Frying hardware or not, 7xxx support in OSX is very awesome. Now if only Apple would take the next step and give us crossfire support...
Perhaps someone could take an old Mac Pro mobo and crank the power up until it melts?
I think the purpose of a forum such as this is exactly what the OP did - give real world experience...
Thanks for the info revelstudios. Most of us are intelligent enough to appreciate your post for what it is.
And then along come the MacRumor nannies to tell me my hardware "could get fried" because they don't believe Apple built in a safety-overhead that's part of the original spec. Good grief.
... People have fried their boards trying to run too much power through the motherboard tracers.
Maybe they just assume users will stick to the 6 pin 75 watt/cable "spec" and not use adapters/splitters. Maybe they assumed users will stick to Apple-sanctioned cards. The appearance of drivers doesn't mean Apple "blesses" this equipment.
The motherboard is the most expensive internal component, since Apple charges $1,200 for it. You're saying it can handle wattage above even the 75watt/connector standard without any basis in reality.
If you have any real sources for information, please let us know.
With the hundreds (thousands) of users here I like to here an "Aye" from everyone who has fried a logic board trace from using a 6 to 8 pin adapter.....
Please speak up !
*SNIP*
*mind blown* You guys are hypothesizing it can't... I'm running multiple proofs it can. I've also provided the actual spec used on the same components for an HP product, built by Intel -- the very same as the MP's. No basis in reality? Flip that script.
... People have fried their boards trying to run too much power through the motherboard tracers. This is a fact.
silly question, where is it stated a mac pro is only able to deliver 225W to a single gfx card?
Because bunging two 5770's in (one of apples options) is a 300W total option, so you're only really messing with a difference of 75w being pushed to two pcie slots, instead of 150w to one... & pcie power draw is measured by bus too, as I understand it.
- Card one = 75W (slot) + 75W (cable)
- Card two = 75W (slot) + 75W (cable)
I think you all are missing something here...
The HD7970 non-GHZ was measured to be around 200 Watts in actual power draw. The HD7970 GHZ draws about 20 Watts more. That is 220 Watts which is within spec. The 8 pin is only really necessary when overclocking.
According to hwcompare.com the 7970 is rated at 250w max TDP, they do not yet have the GHZ edition listed.
Thanks for the nod, Class. The worst part of this entire debacle here; I base my business and the livelihood of my family and the people that work for us around this kind of technology. I'm not flaunting any of this stuff to run benchmarks. We're using these kits every day for some seriously heavy-lifting stuff. Post visual effects, editing and transcoding 4K and 5K RAW footage, etc. We're filming on RED Epic camera systems and turning out products that get projected in theaters and will be featured at next year's NAB. We beat the heck out of these machines and did some serious multi-day burn-in renders well before I ever posted here.
And then along come the MacRumor nannies to tell me my hardware "could get fried" because they don't believe Apple built in a safety-overhead that's part of the original spec. Good grief. What I didn't mention (only hinted earlier) is that most of the boxes we're running these 7970's in ALSO have RED Rocket cards too: http://www.red.com/store/products/red-rocket
Enjoy the new hardware guys and I hope this information helps some people out there. Pretty exciting times for Mac Pro's. A really nice turn from the disappointing Summer release.
Pick up a 2012 5,1 Mac Pro, stack it with RAM, use SSD and raid stripe SSD's (VOL1 OS+Apps, VOL2 Cache, VOL3-4 R0 Data), add a USB 3.0 and eSATA card, drop in a 7970 Radeon and your machine(s) will positively chew through the heaviest that can be imagined. This configuration smokes the MAINGEAR's we invested in. Really the only thing our builds can't do is Thunderbolt. There's nothing else available right now we'd even want. So problem solved, the 5,1 is bleeding edge again. Way to go Apple!
Both the GHZ and non-GHZ version have 250 watt max TDP. However that is not what the cards actually draw under load.
Confirmed working, AMD Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition on OS X 10.8.3, Mid 2012 Mac Pro, no flashing required. Also confirmed working since 10.8.1 beta. Strongly believe this is here to stay. Beautiful hardware. Real-time playback of full-resolution 4K footage in FCPX. Also tested with Adobe apps and lots of GPU crunching. Stable. No issues at all.
However, it shows the PSU is certainly more than capable, it's 980W isn't it?
I would be much happier if a cable was run from the psu directly to the 8 pin port on the gfx card...
Nox
The reason I personally moved to Apple from Windows was because I didn't want to be my own tech support. I just wanted things to work...
At some point, I bought into that Apple mantra true. Then I quickly realized it's a load of bunk.
For starters; Apple TV never works correctly. There are constant software bugs and connectivity niggles and after snapping up three generations of hardware for multiple televisions across home and studio, Apple announces "it's a hobby". Nice. How about the fact that the iMacs have, for multiple generations now, not matched the hardware dimensions of the Apple LED Cinema Displays? You need to buy an after-market stand to get the monitors leveled for multi-monitor mini-seam transitioning.
Or what about the Airport Express modules that would limply hang off the wall with their prongs exposed, luring children (worst-case) or would simply fall off the wall with the slightest bump (common)? Or how about the fact that the current generation of Airport Extreme and Airport Express hockey pucks are not compatible when attempting to use the Express to expand a network (even though Apple claims they are)? What of the fact that every single 30 pin iToy connector I've ever seen frays at the plug? Or the fact that Apple had to replace all of the original 5v cubes? Or that the first and second generation Apple Garage Band apps had a bug that only allowed monaural output? Pretty significant when you're talking about a music program... Or that Apple bought Logic and drove the product into the ground (which they also did with other major professional tools)?
Remember the iPhone antenna-gate problems? How about the first generation iPhone that had a "lock screen" that didn't actually lock/secure anything? Did you ever use the iPhone 4.* release that caused visual voicemail to not display for up to 30 seconds each time?
I once had an iMac DVD jam in the side-screen slot load. That DVD and the HDD inside of the iMac contained an unreleased album from a major recording artist, plus unreleased/unapproved video footage from a music video rough. I called Apple Support and after attempts at software troubleshooting, they told me it was not possible for me to fix this by myself. I would need to take the iMac into an Apple store to fix it. Because Apple neglected to include the paperclip force eject hole that every other computer on Earth has -- presumably this was because Apple didn't like the aesthetics of a pin hole -- I had to bring everything into an Apple Store to fix this and they would need to bring the computer into the back room (where I'm not allowed) to perform the work. Nope. Couldn't risk it. Had to do the disassembly and dirty work myself. All.. to... eject... a DVD. The drive never jammed again and I made sure to only use external drives for vital work.
Have you ever downloaded an album from iTunes that was corrupted and then had to email Apple and ask for a re-download? I have. Did you ever need to contact Apple support because you had reached the limits of iTunes activations and needed to reset all of them so you could use iTunes again? Yep, been there.
How many times in a week do you need to provide your administrator password, sometimes even multiple times in a row. I distinctly remember Apple making fun of Microsoft for this (which no longer happens in Windows since 7, by the way).
Ever max out your RAM shopping with Apple only to find out later, the hardware can safely support much more but Apple inexplicably won't sell or advertise that? That's fun. And expensive.
Or how about all of us MacBook Air buyers that bought the first generation hardware and only found out later, after light-weight use (browsing internet or playing music) the thing would heat up on battery and the second processor core would shutdown. Nice. Great design there. Again, expensive.
I've also got an iTunes-bought Disney movie I bought for my daughter that inexplicably pops French credits and then de-synchronizes the vocal track in the middle of playback. I've emailed Apple about that and never heard a word back. But because the video file is 'in the cloud' via iTunes Match, it can't be fixed on our end.
Or that Apple Maps doesn't work as-well-as Google Maps and even though they had a license that ran until next year, they pulled the plug in the interest of competition only.
There are countless more. These just off the top of my head. "It just works" is a marketing bullet point.
But hey, these 7970's do 'just work' and no one here wants to believe that...