Your motherboard’s fastest storage slot might not be the one you should actually use first
Building a PC comes with a lot of unwritten (and written) rules that get passed around forums, YouTube comment sections, and Reddit threads until they calcify into conventional wisdom. Some of them aren't intuitive, but some of them seem a bit too simple, like M.2 SSD installation. When you install your SSD, you put it in the first M.2 slot. It's labeled M2_1, it's closest to the CPU, and it's the fastest one on the board. Why would you put your drive anywhere else? The short answer is that for most builders, that slot is overkill, and depending on your motherboard, using it without the right drive could actually work against you.
Building a PC comes with a lot of unwritten (and written) rules that get passed around forums, YouTube comment sections, and Reddit threads until they calcify into conventional wisdom. Some of them aren’t intuitive, but some of them seem a bit too simple, like M.2 SSD installation. When you install your SSD, you put it in the first M.2 slot. It’s labeled M2_1, it’s closest to the CPU, and it’s the fastest one on the board. Why would you put your drive anywhere else? The short answer is that for most builders, that slot is overkill, and depending on your motherboard, using it without the right drive could actually work against you.
Sophia Wilson
Atlanta
Atlanta
Published by: aplhsindia.in
