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  1. M

    NVMe boot with SuperMicro X9DA7 & X9DRi-F

    As described I didn't make a complete new install but migrated the system from a sata ssd. But imho a fresh install should be not impossible. some other lessons learned: There was a problem when trying to update windows to latest 1709. After every reboot within the update process: the system...
  2. M

    NVMe boot with SuperMicro X9DA7 & X9DRi-F

    hm just noticed that 2 GByte/s would be typical for PCIe 2.0 4x Faster speeds would only be possible when using 3.0 (which Ivybridge, the mainboard and of course 960 support) so have to check if this is the problem. Any ideas how to do this best in W10?
  3. M

    NVMe boot with SuperMicro X9DA7 & X9DRi-F

    only downtime: in Benchmark Seq. Read is not perfectly fast - it's nearly the same as write (around 2,000 MB/sec, which matches advertised expectations). Are there any ideas on this? spec: 3GHz 10c ivy, W10, latest Samsung driver
  4. M

    NVMe boot with SuperMicro X9DA7 & X9DRi-F

    maybe also interesting (to save some time by preventing need for new install): before making boot possible on Supermicro X9, I migrated a sata ssd from MBR to GPT and than moved system partition to new Samsung (PCIe NVME) (all done with MiniTool Partition Wizard pro v10.2)
  5. M

    NVMe boot with SuperMicro X9DA7 & X9DRi-F

    Many thanks for all these work and details. Just modded Bios v3.2 of X9DRi-LN4F+ => now 1TB 960Pro not only works but also boots perfectly W10 within kryoM.2 PCIe 3.0 x4 :D