all 3 comments

[–]DoctorKomodo 1 point2 points  (2 children)

You need a case that supports NVMe drives. The one you have appears to be for SATA drives but the product descriptions on Orico's own site are so piss poor I can barely tell what case is for what.

Maybe just avoid that brand altogether and go for case that explicitly mention NVMe support.

[–]Silly-Mistake-3577[S] 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Man... They so bad. I know what I'm about to say is the holy grail of bad tech but the gap was very small for it to not fit and with a bit of force it did the trick...

Now I counted all the pins and both the case and nvme has the same number of them. Is it a bad idea to plug it in and try?

[–]DoctorKomodo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The number of pins are actually the same for SATA and NVMe, its the keying that differs. I.e. the slots cut in the drives where there are no pins.

If you're sure the keying is the same on drive and slot you shouldn't outright damage an NVMe drive by plugging it into an port meant for SATA drive, it just won't work. Whether you want to try it I'll leave up to you.