PCIe Question

kevinthenerd

Platinum Member
Jun 27, 2002
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Somebody told me that there's quite a bit of difference between the various PCIe generations. Is there a utility that I can download somewhere that will tell me what I have so I know what kind of hardware I can support optimally? Thanks.
 

t3h l337 n3wb

Platinum Member
Apr 22, 2005
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There should only be one type of PCI-Express that everything works with. PCI-X is a completely different story.
 

kevinthenerd

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Jun 27, 2002
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Everest only verifies that I have a Dell PowerEdge 1600SC motherboard, but how can I be certain that Dell is using the right terminology when they say "PCI-X"? Is it a good bet that I have PCI-X?
 

kevinthenerd

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Jun 27, 2002
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Here's a picture of the motherboard. Can you name that interface?

http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f360/kevinthenerd/motherboard.jpg

The card on the left is a PCI video capture card. The card on the right is the Dell PERC4/SC RAID controller. The big blue thing on the far right separates the case into two different regions of airflow.

According to the sticker on the inside of the case of the computer, it says that the two green slots are "64-bit/100-MHz bus." The two white ones on the right are "64-bit/66-MHz bus," and the two on the left are, as I already know, "32-bit/33-Mhz bus."

I totally left the computer scene shortly after AGP came out. I went off to try to become a theology major, and in the mean time I tried a math major. It's only been recently that I've tried to come back into the fold because I use computers for mechanical engineering research. I feel like such an idiot because I used to have all this stuff down cold (even as far back as when ISA ruled the realm).

Edit: Sorry about my crappy camera phone. I didn't even want a camera when I bought it, but it had other important features that I needed.
 

kevinthenerd

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Jun 27, 2002
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Originally posted by: LED
You can look @ the Slots and by the age and type of the Mobo plus what I see as the Replacement Model it has 2 PCI-X slots...

Replacement model? This motherboard died and was swapped by Dell three months after purchasing it, and the BIOS update tools tell me that it's the wrong BIOS, even though the BIOS setup verifies that it's a 1600SC. (I've been reluctant to change the BIOS because, if it fails, I won't be able to fix it back myself.)
 

Green Man

Golden Member
Jan 21, 2001
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That dell does have PCI-x.
It is totally different from PCIe.
AFAIK, the differences are due to the bus speed. As long as you know which slot is 64/66 and which is 64/100, then you can figure out what cards are supported. I believe that all PCI-x cards are backwords compatible as well, so if you plug on into a slower slot it will run at the specs of the slot.
 

LED

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 1999
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Originally posted by: kevinthenerd
Originally posted by: LED
You can look @ the Slots and by the age and type of the Mobo plus what I see as the Replacement Model it has 2 PCI-X slots...

Replacement model? This motherboard died and was swapped by Dell three months after purchasing it, and the BIOS update tools tell me that it's the wrong BIOS, even though the BIOS setup verifies that it's a 1600SC. (I've been reluctant to change the BIOS because, if it fails, I won't be able to fix it back myself.)

Yes replacement Model...I'm not refering to yours in hand but the picture is one of what can be used to replace the Dell Model Motherboard you are inquiring about as it has the same specs...further research on the Specific Dell Model plainly reads that it is does indeed have 2 PCI-X Slots ...