Kristoff Rand
Yeah... That's good advice Durge. 
Yeah... That's good advice Durge.![]()
I've heard this before but when I had triple 780 Tis (for only a week or two) they were running at true PCI-E 3.0 @ 16x,16x, and 8x. I think the reserved PCI-E lanes are something else. From the PCH instead of the CPU or something.40 lanes is top width I believe... And then some of those are normally reserved.
The PCI Express link between two devices can consist of anywhere from one to 32 lanes. In a multi-lane link, the packet data is striped across lanes, and peak data throughput scales with the overall link width. The lane count is automatically negotiated during device initialization, and can be restricted by either endpoint.
I have no idea what that's explaining. Maybe it's speaking theoretically for one device (i.e. 1 GPU). The i7-970, 980 etc. (can't remember the name), Sandy-E, Ivy-E, and H-E all include / are all capable of 40 PCI-E lanes.
WHoa whoa whoa... a hack to force Sandy to do threesomes? really? Like this?
http://nvidia.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3135/~/geforce-gen3-support-on-x79-platform
View attachment 17017
It's determined by the chipset and the CPU. For example, the X99 chipset is capable of 40 lanes but the 5820k CPU for that platform is only capable of up to 24 lanes, or 28 or something - I can't remember exactly but you get the point.How do you check # of supported lanes of a mobo?
Whats uefi for, what benefit?
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I was actually showing Nvidia Inspector which doesn't show the EUFI in the same location. Here's my GPU-Z showing that it didn't work for me.
The CSM, or Compatibility Support Module, is used so a UEFI type BIOS can be used or run as a standard BIOS does.
When CSM is enabled, a PC is not UEFI booting, it is BIOS booting.
In order to UEFI boot with Windows 8, CSM must be disabled.
durge how i flash bios not 1 thing i ever been game enough to play with as dont want to stuff it up. csm ?
When CSM (Compatibility Support Module) is enabled it allows a modern EFI based PC to operate in a Legacy BIOS mode.
This allows for your operating system to be installed and run from a traditional MBR (Master Boot Record) disk and the advanced features of the EFI system are disabled.
Switching to UEFI mode enables the EFI system. UEFI PCs usually use the GPT file table, which includes a hidden SYSTEM partition and a Windows SYSTEM RESERVED partition.
If you don't know how to flash your bios, I would not recommend flashing your bios. Many newer systems come with windows programs to do it for you... Much, much safer.
im on win7 so il just stick with it and not touch bios. tyvm for your help guys much appreciated.
i5-2500K | i7-5960X | |
Physical Cores | 4 | 8 |
Threads (Physical Cores + Virtual Cores) | 4 | 16 |
RAM Type | DDR3 | DDR4 |
RAM Amount (max) | 32 GB (4 x 8GB) | 128 GB |
RAM Frequency (max) | 2133 MHz (SB IMC probably can't handle 2400 MHz | >3200 MHz |
RAM Channeling | Dual | Quad |