![]() ![]() BEST NVIDIA GRAPHICS CARD FOR MAC PRO PROIf you own the 3,1, 4,1, or 5,1 Mac Pro you can utilize any of GPUs we sell except for the GT 1 GT mentioned above. We do not provide these methods, but information about them is readily available online. In the meantime, the 3870 is a good card and is now quiet (noisy as stock because ATI wanted to make it a single slot card for a wider base, increasing noise from a smaller fan) once I replaced the fan with a passive cooler (since the bottom PCIe2 slot has room for a dual space card) it is now super quiet :-) AMD Radeon 7950, 7970 or R9 280X if you have installed OS X Mavericks or newer via hack methods. I imagine ATI will correct this and come out with a retail version that will drive two DVI ports, just like they did for the HD 3870. Therefore, disappointed to hear that the HD 4870 will only work with one monitor on the 2008 Mac pro’s unless Apple gets Color working with dual cards. Apple never mentioned this when I ordered two of them for my video workstation. I was forced to go this route as I use Apple’s “Color” app (part of the FCP Studio 2 suite) which will not work (launch) with two cards installed. I’ve been running a HD 3870 in my 2008 Mac Pro 2.8 and it works flawlessly and much faster than the ATI 2600 XT. I would do it myself, if Apple will play this rather ignorant game with it’s clients. Rominator, would you mind to supply me with the flashin procedure for the 4870. I have 12GB RAM, with Motion set to use between 75-85% of the RAM, 4 disks equalling 4TB (3GB/s 32MB cached internal drives)…… Am I missing something. Most of the non-Apple branded cards will not work until the machine is past the boot volume selection screen (if you need it) and I. I recently had to replace a second dying NVidia 8800 GT in my Mac Pro (early 2008) but decided to stick with an Apple card. This is luducrous for such a ‘supposedly’ high end machine. Take a look at CUDA compatible GPUs for the Mac Pro and Abandoning Apple 'Blessed' GPUs. Then it was recognised, but with ALL the tweeks Ive tried I see “”NO”” improvement other than noise reduction… and I believe its slower than my ATI X1900 card. So I bought it, installed it, to find I then needed to purchase 10.5.6 (Leopard), so bought this, installed, fitted the 8800. “The 8800GT is the best one for this model”…. Recently spoke with Apple re a graphics upgrade. Work demanded I leave the mac pro for a while and now on my return, I am still convinced Ive been sold a 5k bathtub. I have used the ATI x1900 as Apple recommended on initial purchase… It seemed to run ok with MOTION graphics at osx9.x, then on upgrading to 10.X Tiger, it slowed dramatically for me or appeared to. I have the 2007 2.1 2 cpu Quad-core (core?) The quick results are: GT120 functions, in both ports, in 800MHz Mac Pro. BEST NVIDIA GRAPHICS CARD FOR MAC PRO UPDATEUPDATE 8/27/10 We tested the Radeon 58 graphics cards with all model year (2006-2010) Mac Pros…see the results at this revealing post! Our back room gurus tested the NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 and the ATI Radeon HD 4870 graphics cards from the early 2009 Mac Pro in the 800MHz and 667MHz Mac Pro models with varying success. Update note 3/17/09 should note that testing was done under OS X 10.5.6 and was done with a Mini DisplayPort straight into a new display. We’ll have more details later, but there’s a preliminary first look summary. If you have an 800MHz Mac Pro now – the GT120 ought to become a nice option all around… And the 4870 maybe too for those wanting that super video performance while not needing it to support two displays. No go with either of Video Cards from the new Mac Pros. GT120 – Works like a champ with both DisplayPort and DVI Port. The quick results are: GT120 functions, in both ports, in 800MHz Mac Pro.Ĥ870 – Works A-OK via its DVI port. Summary: if it's a beefy nVidia or ATI/AMD video card you can put in your Mac, it's probably supported.Our back room gurus tested the NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 and the ATI Radeon HD 4870 graphics cards from the early 2009 Mac Pro in the 800MHz and 667MHz Mac Pro models with varying success.
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