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Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem
So if you already have a PCIE 4.0 NVME SSD as an OS drive then you're fine to leave that as-is. Use the new ssd to house games. Once you have at least 1x secondary drive, after its formatted and assigned a drive letter you can configure all the major game clients settings and add a game library on a secondary drive so either its the default location for game installs moving forward or is an option when clicking install you would then have option to choose the library on another drive.
Unless you are willing to either wipe out the old drive or backup off of it what you need onto some other drive (not the new ssd though) and then wipe both drives and do a clean OS install on the new PCIE 5.0 SSD then it's not worth worrying about.
it does help you. It's up to you, because it doesn't matter how you want to use it. There is no "best". It's just storage, use it how you want.
Although my preference is to install Windows on the fastest drive I have. But seeing as what you're already running, the difference would be fairly inconsequential most of the time.
I would generally agree, I would prefer the fastest drive for the OS. However, it's going to be a bit more work to do the cloning or do a clean install of windows and set everything back up. That's up to you. But it would be 99% your preference, and 1% actual performance benefit in most cases.
I might be willing to do that work personally. But I won't pretend everyone should or that there's a lot of measurable benefit beyond my own satisfaction.
Gaming and general computing uses random reads, the crazy performance numbers, are for sequential, as far as random go, the fastest drive isn't much better than a, quality 5 year old sata drive.
As a rule of thumb, you want your applications on your fastest drive.
As a rule of thumb, you want your games on your fastest drive.
As a rule of thumb, you want your stored files being accessed from your fastest drive.
See where this is going? Ideally, you want anything and everything you're accessing to be on something faster as opposed to something slower. When working with tiered storage (meaning it's not all identical and some is faster/slower than others), you don't have that option though.
It's sort of worth pointing out too that on most platforms, the primary M2 drive is connected directly to the CPU and secondary ones sometimes aren't. The secondary ones are often connected to the chipset which itself is connected to the CPU. So what's the difference? Beyond some added latency, this connection uses as limited number of lanes. In particular, AMD platforms only use 4 lanes (recent Intel platforms use 8 as far as I know). Guess how many lanes a single NVMe drive uses? The answer is 4. While the drop is small, it's there. So I'd always have the OS on the primary M2 port as well.
But none of these are hard rules. Just "most efficient average measures".
You haven't stated what drives you're using, only that one is PCI Express 4.0 and the other is 5.0. That doesn't say much.
I'll presume the 4.0 drive is something like an SN850X (one of the fastest 4.0 drives) or a SN770 (fairly performant but more mid-range overall) and the 5.0 could imply it's the new SN8100. The latter would be much faster than either or the other two, but it's mostly going to be peak sequential values.
There's sort of two ways to look at this.
The first is that "it doesn't matter" because even the slowest possible drive here (the SN770) probably won't be blindly discernible compared to the fastest for most uses. For non-power users, that will likely be true.
The second is that if you already have a very performant PCI Express 4.0 drive (already well into "not discernible" territory) and are spending money on a more premium drive, you may as well make use of it all in the best way you can. And the time to clone and switch positions of an SSD is small, which is ultimately what would make me lean towards this option.
That was true years ago, today, there is literally no difference between a Gen 3 NVMe and a Gen 5 NVMe, you will see literally zero difference in your OS because storage speed is no longer the bottleneck.
Saying it's "zero" isn't true though. Small and imperceptible blindly, sure, but then that applies far more for games, so...
The system drive is going to hold not just the OS itself but presumably all your applications (possibly including some games). Small and imperceptible for all the data you work with adds up more in my mind than a slight difference in a loading screen here and there.
But as I said at the end of my post, either way works about as well here. Context also matters. The thread starter already has the drive, so the only cost at this point is the time to clone and swap the drive, which is nothing. The older drive is also larger, so I think it would be a better fit for an expanded games drive as opposed to the inverse.