- Joined
- Jun 11, 2013
- Messages
- 264 (0.07/day)
- Location
- Nehr'esham
System Name | Neverending Story |
---|---|
Processor | 7700X / 4790K / 4670K / G3258 / 3770K / 8750 / 6800K / 5800K / 3870K / QX6700 / 6500K / 5750M |
Motherboard | X670H / Z97X-SOCF / Z77X-UP5 / Z77CROWN-U1D / F2A88X-UP4 / A75-UD4H / IX48-GT3 / BlackOps / FS1r2A75 |
Cooling | HR-22 / Silver Arrow IB-E / Archon SB-E / Mega Shadow / TRUE-Black |
Memory | Corsair Dominator GT / GTX / Platinum, G.SKILL Flare / Perfect Storm / Pi / Trident (X/Z), OCZ Blade |
Video Card(s) | mostly obscure stuff |
Case | Lancool / Silverstone / Thermaltake / Cubitek |
Audio Device(s) | - |
Power Supply | 80plus Platinum |
Software | - |
Benchmark Scores | - |
There is nothing wrong with double checking stuff. I had no reason to doubt the sticker to begin with, since the information did match the device ID and the module was working as expected with the supplied Intel driver.
"though it should be reiterated that these USB4 ports are shared with the motherboards M.2 Socket_1 (top). Both cannot be used at the same time."
-- Even with the bandwidth being shared, it is still possible to use both at the same time, at least from my testing. I did not see any connection dropouts with my own USB C enclosure, just observed reduced transfer rates.
"though it should be reiterated that these USB4 ports are shared with the motherboards M.2 Socket_1 (top). Both cannot be used at the same time."
-- Even with the bandwidth being shared, it is still possible to use both at the same time, at least from my testing. I did not see any connection dropouts with my own USB C enclosure, just observed reduced transfer rates.