Hello all, I agree that these adapters should work fine. It looks like this=20 company has spent a lot of time and effort developing them. Thanks, rich! On 8/31/2014 5:44 PM, peter green wrote: > Joe McCauley wrote: >> I'm upgrading my PC & the new system has no PCI slots. I need to run som= e NI data acquisition PCI cards in this machine, so I was looking at one of= these - http://www.virtuavia.eu/shop/pci-e-x1-to-dual-pci-with-case.html. >> >> Has anyone used something similar? Will my OS (windows 7/8.1) see the ca= rds? I'm going to be running them in Labview. I'm sort of stuck with this m= achine and apart from that, PCI slots seem to be well on the way out so if = it worked, this would be a lot better than throwing out all the PCI cards I= use from time to time. > Theres no general reason why a PCIe to PCI adaptor like this shouldn't > work. PCIe to PCI bridges are a pretty standard component which windows > knows how to deal with (many motherboards have them onboard). The only > question is will the corners they have cut (for example they appear to > be abusing a USB3 cable to carry the PCIe connection) lead to > unreliability. > > I haven't used such soloutions myself but I did hear from an NI guy that > some external expansion soloutions had caused problems with their cards > in the past. > > Are you being forced into a specific model of computer by an employer or > something? Last I looked the "leet gamer" boards were generally lacking > PCI and the smaller form factor boards tend to only have at most one PCI > slot due to space restrictions but there were plenty of midrange ATX > boards arround with 2-3 PCI slots. > > --=20 http://www.piclist.com/techref/piclist PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .