![]() ![]() Sandy Bridge integrated PCIe Controller supported PCIe 2.0 speeds whereas its socket compatible successor Ivy Bridge supported PCIe 3.0, and you could actually use that on the PCIe Slots wired to the Processor just by upgrading to Ivy Bridge on Sandy Bridge era boards. We also went though previous generation motherboards supporting a new PCIe generation with Intel Ivy Bridge. My AM3 ASUS M4A785TD-V EVO which officially supported 16 GiB RAM with 4 * 4 GiB modules yet worked fine with 4 * 8 GiB modules for a full 32 GiB comes to mind. ![]() Click to expand.This is actually a rather mediocre answer because there were times in the past where new stuff was actually supported but motherboards specs weren't officially updated. ![]()
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