What is TMP?
Asus never added support for TPM 2.1 on their Z97 Pro and H97 motherboards. That is why that TPM option is not available in the BIOS.
@@Ace1000ks and an option that must be activated in the bios to install windows 11
@@Ace1000ks ah ok, which motherboard do you recommend to buy?
@@lorenzoguida2706 They will stop supporting Windows 10 in 2026, so you have a long time. By 2026, your computer would be obsolete.
for H97M-E, what the same ?
It's similar, but it isn't the same.
Is h97i plus support m.2 nvme plz tell me
You can, but you have to update the BIOS first.
ruclips.net/video/L76Zv-Xf3B8/видео.html
Tengo un Asus Prime B450M-A2 con un AMD Athlon 3000G y un M.2 Nvme kingston de 500gb y resulta que no pude hacerlo reconocer por la BIOS ya actualizada hasta que un tipo me indicó que había que habilitar una opción en la BIOS el problema es que no recuerdo cual era la opción .. Lo que si recuerdo es que estaba abreviado y no era el modo raid o csm
El problema es que RUclips de la nada me baneo mi cuenta y tuve que crearme otra y no se en que vídeo y quien me ayudó sobre eso
I don't speak Spanish.
Hola Samuel, que hiciste para que te leyera el nvme? Estoy teniendo ese mismo problema me podrias ayudar?
@@ramiro5850 tengo el mismo problema con los mismos componentes. Lo único que se es que hay una opción en opciones avanzadas y hay que habilitar el cpu pcie lanes unlock. Pero no me sale esa opción en mí tarjeta madre
It runs at full speed? (read and write speed)
It cannot utilize the full potential of the M.2 NVMe SSD I am using. The highest bandwidth I get on this motherboard is about 850 MB/sec.
On my new I7-10700kf based computer, I get about 2.4 GB/s or 2400 MB/s.
ruclips.net/video/IJyQijomOHo/видео.html
The Asus H97M-Plus MB has bandwidth limitations, but the newer 10th and 11th generation core I3/I5/I7 motherboards have much higher bandwidths for M.2 NVMe SSDs.
@@Ace1000ks Thanks pal
Doesn’t give me m.2 as an option 😢
If you are using some other motherboard than a Asus H97M series then the menu is going to be different.
No showing m.2 why h510me board
k
How abou the h97m-e sir?
It should be the same.
@@Ace1000ks thank you
@@anyhow5860 Sure, no problem.
this works on gigabyte z97x aswell? nice video
The BIOS menu is different for a Gigabyte motherboard compared to a Asus motherboard, so I don't know if this would work or not.
Absolute legend 👏
bios ОБНОВИТЕ ДО ПОСЛЕДНЕЙ ВЕРСИИ
Right.
@@Ace1000ks I am now installing the OS on such a computer, I saw the M.2 connector, inserted NVME, but the BIOS did not detect it, then I watched your video and realized that this is possible. THANK YOU SIR! sms from a resident of the North Caucasus, google translation 👍👍
Show! Foi único com apresentação boa.
Спасибо
nice