What is the meaning of the keys of M.2 SSDs?
Depending on which interfaces are provided by a M.2 connector, a specific form of the connection is used. These so-called keys require M.2 plug-in cards with recesses at certain points, so that only suitable plug-in cards fit into the respective M.2 connectors.
Most currently available M.2 SSDs are Key B + M. They have both recesses and can be plugged into Key-B as well as Key-M connectors.
Buyers need to make sure the connector and module support the same key otherwise the M.2 card will not fit.
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M.2 can provide both SATA and PCI Express as an interface:
Overview of the maximum speeds of different interfaces
As mentioned above, M.2 can provide both SATA and PCI Express as an interface.
M.2 SSDs connected via PCIe offer a speed advantage.
PCIe 2.0 allows 5 GBit/s per lane, PCIe 3.0 allows 8 GBit/s per lane.
Interface | Maximum speed |
SATA 3 | 6 GBit/s |
PCIe 2.0 x2 | 10 GBit/s |
PCIe 2.0 x4 | 20 GBit/s |
PCIe 3.0 x2 | 16 GBit/s |
PCIe 3.0 x4 | 32 GBit/s |
PCIe 4.0 x4 | 64 GBit/s |
References:
General Technical Knowledge Base: M.2
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Review Date: 2022-11-15