Boards that include a PCIe 5.0 M.2 slot so often also include integrated passive cooling that has to stripped off first just to install one of the hot-n-hungry PCIe 5.0 SSDs and if the piece you're stripping off to clearn room for your roasty-toasty PCIe 5.0 SSD's active cooling solution was also the same piece that cooled your PCIe 4.0 drive you also use - then tough luck.
Just like RGB Lightning it's about showing off the awesome ASUS Proart / ASUS ROG GAMER Logo / MSI Godike / Gigabyte whatever ... and so on Bullshit marketing Labels.
It's not about functionality.
The mainboard guys are for sure smart and intelligent to put M2 drives below expansion slots. I always have to remove the graphic card to access the M2 NVME drive.
Well they improved now the design with even bigger M2 passive covers which even block more of the mainboard area.
The passive cooler from a proper M2 NVME SSD is for sure better as the usual bad passive cooler from the mainboard in my point of view. These placeholder advertisement shields are just for show and not really decent passive cooling for a M2 drive in my point of view. The side profile of my e.g. Corsair MP 600 Pro has for sure better cooling characteristics as e.g. the m2 covers from my prevous msi b550 gaming edge wifi. There were some tables in the past during my education where we learnt about the characteristics of passive coolers.
I prefer a cheaper mainboard without those "useless" m2 cooling covers with bad cooling characterics.
I use PCIe 4.0 as main drives and backup drive.
My biggest time sink is cloning system for back-up.
Because of throttling, the data transfer is only slightly better then SATA.
It usually takes about 2 hours for clonezilla to create and check a back-up.
It is worth doing, but I wish the hardware was faster.
I disagree. Backup to USB-NVME-SSD is much faster as backup to USB-SATA-SSD.
My gnu gentoo linux installation was installed in 2006.
The backup took over 25 minutes for around 60GB from Mainboard NVME SSD to external USB-A to SATA SSD. I used different SATA SSDs in the sizes for 120 to 128GB. Around 5 drives. Times were similar for a long time period. Before that I had similar times for my gaming notebook internal SATA SSD to USB - SATA SSD. (Same setup)
Improvement:
I had for a while
Internal drive: P5Plus 1TB + LVM2 Container -> Luks encryption container -> ext4 file system
backup to usb-a -> NVME -> around 6-8 minutes
Now:
Internal drive: KC3000 2TB + LVM2 Container -> Luks encryption container -> BTRFS file system
backup to usb-a -> NVME -> round up to 6 minutes for 90TB mixed data. Hole gentoo installation and data.
Additional information:
I write the start time stamp to a file. I force all writing operations and than write the end date time stamp to a file. My backups are done without internet connections with a live gnu linux iso.
Please note I backup from a compressed and encrypted volume (gentoo btrfs zstd / luks / lvm) to external encrypted volume (lvm2 / luks / ext4)
I bought a low end, cheap, "garbage" PCIE 3.0 drive for that purpose. Not sure if a better high end drive like a Crucial P5 Plus or better reduce even more the backup time. It was a money decision to go for that cheap WD drive.
I use low spec as external NVME drive (german amazon text - copy paste):
WD Blue SN570 1TB High-Performance M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD, mit bis zu 3500MB/s Lesegeschwindigkeit
ICY BOX SSD M.2 NVMe Gehäuse, USB 3.1 (Gen2, 10 Gbit/s), Kühlsystem, USB-C, USB-A, PCIe M-Key, Aluminium, grau
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These times are reproducible and similar.
I'm well aware of, that i compare apples with bananas. It's the same gnu gentoo linux installation with a lot of similar data. But the user data changed a bit. The system files changes a lot, as the system gets updates a alot. I wanted to show that there is a very big time difference between USB-A to USB-SATA-SSD bridge in comparission with USB-A to USB-NVME-SSD bridge. It also matters how you make backups on which file system and which operating systems. Working with the bash shell in gnu linux with cp / cryptsetup commands is kinda fast in my point of view. I would never use a graphical user interface for backups.
I prefer hole system backups. I moved my installation several times and also tested the backups. The backup strategy works.