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Can I have two different GPU in my motherboard
How do I run the integrated video adaptor alongside the GPU on a Ivy Bridge system?What's the difference between MSI's N660 Gaming and N660 TF GPU editions?Is is possible to use SLI with two identical graphics cards with different RAM sizes?Will Loading Up My PCI Express Slots Affect GPU Performance?My GPU stops suddenly and get black screenAny way to connect two VGA monitors to GeForce 970?Can I use two monitors each connected to my GPU and motherboard?Connecting HDMI-only monitor to GPU or motherboardWill this PCI-E 1X to 16X Bottleneck my GPU?Select GPU to use by specific applicationshp nvidia quadro pro p2000 not detected by motherboard (msi Z270 gaming pro carbon)
I would like to know if i can install second GPU card in my motherboard msi 970
here are the specs
https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/970-GAMING/Specification
it has two slots for GPU and i have geforce gtx 1050 ti in one of them but i was wondering if i could put some old cheap GPU in the second one and hook up couple more monitors to it for simple work related tasks,
I'm not sure if i can have to have two different GPU or do i need same models?
Basically I'm trying to achieve 4 monitor, I already have two monitors connected right now and I don't need a second expensive gtx 1050 for handling extremely simple tasks.
If I can do it will I be able to drag programs between all monitors?
For example what happens if I have a power hungry software like Adobe Photoshop open in between monitors that are being run by different GPU's?
graphics-card multiple-monitors motherboard gpu
add a comment |
I would like to know if i can install second GPU card in my motherboard msi 970
here are the specs
https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/970-GAMING/Specification
it has two slots for GPU and i have geforce gtx 1050 ti in one of them but i was wondering if i could put some old cheap GPU in the second one and hook up couple more monitors to it for simple work related tasks,
I'm not sure if i can have to have two different GPU or do i need same models?
Basically I'm trying to achieve 4 monitor, I already have two monitors connected right now and I don't need a second expensive gtx 1050 for handling extremely simple tasks.
If I can do it will I be able to drag programs between all monitors?
For example what happens if I have a power hungry software like Adobe Photoshop open in between monitors that are being run by different GPU's?
graphics-card multiple-monitors motherboard gpu
add a comment |
I would like to know if i can install second GPU card in my motherboard msi 970
here are the specs
https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/970-GAMING/Specification
it has two slots for GPU and i have geforce gtx 1050 ti in one of them but i was wondering if i could put some old cheap GPU in the second one and hook up couple more monitors to it for simple work related tasks,
I'm not sure if i can have to have two different GPU or do i need same models?
Basically I'm trying to achieve 4 monitor, I already have two monitors connected right now and I don't need a second expensive gtx 1050 for handling extremely simple tasks.
If I can do it will I be able to drag programs between all monitors?
For example what happens if I have a power hungry software like Adobe Photoshop open in between monitors that are being run by different GPU's?
graphics-card multiple-monitors motherboard gpu
I would like to know if i can install second GPU card in my motherboard msi 970
here are the specs
https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/970-GAMING/Specification
it has two slots for GPU and i have geforce gtx 1050 ti in one of them but i was wondering if i could put some old cheap GPU in the second one and hook up couple more monitors to it for simple work related tasks,
I'm not sure if i can have to have two different GPU or do i need same models?
Basically I'm trying to achieve 4 monitor, I already have two monitors connected right now and I don't need a second expensive gtx 1050 for handling extremely simple tasks.
If I can do it will I be able to drag programs between all monitors?
For example what happens if I have a power hungry software like Adobe Photoshop open in between monitors that are being run by different GPU's?
graphics-card multiple-monitors motherboard gpu
graphics-card multiple-monitors motherboard gpu
asked Feb 9 '18 at 5:13
LinasLinas
110115
110115
add a comment |
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
Kind of, though it's not that simple.
Practically, on more modern versions of Windows, it'll 'just work' for most tasks.
For Windows 7, they need to be the same driver (so Nvidia only or AMD only). Windows 10 doesn't care.
I've run a third monitor on onboard video with some tweaks on Windows 8 and 10 with the primary monitors being on a separate video card, and that's roughly the worst case scenario. So yeah, you'd be able to drag programs between monitors, and what you're thinking of would be doable. I'd suggest cards of the same brand and roughly similar era (so an 800-1000 series) simply for driver compatibility.
With paired video cards, chances are your system will drop down to x8 PCIe lanes from x16, but there's little practical performance loss from this.
With some software, you can use a secondary/lesser card as a co-processor for specific tasks or simply pick one as a primary card. Photoshop specifically suggests using one card for your output, and to use identical video cards.
Adobe also says:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance. Multiple graphics cards with conflicting drivers can cause problems with graphics-processor accelerated features in Photoshop.
So in this particular scenario, it's not that useful.
You might see some advantages with some CUDA or OpenCL loads but YMMV.
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
add a comment |
Yep, having two completely different GPUs in one PC is possible, as long as there are enough PCI slots. However, if you are planning to use SLI, it requires two of the same cards. Furthermore, you should remember not all applications take advantage of the dual GPU setup.
Source
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
add a comment |
While previously you needed to have special, more expensive motherboards running two or more video cards from the same vendor (called Crossfire/SLI by their respective vendors), DirectX 12 allows for multi-display adapter (MDA) where the software (game, mostly) can explicitly work with, as the name suggests, multiple displays (CF/SLI is now called linked display adapter or LDA)). However, to quote one of the earliest benchmarks from 2016 February:
Almost no games presently support Dx12, fewer still support this type of multi-GPU configuration, and then there still has to be some dev-side support and testing for that configuration. It's not all just about drivers and APIs; if the game's QA team hasn't run the configuration, there's a good chance more bugs present themselves.
While obviously since then more games started supporting DirectX 12, it is still true that few supports MDA and you are more likely to face bugs. If there are N video cards the QA tested then to test all possible pairs they would need to test almost N squared, which very quickly becomes unfeasible.
So: you can have two GPUs, in theory they will accelerate some games together, in practice it's a bit more dubious.
If you have no need of that and just want to hang a lot of monitors off the same PC, this will almost always work, the Matrox M9188 have compatibility issues with quite a few Matrox cards, see Multi-Card Compatibility Table. At the time of this writing this card was retailing above 1500 USD so chances are, most people won't ever run into it much less want to add more cards to it.
add a comment |
Yes, this can technically work—both cards will give you graphical output. However, different cards cannot be linked together to function as a GPU array (CrossFire or SLI), so you generally won't be able to use them together to render graphics in games. The cards will operate independently of each other. In your case, the second card will be responsible for rendering the graphics on the additional monitors that are attached to it.
However, there are other ways you can use the second graphics card:
- GPU-accelerated compute applications often allow you to select the specific graphics card to use. However, Photoshop doesn't support multiple GPUs for acceleration and (presumably) will only use the first card:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance.
- A few new DirectX 12-based games (e.g. Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation) are capable of using two independent graphics cards to enhance performance. This can, in some cases, enable cards from different vendors to be used together.
- Games which use NVIDIA PhysX technology can use the second card as a dedicated processor for physics computations, independently of the first card which handles the graphical rendering. This can improve performance in some games. A dedicated PhysX GPU can be configured in the NVIDIA Control Panel.
add a comment |
I use a GTX1070/750ti with two monitors. I just had to make sure I set my display that the 750ti was plugged into as primary or desktop applications wouldn't use my 750ti.
I assumed that Chrome and such would use whichever GPU its window was on. Boy, was I wrong. My 750ti no takes care of gpu programs like chrome, twitch, bnet, and my games use my 1070. Noticed a 10-15 fps improvement.
add a comment |
I have a 144hz monitor with dvi dual-link input and a RTX 2060 with only displayport & hdmi output. So I cannot achieve 144hz with hdmi. I have to buy an active DP to dvi duallink adaptor. My question is, can I use a second graphic card that has dvi output only for display? and all the processing on the RTX 2060? Just to achieve 144hz.
New contributor
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6 Answers
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active
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votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
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Kind of, though it's not that simple.
Practically, on more modern versions of Windows, it'll 'just work' for most tasks.
For Windows 7, they need to be the same driver (so Nvidia only or AMD only). Windows 10 doesn't care.
I've run a third monitor on onboard video with some tweaks on Windows 8 and 10 with the primary monitors being on a separate video card, and that's roughly the worst case scenario. So yeah, you'd be able to drag programs between monitors, and what you're thinking of would be doable. I'd suggest cards of the same brand and roughly similar era (so an 800-1000 series) simply for driver compatibility.
With paired video cards, chances are your system will drop down to x8 PCIe lanes from x16, but there's little practical performance loss from this.
With some software, you can use a secondary/lesser card as a co-processor for specific tasks or simply pick one as a primary card. Photoshop specifically suggests using one card for your output, and to use identical video cards.
Adobe also says:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance. Multiple graphics cards with conflicting drivers can cause problems with graphics-processor accelerated features in Photoshop.
So in this particular scenario, it's not that useful.
You might see some advantages with some CUDA or OpenCL loads but YMMV.
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
add a comment |
Kind of, though it's not that simple.
Practically, on more modern versions of Windows, it'll 'just work' for most tasks.
For Windows 7, they need to be the same driver (so Nvidia only or AMD only). Windows 10 doesn't care.
I've run a third monitor on onboard video with some tweaks on Windows 8 and 10 with the primary monitors being on a separate video card, and that's roughly the worst case scenario. So yeah, you'd be able to drag programs between monitors, and what you're thinking of would be doable. I'd suggest cards of the same brand and roughly similar era (so an 800-1000 series) simply for driver compatibility.
With paired video cards, chances are your system will drop down to x8 PCIe lanes from x16, but there's little practical performance loss from this.
With some software, you can use a secondary/lesser card as a co-processor for specific tasks or simply pick one as a primary card. Photoshop specifically suggests using one card for your output, and to use identical video cards.
Adobe also says:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance. Multiple graphics cards with conflicting drivers can cause problems with graphics-processor accelerated features in Photoshop.
So in this particular scenario, it's not that useful.
You might see some advantages with some CUDA or OpenCL loads but YMMV.
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
add a comment |
Kind of, though it's not that simple.
Practically, on more modern versions of Windows, it'll 'just work' for most tasks.
For Windows 7, they need to be the same driver (so Nvidia only or AMD only). Windows 10 doesn't care.
I've run a third monitor on onboard video with some tweaks on Windows 8 and 10 with the primary monitors being on a separate video card, and that's roughly the worst case scenario. So yeah, you'd be able to drag programs between monitors, and what you're thinking of would be doable. I'd suggest cards of the same brand and roughly similar era (so an 800-1000 series) simply for driver compatibility.
With paired video cards, chances are your system will drop down to x8 PCIe lanes from x16, but there's little practical performance loss from this.
With some software, you can use a secondary/lesser card as a co-processor for specific tasks or simply pick one as a primary card. Photoshop specifically suggests using one card for your output, and to use identical video cards.
Adobe also says:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance. Multiple graphics cards with conflicting drivers can cause problems with graphics-processor accelerated features in Photoshop.
So in this particular scenario, it's not that useful.
You might see some advantages with some CUDA or OpenCL loads but YMMV.
Kind of, though it's not that simple.
Practically, on more modern versions of Windows, it'll 'just work' for most tasks.
For Windows 7, they need to be the same driver (so Nvidia only or AMD only). Windows 10 doesn't care.
I've run a third monitor on onboard video with some tweaks on Windows 8 and 10 with the primary monitors being on a separate video card, and that's roughly the worst case scenario. So yeah, you'd be able to drag programs between monitors, and what you're thinking of would be doable. I'd suggest cards of the same brand and roughly similar era (so an 800-1000 series) simply for driver compatibility.
With paired video cards, chances are your system will drop down to x8 PCIe lanes from x16, but there's little practical performance loss from this.
With some software, you can use a secondary/lesser card as a co-processor for specific tasks or simply pick one as a primary card. Photoshop specifically suggests using one card for your output, and to use identical video cards.
Adobe also says:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance. Multiple graphics cards with conflicting drivers can cause problems with graphics-processor accelerated features in Photoshop.
So in this particular scenario, it's not that useful.
You might see some advantages with some CUDA or OpenCL loads but YMMV.
edited Jun 21 '18 at 5:11
Pang
583611
583611
answered Feb 9 '18 at 6:15
Journeyman Geek♦Journeyman Geek
112k44217371
112k44217371
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
add a comment |
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
Windows 10 will care, multi-GPU is a DX12/Vulcan feature, and of course DX12 is Windows 8+ only. Of course CUDA and OpenCL will work provided the drivers are supplied. They will be separate in that case. Only SLi/Crossfire would allow you to combine similar cards for more computation intensive operations.
– Ramhound
Feb 9 '18 at 9:44
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
for non gaming use, no. I was referring to setups like superuser.com/questions/523928/… .
– Journeyman Geek♦
Feb 9 '18 at 9:49
add a comment |
Yep, having two completely different GPUs in one PC is possible, as long as there are enough PCI slots. However, if you are planning to use SLI, it requires two of the same cards. Furthermore, you should remember not all applications take advantage of the dual GPU setup.
Source
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
add a comment |
Yep, having two completely different GPUs in one PC is possible, as long as there are enough PCI slots. However, if you are planning to use SLI, it requires two of the same cards. Furthermore, you should remember not all applications take advantage of the dual GPU setup.
Source
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
add a comment |
Yep, having two completely different GPUs in one PC is possible, as long as there are enough PCI slots. However, if you are planning to use SLI, it requires two of the same cards. Furthermore, you should remember not all applications take advantage of the dual GPU setup.
Source
Yep, having two completely different GPUs in one PC is possible, as long as there are enough PCI slots. However, if you are planning to use SLI, it requires two of the same cards. Furthermore, you should remember not all applications take advantage of the dual GPU setup.
Source
edited Feb 10 '18 at 3:33
answered Feb 9 '18 at 6:04
potatomanpotatoman
861112
861112
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
add a comment |
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
No i do not need SLI the second card would be purely just for handling simple software like browsers or IDE while my main card would do heavy lifting.
– Linas
Feb 9 '18 at 6:16
add a comment |
While previously you needed to have special, more expensive motherboards running two or more video cards from the same vendor (called Crossfire/SLI by their respective vendors), DirectX 12 allows for multi-display adapter (MDA) where the software (game, mostly) can explicitly work with, as the name suggests, multiple displays (CF/SLI is now called linked display adapter or LDA)). However, to quote one of the earliest benchmarks from 2016 February:
Almost no games presently support Dx12, fewer still support this type of multi-GPU configuration, and then there still has to be some dev-side support and testing for that configuration. It's not all just about drivers and APIs; if the game's QA team hasn't run the configuration, there's a good chance more bugs present themselves.
While obviously since then more games started supporting DirectX 12, it is still true that few supports MDA and you are more likely to face bugs. If there are N video cards the QA tested then to test all possible pairs they would need to test almost N squared, which very quickly becomes unfeasible.
So: you can have two GPUs, in theory they will accelerate some games together, in practice it's a bit more dubious.
If you have no need of that and just want to hang a lot of monitors off the same PC, this will almost always work, the Matrox M9188 have compatibility issues with quite a few Matrox cards, see Multi-Card Compatibility Table. At the time of this writing this card was retailing above 1500 USD so chances are, most people won't ever run into it much less want to add more cards to it.
add a comment |
While previously you needed to have special, more expensive motherboards running two or more video cards from the same vendor (called Crossfire/SLI by their respective vendors), DirectX 12 allows for multi-display adapter (MDA) where the software (game, mostly) can explicitly work with, as the name suggests, multiple displays (CF/SLI is now called linked display adapter or LDA)). However, to quote one of the earliest benchmarks from 2016 February:
Almost no games presently support Dx12, fewer still support this type of multi-GPU configuration, and then there still has to be some dev-side support and testing for that configuration. It's not all just about drivers and APIs; if the game's QA team hasn't run the configuration, there's a good chance more bugs present themselves.
While obviously since then more games started supporting DirectX 12, it is still true that few supports MDA and you are more likely to face bugs. If there are N video cards the QA tested then to test all possible pairs they would need to test almost N squared, which very quickly becomes unfeasible.
So: you can have two GPUs, in theory they will accelerate some games together, in practice it's a bit more dubious.
If you have no need of that and just want to hang a lot of monitors off the same PC, this will almost always work, the Matrox M9188 have compatibility issues with quite a few Matrox cards, see Multi-Card Compatibility Table. At the time of this writing this card was retailing above 1500 USD so chances are, most people won't ever run into it much less want to add more cards to it.
add a comment |
While previously you needed to have special, more expensive motherboards running two or more video cards from the same vendor (called Crossfire/SLI by their respective vendors), DirectX 12 allows for multi-display adapter (MDA) where the software (game, mostly) can explicitly work with, as the name suggests, multiple displays (CF/SLI is now called linked display adapter or LDA)). However, to quote one of the earliest benchmarks from 2016 February:
Almost no games presently support Dx12, fewer still support this type of multi-GPU configuration, and then there still has to be some dev-side support and testing for that configuration. It's not all just about drivers and APIs; if the game's QA team hasn't run the configuration, there's a good chance more bugs present themselves.
While obviously since then more games started supporting DirectX 12, it is still true that few supports MDA and you are more likely to face bugs. If there are N video cards the QA tested then to test all possible pairs they would need to test almost N squared, which very quickly becomes unfeasible.
So: you can have two GPUs, in theory they will accelerate some games together, in practice it's a bit more dubious.
If you have no need of that and just want to hang a lot of monitors off the same PC, this will almost always work, the Matrox M9188 have compatibility issues with quite a few Matrox cards, see Multi-Card Compatibility Table. At the time of this writing this card was retailing above 1500 USD so chances are, most people won't ever run into it much less want to add more cards to it.
While previously you needed to have special, more expensive motherboards running two or more video cards from the same vendor (called Crossfire/SLI by their respective vendors), DirectX 12 allows for multi-display adapter (MDA) where the software (game, mostly) can explicitly work with, as the name suggests, multiple displays (CF/SLI is now called linked display adapter or LDA)). However, to quote one of the earliest benchmarks from 2016 February:
Almost no games presently support Dx12, fewer still support this type of multi-GPU configuration, and then there still has to be some dev-side support and testing for that configuration. It's not all just about drivers and APIs; if the game's QA team hasn't run the configuration, there's a good chance more bugs present themselves.
While obviously since then more games started supporting DirectX 12, it is still true that few supports MDA and you are more likely to face bugs. If there are N video cards the QA tested then to test all possible pairs they would need to test almost N squared, which very quickly becomes unfeasible.
So: you can have two GPUs, in theory they will accelerate some games together, in practice it's a bit more dubious.
If you have no need of that and just want to hang a lot of monitors off the same PC, this will almost always work, the Matrox M9188 have compatibility issues with quite a few Matrox cards, see Multi-Card Compatibility Table. At the time of this writing this card was retailing above 1500 USD so chances are, most people won't ever run into it much less want to add more cards to it.
edited Feb 10 '18 at 4:14
answered Feb 10 '18 at 4:07
chxchx
2,60021437
2,60021437
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yes, this can technically work—both cards will give you graphical output. However, different cards cannot be linked together to function as a GPU array (CrossFire or SLI), so you generally won't be able to use them together to render graphics in games. The cards will operate independently of each other. In your case, the second card will be responsible for rendering the graphics on the additional monitors that are attached to it.
However, there are other ways you can use the second graphics card:
- GPU-accelerated compute applications often allow you to select the specific graphics card to use. However, Photoshop doesn't support multiple GPUs for acceleration and (presumably) will only use the first card:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance.
- A few new DirectX 12-based games (e.g. Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation) are capable of using two independent graphics cards to enhance performance. This can, in some cases, enable cards from different vendors to be used together.
- Games which use NVIDIA PhysX technology can use the second card as a dedicated processor for physics computations, independently of the first card which handles the graphical rendering. This can improve performance in some games. A dedicated PhysX GPU can be configured in the NVIDIA Control Panel.
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Yes, this can technically work—both cards will give you graphical output. However, different cards cannot be linked together to function as a GPU array (CrossFire or SLI), so you generally won't be able to use them together to render graphics in games. The cards will operate independently of each other. In your case, the second card will be responsible for rendering the graphics on the additional monitors that are attached to it.
However, there are other ways you can use the second graphics card:
- GPU-accelerated compute applications often allow you to select the specific graphics card to use. However, Photoshop doesn't support multiple GPUs for acceleration and (presumably) will only use the first card:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance.
- A few new DirectX 12-based games (e.g. Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation) are capable of using two independent graphics cards to enhance performance. This can, in some cases, enable cards from different vendors to be used together.
- Games which use NVIDIA PhysX technology can use the second card as a dedicated processor for physics computations, independently of the first card which handles the graphical rendering. This can improve performance in some games. A dedicated PhysX GPU can be configured in the NVIDIA Control Panel.
add a comment |
Yes, this can technically work—both cards will give you graphical output. However, different cards cannot be linked together to function as a GPU array (CrossFire or SLI), so you generally won't be able to use them together to render graphics in games. The cards will operate independently of each other. In your case, the second card will be responsible for rendering the graphics on the additional monitors that are attached to it.
However, there are other ways you can use the second graphics card:
- GPU-accelerated compute applications often allow you to select the specific graphics card to use. However, Photoshop doesn't support multiple GPUs for acceleration and (presumably) will only use the first card:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance.
- A few new DirectX 12-based games (e.g. Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation) are capable of using two independent graphics cards to enhance performance. This can, in some cases, enable cards from different vendors to be used together.
- Games which use NVIDIA PhysX technology can use the second card as a dedicated processor for physics computations, independently of the first card which handles the graphical rendering. This can improve performance in some games. A dedicated PhysX GPU can be configured in the NVIDIA Control Panel.
Yes, this can technically work—both cards will give you graphical output. However, different cards cannot be linked together to function as a GPU array (CrossFire or SLI), so you generally won't be able to use them together to render graphics in games. The cards will operate independently of each other. In your case, the second card will be responsible for rendering the graphics on the additional monitors that are attached to it.
However, there are other ways you can use the second graphics card:
- GPU-accelerated compute applications often allow you to select the specific graphics card to use. However, Photoshop doesn't support multiple GPUs for acceleration and (presumably) will only use the first card:
Photoshop currently doesn't take advantage of more than one graphics processor. Using two graphics cards does not enhance Photoshop's performance.
- A few new DirectX 12-based games (e.g. Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation) are capable of using two independent graphics cards to enhance performance. This can, in some cases, enable cards from different vendors to be used together.
- Games which use NVIDIA PhysX technology can use the second card as a dedicated processor for physics computations, independently of the first card which handles the graphical rendering. This can improve performance in some games. A dedicated PhysX GPU can be configured in the NVIDIA Control Panel.
answered Feb 10 '18 at 5:28
bwDracobwDraco
36.9k37137177
36.9k37137177
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I use a GTX1070/750ti with two monitors. I just had to make sure I set my display that the 750ti was plugged into as primary or desktop applications wouldn't use my 750ti.
I assumed that Chrome and such would use whichever GPU its window was on. Boy, was I wrong. My 750ti no takes care of gpu programs like chrome, twitch, bnet, and my games use my 1070. Noticed a 10-15 fps improvement.
add a comment |
I use a GTX1070/750ti with two monitors. I just had to make sure I set my display that the 750ti was plugged into as primary or desktop applications wouldn't use my 750ti.
I assumed that Chrome and such would use whichever GPU its window was on. Boy, was I wrong. My 750ti no takes care of gpu programs like chrome, twitch, bnet, and my games use my 1070. Noticed a 10-15 fps improvement.
add a comment |
I use a GTX1070/750ti with two monitors. I just had to make sure I set my display that the 750ti was plugged into as primary or desktop applications wouldn't use my 750ti.
I assumed that Chrome and such would use whichever GPU its window was on. Boy, was I wrong. My 750ti no takes care of gpu programs like chrome, twitch, bnet, and my games use my 1070. Noticed a 10-15 fps improvement.
I use a GTX1070/750ti with two monitors. I just had to make sure I set my display that the 750ti was plugged into as primary or desktop applications wouldn't use my 750ti.
I assumed that Chrome and such would use whichever GPU its window was on. Boy, was I wrong. My 750ti no takes care of gpu programs like chrome, twitch, bnet, and my games use my 1070. Noticed a 10-15 fps improvement.
answered Apr 10 '18 at 2:04
AbomAbom
11
11
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I have a 144hz monitor with dvi dual-link input and a RTX 2060 with only displayport & hdmi output. So I cannot achieve 144hz with hdmi. I have to buy an active DP to dvi duallink adaptor. My question is, can I use a second graphic card that has dvi output only for display? and all the processing on the RTX 2060? Just to achieve 144hz.
New contributor
add a comment |
I have a 144hz monitor with dvi dual-link input and a RTX 2060 with only displayport & hdmi output. So I cannot achieve 144hz with hdmi. I have to buy an active DP to dvi duallink adaptor. My question is, can I use a second graphic card that has dvi output only for display? and all the processing on the RTX 2060? Just to achieve 144hz.
New contributor
add a comment |
I have a 144hz monitor with dvi dual-link input and a RTX 2060 with only displayport & hdmi output. So I cannot achieve 144hz with hdmi. I have to buy an active DP to dvi duallink adaptor. My question is, can I use a second graphic card that has dvi output only for display? and all the processing on the RTX 2060? Just to achieve 144hz.
New contributor
I have a 144hz monitor with dvi dual-link input and a RTX 2060 with only displayport & hdmi output. So I cannot achieve 144hz with hdmi. I have to buy an active DP to dvi duallink adaptor. My question is, can I use a second graphic card that has dvi output only for display? and all the processing on the RTX 2060? Just to achieve 144hz.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 14 mins ago
Fadil ChadyFadil Chady
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
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