WYP
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Meet the Corsair Force series MP300. NVMe but affordable.

Read more about Corsair's new MP300 series of NVMe SSDs.

Read more about Corsair's new MP300 series of NVMe SSDs.

Pci x 2? seems a bit of a devolution than moving fwds, I thought the standard these days was x4
No point using/wasting the extra PCIe lanes if you don't plan to make an SSDs that can offer high enough speeds to make them useful.
The whole point here is that the reduced complexity reduced the controller cost of the drive and makes the device cheaper to produce. 1,600MB/s reads is plenty fast.
No point using/wasting the extra PCIe lanes if you don't plan to make an SSDs that can offer high enough speeds to make them useful.
The whole point here is that the reduced complexity reduced the controller cost of the drive and makes the device cheaper to produce. 1,600MB/s reads is plenty fast.
Doesn't matter though for most people.
Most people use a CPU with 16 PCI lanes. If you have even X1 controllers the GPU will get bumped down to x8 lanes. So really that argument makes little sense unless it gets run off by the CPU chipset.
Hmm I may just be used to my older board which I am pretty sure does it how I described.
Either way good to see it's the chipset.
Still think we should have more PCI lanes to begin with so it wouldn't even be an issue
Yeah, if is it pre-Skylake the M.2 just uses the same generic PCIe lanes as everything else. That changed post Skylake, as they moded M.2 to the DMI and gave the chipset extra lanes.
Just did some looking around. This isn't really worth it.
For less than $20 more you could get a Samsung 970 Evo when comparing between the 240GB Corsair and the 250GB Samsung.
You get little bit more storage and way faster speeds. Another Corsair product bites the dust..