I have the stock GT120 in still for emergency use. Windows just ignores it (there is no monitor connected)...
Ah ok, thanks.
I have the stock GT120 in still for emergency use. Windows just ignores it (there is no monitor connected)...
Thanks for confirming... Any issues with cards with more than 2GB of RAM?
My GTX 570 2.5 GB works awesome, just no OpenCl. I must be doing something wrong, wrecked my system twice while trying to patch it...
Good job, I hope this gets pinned/stickied!
The 2006/2007 1,1 and 2,1 Mac Pro machines have assignable PCI lane bandwidth, but only the bottom (slot 1) is 16x. They are all only PCI-e 1.0 as well. I think I read somewhere there are problems with the modern 5xx and 6xx cards in these older machines?
no answers?
no answers?
Thanks for the info in this thread. It should be stickied! Do you have any idea what, approximately, the performance hit for cards running in PCI 1.0 in Windows looks like? There's half as much bandwidth, but what impact does that have on real world performance? Just curious...
Does anyone know if I can power a GTX 580 from the optical rive bay instead of the motherboard without any power issues?
If you're talking about getting a power supply that fits into the optical drive bay (there's a link floating around somewhere, I'll try and find it) then yes, that will work fine.
If you're talking about rigging up the cables that power the optical drive to power the GPU, I actually don't know. I know the SATA power cable won't be enough. I thought that this would be a no-go, but I can't find confirmation about how much power the molex cable can supply. I would probably not suggest trying this, since we don't know if it'll work and you could end up damaging something.
If you really have to have a GTX 580, the safest option is an external power supply. This is why most people recommend getting a GTX 570, since it fits perfectly into the 225W power budget and is very close to the performance of the GTX 580.
Edit: Okay, I found this link for parallel ATA molex cables:
http://pinouts.ru/Power/BigPower_pinout.shtml
It suggests they could drive 75W just like the regular 6-pin PCIe power cables. So, this might work if you have a parallel ATA connector from a 2008 or earlier Mac Pro.
Thanks for the trouble finding the link! Much appreciated.
I might just go with the 570 then.
Edit: Okay, I found this link for parallel ATA molex cables:
http://pinouts.ru/Power/BigPower_pinout.shtml
It suggests they could drive 75W just like the regular 6-pin PCIe power cables. So, this might work if you have a parallel ATA connector from a 2008 or earlier Mac Pro.
If you're using a peripheral connector to PCI Express adapter then be sure to plug each of the adapter's peripheral connectors into a separate PSU cable. They gave you two peripheral connectors for a reason. Plugging them both into the same PSU cable forces your video card to draw its 12 volt power through one 18 gauge wire. That increases your voltage drop and power dissipation in the cable. Some current high-end video cards can suck up more than 10 amps at 12 volts with most of it coming through the PCI Express connector so it pays to be careful.
Keep in mind that MP (2006 - 2008) molex power line is single one (2 connectors on single cable).
Link you've posted states:
It might work well for some low-power-demand-cards but using this line with cards that need more juice is playing with fire IMO.
Sorry for derailing you thread a bit, but I think that's important.