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ForgedTurbo

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  1. Thanks for the reply, but why would Windows know? I might have to stick with a ultra fast storage drive, and a slower boot drive.
  2. Greetings. I just purchased an Intel 600P NVMe M.2 PCI-e SSD Trying to put it in my Laptop (MSI GE62 2QD 081US) And the BIOS cannot detect the SSD, Meanwhile, Windows 10 Home (64-bit) is detecting it just fine. I can read from and write to the SSD, no problem. The laptop has a 5th Gen Intel Processor (Broadwell) i7-5700HQ Which I am not sure if supports NVMe The motherboard supports PCI-e SSD (PCI-e 2.0 x4) (it should be compatible with PCI-e 3.0 x4)(I am not worried about the bottle neck.) I updated the BIOS, which still indicates the PCI-e Hard Drive Slot as "Empty" I can use it for storage at the moment, but I would rather use it as my boot drive. I don't know why and how this happened, so please help!! Thanks in advance.
  3. Thanks for the reply. Mine does support one PCI-e SSD, And I can confirm that I put it in the right slot. Can NVMe hardware run in AHCI mode? That's the question now.
  4. Greetings. I just purchased an Intel 600P NVMe M.2 PCI-e SSD Trying to put it in my Laptop (MSI GE62 2QD 081US) And the BIOS cannot detect the SSD, Meanwhile, Windows 10 is detecting it just fine. I can read from and write to the SSD, no problem. The laptop has a 5th Gen Intel Processor (Broadwell) i7-5700HQ Which I am not sure if supports NVMe The motherboard supports PCI-e SSD (PCI-e 2.0 x4) (it should be compatible with PCI-e 3.0 x4) I am not worried about the bottle neck. I updated the BIOS, which still indicates the PCI-e Hard Drive Slot as "Empty" I can use it for storage at the moment, but I would rather use it as my boot drive. I don't know why and how this happened, so please help!! Thanks in advance.
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