If you have had your head turned by the latest iteration of the Ryzen Zen architecture but want a smaller form factor, the Strix X470-i is a stormer.
ASUS ROG Strix X470-I Gaming Review
Tom, any news on x470 crossahair extreme?
Got this board and tried two m.2 drives on the main front slot, and they didn't work. The slot doesn't even appear in the BIOS. Returned it and got an Asrock board instead.
Got this board and tried two m.2 drives on the main front slot, and they didn't work. The slot doesn't even appear in the BIOS. Returned it and got an Asrock board instead.
Tom, any news on x470 crossahair extreme?
IT would depend on your drive/s and whether you have it set to the right mode. There are two different types of M.2. One is SATA and will need to be set accordingly and the other is NVME which uses PCIE lanes. Usually when you use SATA it knocks out a couple of your SATA ports on the board. However, I would imagine PCIE/NVME needs the controller to be enabled.
Silly question but did you read the manual?
Oh you are so clever aren't you. Of course I tried that, the problem is that the first m.2 slot isn't even detected at a bios level so there is no option that can be set at all. Anyway, returned this board, installed the same nvme drive in the Asrock x470 and had no issues. BTW multiple people are reporting this issues in online reviews.
The positioning of two of the SATA ports will be problematic if you're the neat freak type as it will be impossible to route the cables anything other than over the top of your RAM.