Dual monitor setup for CS4

Kubaki

Junior Member
May 7, 2009
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Hello. I'm looking for help building a dual monitor rig. It will serve mostly for 2D graphic design (70%) and gaming (30%). I will be working with CS4 (mostly Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign and Flash). I plan to buy one monitor for web design and photo editing and another one for print-target media processing. Does it make sense? I'm willing to spend up to $2000 for both. What do you recommend?

Next I plan to spend $500, or a little bit more, on a video card. I'm torn between high-end gaming cards (like Radeon HD4870x2 or GeForce GTX295) and mid-range workstations (Quadro FX 1700, Quadro NVS 420 or 450). Are they all suitable for dual monitor setup? Which will be best for my needs? Finally, what CPU/motherboard/memory should I invest in? I don't want them to bottleneck my system. I don't want to go cheap here, but I don't want to spend too much if it's not really necessary.

Thanks in advance.

UPDATE
I'm considering these components:
Processor: Intel Core i7-920
Motherboard: DFI LanParty DK X58 or MSI X58 Platinum
RAM: OCZ 3x2GB 1600MHZ Platinum
Video Card: Geforce GTX275 (or Radeon HD4890)
Power supply: Antec EarthWatts 650W
Monitors: undecided

What's your opinion?
 

Kubaki

Junior Member
May 7, 2009
4
0
0
I did. I even posted a similar question there. The problem is that I have three main goals in mind: 1) design for print, 2) design for the web, and 3) gaming. Currently I am using good old Sony CPD-G500 (21" CRT monitor), and I use it for everything, but it looks like it's going to die soon.

I could buy NEC MultiSync LCD2690WUXi for publishing work, LCD2090UXi for web design and call it a day. Exactly $2000, mission accomplished. Still, I love playing computer games. I'm having less and less time for it recently, but I don't want to give it up. I know that LCD2090UXi is pretty fast (for a NEC) but I'd like my gaming monitor to be slightly larger. Will LCD2690WUXi be fit for the job?

I would probably consider Planar PX2611W instead of NEC LCD2690WUXi, but this one is hard to get in my country (practically unavailable). Are there any other viable options?
 

zagood

Diamond Member
Mar 28, 2005
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If you're not doing 3d or video, there's no reason to get a workstation card. You'll get much more out of a good monitor when focusing on print.

CS4 is uses GPU acceleration on both ATi and nV parts. I haven't seen any benchmarks so can't say which side makes better use of it, but Adobe and nV made a big deal about their most recent partnership so more development may be focused that way.

Premiere's GPU acceleration works out of the box with ATi's 4xxx cards, but I think you need a Quadro to get the same performance from an nV part.

So some googling for cs4 gpu acceleration and you'll get some good info.

-z
 

Kubaki

Junior Member
May 7, 2009
4
0
0
I don't have enough $ to spend on NVIDIA Quadro CX or Quadro FX 4800+. Luckily I won't work with Premiere or After Effects, and high-end gaming card should do a good job for my needs (smooth display at all zoom levels, rotate canvas, faster color conversion etc.).

Doing my research I found out that CS4 can't take advantage of dual-GPU cards. MultiGPU is the whole point of HD4870x2 and GTX295. As it stands I will have to keep turning it off each time to use CS4 with GPU acceleration... Well, at least I don't have to consider them anymore, and can go with cheaper solution ;)

GTX275 or HD4890? Both are priced at $250-$300, and GTX 275 seems to have an edge in terms of performance. Will it support two large LCD's at their native resolutions? It looks like it should, but I really want to be sure.