![]() ![]() On the second attempt, Device Manager reported the card as unable to start and put a yellow exclamation mark next to it. I plugged a thumb drive into the front panel socket, watched as Device Manager scanned and registered the new hardware and the thumb drive contents appear in File Manager. Like every other add-on card I've used in the past, I thought all I had to do was plug it into an empty PCIe x16 socket (there are no PCIex1 sockets), load a driver from the supplied disk (if any) and away it would go. The reader comes with an extra USB 3.0 port on the front so to use this, I needed somewhere to plug the 20-pin cable in. I like to use a built-in card reader in my desktop PC (for my Canon SD card etc). Every previous board I've owned had two but many manufacturers have taken to ditching the extra socket. I just installed this Renesas USB 3.0 Extensible Host Controller card because the new motherboard I bought had only one 20-pin USB 3.0 header. ![]() This might be of interest to anyone one else who has come across this issue. ![]()
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