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Sonnet announces PCI Express 3.0 Adapter Card featuring Two NVMe SSD Slots, 16-Lane PCIe Bridge


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Sonnet Technologies today announced the Sonnet M.2 2x4 Low-Profile PCIe Card, the latest offering in the company's popular family of high-performance storage adapter cards that enable the installation of multiple SSDs into a computer's or Thunderbolt expansion system's PCIe card slot. The low-profile, half-length PCIe 3.0 card features two M-keyed NVMe M.2 SSD slots that support the installation of M.2 form factor NVMe PCIe SSDs.

Here's what they are saying:

What It Does:
The Sonnet M.2 2x4 Low-Profile PCIe Card enables users to mount two M.2 NVMe 2280 PCIe SSDs (sold separately) into almost any expansion card space with an available x8 or x16 PCIe card slot; using today's highest-capacity SSDs, up to 16TB of storage capacity may be installed. RAID 0, RAID 1, and JBOD configurations are supported, providing users with flexibility in configuring the SSDs for best performance or data safety, or both.

Why It's Important:
For users who need to add internal storage to their computer and require ultra-high-speed data transfer speeds for a smooth workflow — such as video editors working with 6K and greater resolution footage — an NVMe M.2 SSD-based upgrade is ideal. Many computers do not include slots to support installing M.2 SSDs directly but do include PCIe expansion card slots. With Sonnet's M.2 2x4 Low-Profile PCIe Card installed, a user can mount two SSDs in a single PCIe slot — with no cables, adapters, or mounting trays required — for instant-access media storage or as a high-performance scratch disk. For users whose computers lack PCIe card slots — such as notebooks, mini, and all-in-one desktops — but include Thunderbolt ports, installing the Sonnet card into one of Sonnet's multi-slot Echo Thunderbolt to PCIe card expansion systems connects the M.2 2x4 card's dual SSD slots through a single cable.

How It's Distinctive:
Compatible with macOS, Windows, and Linux operating systems, The Sonnet M.2 2x4 Low-Profile PCIe Card requires only a low-profile card space and includes both full-height and low-profile PCIe brackets — so it is ideal for use in most any desktop tower, mini workstation or server computer, or Thunderbolt to PCIe card expansion system with an available x8 or x16 PCIe slot. Because the Sonnet card employs a high-performance 16-lane PCIe 3.0 bridge chip, it doesn't require specific SSDs or a particular motherboard to operate, nor PCIe bifurcation to support RAID features. Installed in a computer's PCIe 3.0 or 4.0 card slot, the Sonnet card supports outstanding storage performance — a single SSD installed on the card can deliver data transfers up to 3,400 MB/s — with two SSDs installed and configured as a RAID 0 set, sustained transfers up to 6,600 MB/s are supported. To support their sustained high performance, the card's integrated heatsink silently cools SSDs to eliminate the need for them to "thermal throttle" — an SSD protection feature that prevents overheating by choking performance until they cool down.

When You Can Get It:
The Sonnet M.2 2x4 Low-Profile PCIe Card (part number FUS-SSD-2x4-E3S) will be available the last week of June from Sonnet and soon after from channel partners worldwide at the suggested retail price of $199.99.

https://www.sonnettech.com/product/m2-2x4-ssd-low-profile-pcie-card/overview.html

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Besides cost, the problem is having spare x8 and x16 slots. A lot of computers have only one x16 and you need it for the graphics card. 

The cheap cards with a regular NVme and a SATA one work on x4. 

Nowadays the number and size of PCie ports is getting more important. 

You also need a card to give you more SATA ports to make up for the ones you lost plugging NVmes into the motherboard

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$200 for 2x PCIe 3.0 4x does seem underwhelming in 2022.
You can buy a 1x PCIe 4.0 4x adapter for about $15.
With the money saved you can buy a decent PCIe 4.0 SSD.
The advantage of the dual card is that you can mix cheap PCIe 3.0 drives for higher capacity.
But in many cases the overall cost will be higher, so unless you really want the RAID features it seems niche.
Plus, does this offer better RAID than your motherboard?

Edited by Technostica
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7 hours ago, Reid Rosefelt said:

Besides cost, the problem is having spare x8 and x16 slots. A lot of computers have only one x16 and you need it for the graphics card. 

The cheap cards with a regular NVme and a SATA one work on x4. 

Nowadays the number and size of PCie ports is getting more important. 

You also need a card to give you more SATA ports to make up for the ones you lost plugging NVmes into the motherboard

Plus it's less confusing with an older system.  I prefer SATA because of the simplicity.

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Without a topline motherboard, you will lose options for NVMe pretty fast.  I put two in my motherboard and then put the other two on two $15 PCie cards.  And that's it for inside my computer--4 full speed NVMe drives.    If I want more, I have to put them outside my computer.  

Those two $15 cards each had room for another SATA NVMe.  They aren't any faster than regular SSDs, but it's a lot easier to install them and they leave drive bays open for later. 

I bought a card with 4 extra SATA ports.  That was a mistake,  I should have bought one with 6 or 8.   Going to have to replace it. 

As I mentioned, when you put NVMe's on your motherboard, usually two of the SATA ports on your motherboard stop working. 

 

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