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crossfire X can run on P35 boards... but the x4 slot will slow things down...
Hmmm I thought my board had 2 PCIE x16 slots...I may be wrong.
Edit:
http://www.giga-byte.com/Products/Motherboard/Products_Overview.aspx?ProductID=2639
Seems it does? Or am I possibly missing something
2 PCI Express X16 slot(x16, x4)
For me Crossfire x is the best solution because of the multimonitor support. I can't believe Sli can't run 2 displays at the same time![]()
so, if you had say a 3870 with a 3850 the clocks would have to be the same wouldn't they? so that means you either have to overclock the 3850 to match the 3870 or underclock the 3870. and how would one card having gddr4 and the other having gddr3 affect it?
so, if you had say a 3870 with a 3850 the clocks would have to be the same wouldn't they? so that means you either have to overclock the 3850 to match the 3870 or underclock the 3870. and how would one card having gddr4 and the other having gddr3 affect it?
Clocks don't have to be the same but the faster card will have to wait on the slower card.
No, this is not true. Unlike SLI; with crossfire the faster card simply gets a larger amount of work to do. So mixing different performing cards will not have any real negative effect on either card, but will improve overall performance.
No this is not true, the faster card simply does a larger share of the work.
(Crossfire is different to SLI in this regard.)
Fraid that ain't entirely true...
Problem is... theres only 2 real ways to do multi-GPU rendering... one splits each frame up between the different cards and the other farms out each frame as it comes to the next available card...
CrossfireX will always use the 2nd method aka AFR this means that if the slower card comes up next and takes too long rendering a frame it will end up being "thrown away" to keep things smooth - so while overall you will see a performance gain due to the top end being pushed up a bit - in the situations where you really need it when things are really bogging down your going to lose all the advantages of one of the cards.
Also if you have 2 or more cards with different speed/size memory the faster cards will run at the speed of the memory of the slowest card.
Lastly it can have a negative effect as while your max fps might be way way up and drag up your average in the process - your minimum fps again what you really want as high as possible can drop by 25-30% in quite a few games.
ATI Catalyst 8.3 is scheduled to be available as a free download starting Tuesday, March 4 online at http://ati.amd.com/support/driver.html.
what about supporting 2x 3870 on a Sli board? I read it is going to be possible but I find it difficult to believe!