ASUS
ASUS - MOTHERBOARDS PCIE 3.0 X4 EXPANSION CARD V2 SUPPORTS 4 NVME M.2 UP TO 128 GB
Out of Stock
ASUS Hyper M.2 X16 Card V2 PCIe 3.0 x4 | NVMe Expansion
ASUS
MPN: HYPER M.2 X16 CARDV2
$54.99
Free shipping on orders over $500
Authorized Dealer — Full manufacturer warranty
Key Features
- Supports up to 4 NVMe M.2 drives
- PCIe 3.0 x4 interface
- Expansion card form factor
- ASUS Hyper M.2 X16 Card V2
- Model number HYPER M.2 X16 CARDV2
- Designed for internal NVMe storage scaling
- Expand internal flash capacity with support for up to 4 NVMe M.2 drives
- Increase storage density using a PCIe 3.0 x4 expansion interface
Add high-density NVMe storage to systems that need more local performance without moving to a larger storage array. ASUS Hyper M.2 X16 Card V2 is built to support up to four NVMe M.2 drives over a PCIe 3.0 x4 connection, giving infrastructure teams a compact way to expand internal flash capacity.
This kind of expansion matters when you want to keep data close to the CPU, reduce dependency on external storage for certain workloads, or build a faster local tier for caching, scratch space, or application data. By concentrating multiple M.2 drives on a single expansion card, the design helps preserve motherboard slots and keeps the build cleaner than piecemeal add-in approaches.
For procurement and architecture teams, the appeal is straightforward: more internal storage density, less chassis clutter, and a path to scale NVMe capacity within an existing platform. It is a practical upgrade for systems where every PCIe lane and every slot must be put to work.
Ideal For
- Add local NVMe capacity to a workstation or server
- Build a high-density flash tier for caching or scratch workloads
- Preserve motherboard expansion slots while increasing drive count
- Scale internal storage in systems with limited chassis space
Why This Product
- 1Supports up to four NVMe drives on one card
- 2Uses PCIe 3.0 x4 for internal expansion
- 3Delivers higher storage density than single-drive adapters
- 4Helps conserve motherboard slots in constrained builds



