I’m in need of a new host nvme drive that can scale up some sql performance, i read that the nvme 7450 MAX is great for this type of work, but i can’t find the nvme version anywhere where i live, they do however have the same version but inside a ssd enclosure as shown here : https://media-www.micron.com/-/media/client/global/images/image-gallery/products-and-technology/ssds/7450-ssd-with-nvme-product-line/7450-group-ordered-vertical-uhd-2000px-v02.jpg?la=en&rev=e83abc7415c849f08a4860e06fddec10&hash=896CAFBC7236F38B1775B396298361B2 (U.3 7mm and U.3 15mm)

Long shot but maybe someone knows, is this just a simple enclosure that can be opened and the nvme can be extracted from the inside or no? I don’t have any U.3 connections available on my super micro board and i need the regular m2 connector.

  • Kamilon@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    NVMe is a technology. M2 is a connector type.

    If you open one of those drives you’ll find NVMe tech. You won’t find M2 connectors.

  • rxVegan@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    There are some Optane drives with m.2 interface like P1600X. Optane may not beat bandwidth records, but their low latency makes them ideal for when you have to do lots of smaller read/write operations like when using databases.

  • cas13f@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Depending on the board, you may have a connection available natively. It’s not uncommon for supermicro to have slimSAS connectors on their enterprise boards that support a PCIE mode.

    You can also purchase simple (passive) interface adapters for M.2 ports that convert to a number of connectors, such as slimSAS, OcuLink, or Mini-SAS HD ports that can carry a PCIE signal–which are used for U.2 drives through cables with the correct connectors on each end.

    …Or you can do the easy thing and just get a different M.2 NVME drive?