Dario L.
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2018
Buy this if you need to clone your SSD or M2, also really good if your board doesn't support m2 drives.Pros:- amazing compatibility- good price- it just works, if you have issues may be related to your mainboard.- full speed at 4x pcieCons:- not the best looking- doesn't come with active cooling (expected at this price point)- only one M.2 connector.
TSG
Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2016
I am so embarrassed by what I did with this thing. I have a bunch of new Dell OptiPlex machines that run Windows 7 and Samsung NVME SSDs, which is a combination that probably shouldn't exist, but it does. The issue is that few conventional imaging tools support NVME drives yet, so... what to do? Answer? Buy a PCIe riser cable and hang this adapter outside a computer and then start loading disk images from within Windows 7. Yeah, you have to power off the machine to swap drives, but that's a lot less hassle than alternatives. No, you don't need a PCIe riser cable, but having this card sitting on the desk is a lot more convenient than constantly installing & removing it from the computer. It works, and works great on all the Samsung PM951 drives I've got.There are no drivers that come with this card and that initially threw me. The tiny little instruction sheet very clearly says to go get the hotfix from Microsoft. You have to give them your email address and they will send you back a link to the "untested hotfix." I've tried this combination on three PCs and all three worked fine, so it seems pretty reliable.Bottom line is this card allowed me to start buying PCs with NVME drives before formally moving to Windows 10 which is a big deal. Very happy with this purchase so far.
Kc
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2016
Awesome little board. Works great with a Samsung 950 Pro SSD. I especially like the addition of the activity LED header pins. I re-routed the HDD LED on my case to those so now I know when my SSD is active.Be advised that Windows 10 comes with NVMe drivers while Windows 7 does not. This makes installing Windows 10 easy, and Windows 7 a little more difficult as you have to provide the driver .inf files, etc during the installation process.I am using this with an Asus Gryphon Z97 motherboard. To anyone out there wanting to run your graphics card at PCIe 3.0 x16 and an NVMe SSD at PCIe 2.0 x4, you have to use the bottom x4 slot for the SSD and the top x16 slot for the graphics card. Then in Advanced settings in BIOS, set both PCIe x8/x16 slots to "3.0" or "Gen3" and set the DMI specifically to "PCI-E 2.0".
Thomas M. Szewczuk
Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2016
The installation was easy and flawless! The CrystalDiskMark test results and app performance....priceless (see pictures below)!!This is a real worth while upgrade!Caveats:-------------- Made No Changes to DELL BIOS settings!-- Ran CrystalDriveMark benchmarks on full up system (116 background processes and 83GB of drive C: populated with OS and Apps) but with anti-virus and firewall switched: OFF-- Installed Samsung Magician 4.9.5 (it uses 10% unallocated space). The jury is out on this since Rapid disk is not supported for this device.-- Drive C: is UEFI by Acronis partition restore noted below.Instructions and/or recommendations:---------------------------------------------------1. Run CrystalDriveMark (free download: http://crystalmark.info/software/CrystalDiskMark/index-e.html) and benchmark the existing drive C:. save the results!!2. Download the Samsung NVMe Driver first from Samsung site: [...]3. Make an image backup of current Boot drive (in my case the LITEON M.2 OEM SSD). I used Acronis TI 2016 (all partitions),4. Shutdown system, unplug and open case (one screw), if you have a non-Boot HDD plugged into SATA-0, move it to another free SATA port (this is just insurance),5. Assemble NVRe SSD onto the Lycom PCIe 3.0 adapter. Secure with included screw (it fits just fine),6. Install the PCIe Storage assembly into one of the free PCIe 3.0x4 slot (I used the unused 16-bit slot but you can use the free short slot too),7. Plug in system and power-up,8. Press F2 to get into DELL BIOS setup. check the MOBOard slots and make sure Mass Storage device is populating a slot (should be OK)9. Restart the system. You should get a system notice to GPT initialize the new NVRe SSD, initialize it.10. Now is a good time to install the Samsung 950 Pro NVRe driver you downloaded previously,11.Check Disks in the device manager. You should see the new Samsung NVRe device and it should be working,12. I created the needed partitions on the Samsung NVRe SSD using "Minitool Partition Wizard FREE", they are as follows:Partition #1: FAT32, Size 500MB, No Label (this is the EFI system partition)Partition# 2: NTFS, Size 462GB, Label "OS"Partition# 3: NTFS, Size 450MB, Label "WINRETOOLS"partition# 4: NTFS, Size 12.7GB, Label "Image"!!!! DON'T USE DRIVE LETTERS !!!! Select none for new partition drive letters13. From within Windows 10 (pro), startup Acronis TI 2016 and perform a full restore from OEM LITEON SSD to Samsung 950 Pro NVRe. I did this from OEM SSD because it had the new Samsung NVRe driver installed after Image backup was performed.14. When restore is completed, shut down system, unplug system power, ground yourself, open case (if not opened), remove Nvidia Card and power connector,15: Remove the OEM LITEON SSD by removing m.2 small screw to MOBOard, THIS IS IMPORTANT TO PREVENT BOOT FROM OEM SSD!16. Reinstall Nvidia card and power connector and bracket,17. Plug system power back in and power up. The 1st boot will take a little while,18. If all goes well...you'll be at the Windows 10 logon prompt.19. Re-install the case cover.Attached images:--My system overview (using speccy)--Before CrystalDiskMark benchmark result--After CrystalDiskInfo result--After CrystalDiskMark Result
FlyingSquirrel
Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2015
This worked great with a Samsung 950 PRO -Series 512GB PCIe NVMe. I'm actually getting the advertised 2500 MB/sec read and 1500 MB/sec speed from the Samsung 950 PRO. Seeing those numbers blew my mind. There are a couple of things to keep in mind if you are going to use a NVMe SSD with this adapter.1. Make sure you put this in a PCIe 3.0 x4 or higher slot on your motherboard and remember that the number of available lanes in your PCIe 3.0 slots will depend on what is in use in the other PCIe 3.0 slots. If you have a MB that was built to run 3 video cards but are only running 1 or 2, then you should be good to go. Check your motherboard manual to be sure.2. Windows 10 has NVMe drivers out of the box, but I don't know about older versions of Windows. Do yourself a favor and upgrade to Windows 10 first.3. If your motherboard isn't seeing the new drive make sure that your PCIe slots are enabled for UEFI. I did this install on a ASUS Z87-Pro and the drive wasn't detected until I switched PCIe Storage from "Legacy" to "UEFI". I'm doing this from memory so the wording may not be exact as to the exact motherboard setting, but it was something like that.4. Make sure your motherboard is using the latest "non-beta" bios before you install the adapter and SSD.