Features: Supports PCIE M.2 SSD (NVMe or AHCI, Key-M), PCIE 3.0 X4 32 Gbps bandwidth Supports SATA-based M.2 SSD (Key-B / B + M), SATA 6 Gbps bandwidth Apply to 2280/2260/2242/2230mm M.2 SSD Supports mSATA, 30x50mm, SATA 6 Gbps bandwidth Support TRIM and UASP PCIe x4 support PCIe x16 slot Supports PCIe 1.0, PCIe 2.0 and PCIe 3.0 motherboard Compatible with Windows / MAC/Linux, no driver required (Note: Win7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 are not compatible with NVME SSD) Operating temperature range: -40 - 85 oC. LED display for each SSD Software Windows 10/8, Windows Server 2012 R2, Linux series, Fedora, SUSE, Ubuntu, Red Hat native drivers support both PCIe-NVMe and PCIe-AHCI. Note: Mac Pro 2009, 2010 and 2012 models support PCIe-AHCI SSD only. System Requirement:  PCIE x4 / x8 / x16 Lane Installation Compatibility with PCIe NVMe/AHCI SSD (Incomplete List)  Samsung XP941, SM951 (AHCI or NVMe), 950 Pro Series SSDs,PM961、960EVO、SM961、PM951、960EVO INTEL 600P Liteon T10 Kingston HyperX Predator M.2 Plextor M6e Series M.2 SSD Note: All of the 3 SSDs(M.2 PCIE-based SSD, M.2 SATA-based SSD and mSATA SSD) can work at the same time. 
R**K
A great way to add PCIE SSD's to Mac Pro 2010
No documentation, not even a small slip of paper. After many tries and fumbling around got this to work on Mac Pro 5.1 running High Sierra. It is 5-6 times faster than my Mercury SSD in the SATA II slots. I used it with a Samsung 500GB 570 EVO Pro. It seems to need a 16 channel PCIE slot and the memory card goes in the lower left bank. No extra software needed. No need to use the included cables. Only drawback is that I cannot seem to boot from this drive. One star deducted for lack of documentation and one for no support contact info. NOW ... what to put on this drive??
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