![]() ![]() ![]() Something like this would take the 5v from those usb 2.0 connector and produce 12v : ebay link The adapter above has a floppy connector to give it 5v for the usb port and 12v for the pci-e x1 slot You will need 12v from somewhere, as pci-e x1 requires it, but miniPCIe has only 3.3v in it. You could do the same for the pci-e x1 slot and use two ribbon cables instead (you solder the wires at the other end directly on the pci-e card's fingers). You could even desolder it to get a lower height board. You will ignore the USB port as it most likely won't work. In that case, you could maybe get a mini PCIe to regular pci-e adapter, here's one for example : ![]() What you could do in theory is to maybe see if the wireless card connector (or whatever's on top left in your last picture) is mini pci-e slot. The flat cable is like the normal cable that comes from a regular case and plugs in a usb 2.0 header on a regular motherboard. The removable bit is just the part with the physical connectors - think of it like the small circuit board on regular cases. The USB ports will most likely come from the chipset, and HM65 Express chipset can only offer up to 12 usb 2.0 ports. ![]()
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