gbohn Posted January 2, 2017 Share Posted January 2, 2017 Hi; I just build a new system on an Asus X99-E WS/USB 3.1 motherboard. I have a Samsung 950 Pro M.2 drive mounted on the motherboard's M.2 socket. I'm using AIDA64 Extreme 5.80.4000. I don't see the 950 Pro listed under the Storage/SMART section, despite seeing an entry for it in Storage/Physical drives. I noticed that under 'sensors', I do see an entry for the temp. of an 'NVMe Samsung 950 Pro' as well. The 'Samsung Magician' software does show 'Smart entries' for this drive. Is there any chance for AIDA64 to display S.M.A.R.T. values for this drive? This is under Windows 7 64 Pro. I tried the Samsung 2.4.7 NVMe drivers as well as the newer 2.0 drivers with the same effect. Thanks; P.S.: This is booted in Legacy/CSM mode, not UEFI in case that makes a difference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fiery Posted January 3, 2017 Share Posted January 3, 2017 Make sure to upgrade to the latest beta version of AIDA64 Extreme available at: https://www.aida64.com/downloads/latesta64xebeta After upgrading to this new version, make sure to restart Windows to finalize the upgrade. Let me know if it helps Thanks, Fiery Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gbohn Posted January 4, 2017 Author Share Posted January 4, 2017 Hi; I installed the beta version 5.80.4032, and I now see an entry for the Pro 950. Thanks. It doesn't seem to have any of the Threshold/Value/Worst scaled entries. Do those values still apply to NVMe drives? But this is much better than before. Thanks; Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fiery Posted January 4, 2017 Share Posted January 4, 2017 8 hours ago, gbohn said: Hi; I installed the beta version 5.80.4032, and I now see an entry for the Pro 950. Thanks. It doesn't seem to have any of the Threshold/Value/Worst scaled entries. Do those values still apply to NVMe drives? But this is much better than before. Thanks; NVMe doesn't support thresholds/value/worst fields as ATA/SATA drives do. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.