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ASRock Intros Blazing Quad M.2 Riser Card: Four Gen 5 M.2 Slots from Your PCIe x16 Slot

btarunr

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ASRock introduced the Blazing Quad M.2 riser card. Roughly the size of a tall, single-slot graphics card, this contraption converts a PCI-Express 5.0 x16 slot to four M.2 Gen 5 slots, each with PCI-Express 5.0 x4 wiring, with room for up to 110 mm drive length. The four slots are located underneath a cooling solution that consists of an aluminium heatsink that's ventilated by a pair of fans. The card draws power from a 6-pin PCIe power connector for a total of 150 W power-delivery capability. While there's no bridge chip on this card, making it essentially a riser that disaggregates an x16 slot to four x4 M.2 slots, a microcontroller handles the cooling. Each of the four M.2 slots has a link/activity LED at the rear I/O. The card measures 243 mm x 126 mm, and is exactly one slot thick. It should prove useful on Xeon W + W790 platforms that have up to 112 PCIe lanes from the processor, although the card supports just about any machine with a PCIe x16 slot with lane disaggregation. You get the PCIe standard that the x16 slot supports.



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Also useful on computers where iGPU is enough and more storage is required
 
Those fans could still be a bit larger for less noise imo.
 
Those fans could still be a bit larger for less noise imo.
Just gotta strap on a pair of Noctua's. (Hold on a moment that didn't sound quite right after I reread what I wrote.)
 
Interesting. I wonder how this thing works when you plug it into a secondary x16 slot with x4 wiring.
 
The power connector, could of been oriented towards the back of the card and not up , for compatibility with slimmer cases and possibly better cable management.
 
The need for 6pin power is absurd.
You have 75w from the pcie, why do you need more??
What NVMe pcie5 pull more than 18w??
 
Doesn't make much sense as a product when there are a mere handful of PCIe 5.0 SSDs available anyway...
The power connector, could of been oriented towards the back of the card and not up , for compatibility with slimmer cases and possibly better cable management.
could have
 
It has no bridge chip, so chances are that only the first slot will function.
Given that Core and Ryzen CPUs generally support 8+8 bifurcation, and using a chipset that allows the same, wouldn't this card be able to run two SSDs?
 
The power connector, could of been oriented towards the back of the card and not up , for compatibility with slimmer cases and possibly better cable management.
^^THIS^^ there is no excuse for this lack of design acumen IMHO :(

And the absence of a bridge chip will make this an auto no-buy for most folks, including me... :D
 
Use case specific.
There might be 2drive models on the vay for those with 2x8lane pcie 5.0 slot on mainstream desktop/*hedt/*ws as some of the latter two may also have at least one x8 slot.

Could be passively cooled as well by making use of chassis air flow front to back/ bottom to top while still withing the one slot format?I'd guess, different heatsinks tough with card backplate on a double duty :guard/heatsink.
 
It doesn't say it's for free sale. My understanding is that it is a "bonus" accessory in the box on some premium model motherboards.
 
This is very silly, where's the pcie switch to convert x8 5.0 to x16 4.0 ? Now that would be interesting, pcie4.0 nvme drives are common and cheap now, contrary to 5.0 which are only a handfull at best and all come with huge heatsinks that would need to be removed.

Doesn't make much sense as a product when there are a mere handful of PCIe 5.0 SSDs available anyway...
And they all come with very big heatsinks, not the type of stuff you buy to chuck into a board like this.
 
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