Thursday, May 26th 2022

Sonnet Announces McFiver PCIe Adapter Card with NMVe SSD, 10 GbE, and 10 Gbps USB Type-C

Sonnet Technologies today announced the McFiver PCIe Card, the latest offering in the company's expansive family of computer adapter cards. The McFiver card features five interfaces — two M.2 NVMe SSD slots, one 10 Gigabit Ethernet port, and two USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) Type-C ports — and fits neatly inside a single-width card space. The Sonnet card is compatible with Mac, Windows, and Linux computers with an available x8 PCIe slot, and with computers with Thunderbolt ports when installed in a Thunderbolt to PCIe card expansion system with an available x8 PCIe slot.

Sonnet's McFiver PCIe Card enables users to add high-performance internal SSD storage, plus 10GBASE-T (copper), 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10GbE), and 10 Gbps USB-C ports to their systems but requires only a single card slot (instead of the three slots single-purpose cards would occupy). The McFiver card mounts one or two single- or double-sided M.2 NVMe 2280 PCIe SSDs (sold separately) for ultra-fast file access; using today's highest capacity SSDs, up to 16 TB of storage may be installed. The card's 10GbE port connects to 10GbE network infrastructure and shared storage systems via inexpensive Cat 6 or Cat 6A cabling. The USB-C ports connect and power two high-performance USB peripherals, supporting a full 10 Gbps connection through each port, and providing USB bus-powered SSD, SSD RAID, and hard drive devices with up to 7.5 watts of power through each port.
For most creators, the ability to move files quickly — whether to or from onboard storage, across a network, or to or from external drives — can be critical to their workflows. While individual adapter cards may offer the capability to speed up one part of the workflow, installing three adapter cards to get all the interfaces a user needs may not be feasible, even in computers with multiple expansion card slots. Sonnet's McFiver PCIe card provides all the benefits of individual SSD storage, 10 Gigabit Ethernet network interface, and 10 Gbps USB-C adapters in a high-performance PCIe card that requires only a single card space for installation. Sonnet's engineers designed the card so that it provides great performance for each function. For users whose computers lack PCIe card slots — such as notebook, mini, and all-in-one desktops — but include Thunderbolt ports, installing the McFiver in one of Sonnet's Echo Thunderbolt to PCIe card expansion systems can add the McFiver card's interfaces through a single cable.

Compatible with macOS, Windows, and Linux operating systems, the McFiver PCIe Card is the only computer card available featuring M.2 NVMe SSD slots and 10GBASE-T 10GbE and USB 3.2 Gen 2 USB-C ports. The card requires only a full-height card space and no power connection — there's no need to connect auxiliary power to the card or AC power adapters to connected USB devices for operation — so it is ideal for use in most any PC or Thunderbolt to PCIe card expansion system with an available x8 PCIe slot.

Because the McFiver employs an x8 PCIe 3.0 bridge chip, the card doesn't require specific SSDs or a particular motherboard to operate, nor PCIe bifurcation to support RAID features. Placed in a computer's PCIe 3.0 or 4.0 card slot, the McFiver card supports outstanding storage performance — a single NVMe PCIe SSD installed on the card can deliver data transfers up to 3,400 MB / s — with two SSDs installed and formatted as a RAID 0 set, sustained transfers up to 6,600 MB / s are supported.

The McFiver's RJ45 10GbE port connects to 10GbE infrastructure via inexpensive Cat 6 or Cat 6A copper cabling at distances of up to 55 or 100 meters, respectively. The card also supports multi-Gigabit (5 Gb / s and 2.5 Gb / s) Ethernet speeds on commonplace (existing) Cat 5e (and better) cabling at distances of up to 100 meters when used with switches with multi-Gigabit support. For Mac users, the card also offers supports Audio Video Bridging (IEEE 802.1Qav, AVB). When used with a switch or router (plus infrastructure) with AVB support, the card is ideal for use in pro audio and video applications where synchronization of data streams is critical.

Like other current Sonnet USB-C cards, the McFiver supports full 10 Gbps bandwidth to each USB port. Sonnet designed the USB sub-system with a focus on intelligent power management and delivery for powering connected drives through its ports to deliver reliable operation when two drives are connected. The card also provides independent power regulation to isolate each port to prevent cross-coupled power glitches — such as when a hard drive spins up after connection — that may cause accidental disconnects of other connected devices.

Availability & Pricing

The McFiver PCIe Card (part number G10-USBC-M2-E) will be available the second week of June from Sonnet and soon after from channel partners worldwide at the suggested retail price of 399.99 USD.
Source: Sonnet
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14 Comments on Sonnet Announces McFiver PCIe Adapter Card with NMVe SSD, 10 GbE, and 10 Gbps USB Type-C

#2
Xajel
Just seeing that price tells me this has a PCIe switch/bridge.

Man thats expensive. PC makers should put some pressure on PCIe switch/bridge makers to reduce the prices for the consumer market.
Posted on Reply
#3
trespot
This is pretty much what I need for my use case actually I hope it will be available in my region, hopefully they can iterate on this product and make another version that can utilize 8x Gen 4 PCIE lanes by allowing PCIE Gen 4 NVME speeds.
Posted on Reply
#4
Octavean
Nice, they really tossed in the kitchen sink with this one. Looks like a great solution especially since these new RyZen 7000 series AM4 Motherboards seem to disproportionately ship with either a scant 2 or 3 PCIe slots. I mean WTF.
Posted on Reply
#5
5 o'clock Charlie
UskompufMcFiver
This name sounds more like a McDonald's menu item than a multi interface expansion card :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#7
JAB Creations
I like the extra functionality of the card, USB C is going to be the way moving forward and yet the ports are still added to socket AM5 motherboards? I plan on having three single-partition drives all based on NVMe, C:\, D:\ and E:\ and with three or hour drives on a motherboard tops that would require a PCI-Express card. If it really is $400 that'd be a bit steep.
Posted on Reply
#8
Minus Infinity
mouacyk399.99 USD
Holy crap, this will be $600 in Australia.
Posted on Reply
#9
Octavean
Yeah, if accurate, ~$399 is a bit steep. I could buy a Thunderbolt 4 card (AIC) for under ~$100 USD and if on th high side it would still be under ~$199 on eBay for such a Thunderbolt 4 card.

With a Thunderbolt 4 card one could add a 10GbE external NIC and an external SSD and maybe have a free USB 4.0 port (probably not). A Thunderbolt doc could add more ports if needed.

Yeah, ~$399 is `bit too much.
Posted on Reply
#10
scoutg
trespotThis is pretty much what I need for my use case actually I hope it will be available in my region, hopefully they can iterate on this product and make another version that can utilize 8x Gen 4 PCIE lanes by allowing PCIE Gen 4 NVME speeds.
I'm in the same boat, I only have enough expansion slots for 1 card that's bigger than pcie 1x, I need a USB card to bypass AMD USB driver tomfoolery with vr, but I also want a 10g link to my nas, plus I can get a nice raid array going for game saves and installs to minimize the amount of individually recognized drives in my system from something like 5 of varying capacity to something more reasonable, the perfect storm would be for this to go on sale
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#11
Prima.Vera
400$ without taxes... are they beyond stupidity??
Posted on Reply
#12
chrcoluk
Awesome product, shame about the pricing. This is how extra m.2 i/o should be managed though in my opinion, PCI-E slots are so flexible. Also integrating newer USB tech extends usability of older boards.
Posted on Reply
#13
JaymondoGB
Was really interesting until I saw the price. Still no doubt the Chinese will copy the device for half the price within a short amount of time
Posted on Reply
#14
Octavean
For what it’s worth, I have a QNAP QM2-2P10G1TB add in card installed in my TS-653D NAS. It’s only a 2x PCIe Gen3 dual NVMe SSD and 10GbE spec card but the ability to have the dual SSD’s and 10GbE is a boon. Dual USB 3.2 10Gbps Type-C would have been an additional awesome feature but it was relatively cheap at about ~$120 USD IIRC. Plus there is no way said card would have the bandwidth for all that.

The QM2-2P10G1TB card should work in a PC too.

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