Originally posted by: BFG10K
I thought with Crossfire you could mix-and-match RAM sizes and it would simply use the lowest common denominator?
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
who are you talking to? OP asked a specific question and you responded with an incorrect answer, then you listed some reasons why he should do what he's already decided to do.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
who are you talking to? OP asked a specific question and you responded with an incorrect answer, then you listed some reasons why he should do what he's already decided to do.
Originally posted by: nanaki333
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
who are you talking to? OP asked a specific question and you responded with an incorrect answer, then you listed some reasons why he should do what he's already decided to do.
the first post in this thread i did not even know i posted. i thought i was replying to a PM. so a thousand apologies.
uhhh.. if you look at what i pasted, it answered his question, which is mixing the cards. i'm also terribly sorry that he responded while i was already in the thread trying to paste my post in (~2 minutes apart).
just doing a search on google, it looks like this question has been asked many times and the most popular answer is "yes, you can".
http://www.hardwarezone.com/ar...view.php?cid=3&id=1543One note regarding using CrossFire with cards of different memory configurations is that the card with greater memory size will be capped to match the memory size of the graphics card with the least amount of memory. So there is flexibility, but with strings attached as it seems.
http://www.driverheaven.net/re...s/x1900x1950/index.htmATI's CrossFire platform allows the end user to mix graphics cards clocked differently and with various memory configurations. This means we are able to use Radeon X1900XTX, X1900XT or even lower clocked Radeon series graphics cards with the master board. It isn't widely known but you can mix and match cards from different ranges as well, as I did in an experiment before writing this article, using a X1900XTX master and X1950XTX slave. When swapping out the master card for the newer X1950 series however I ended up with a black screen when booting in windows, requiring me to reboot into VGA safe mode and deinstalling the driver, so it would be safe to assume that there may very well be a few issues if you go down this road.
Originally posted by: nanaki333
you didn't google hard enough
http://www.hardwarezone.com/ar...view.php?cid=3&id=1543One note regarding using CrossFire with cards of different memory configurations is that the card with greater memory size will be capped to match the memory size of the graphics card with the least amount of memory. So there is flexibility, but with strings attached as it seems.
that's just the first hit from google that took me 2 minutes.
http://www.driverheaven.net/re...s/x1900x1950/index.htmATI's CrossFire platform allows the end user to mix graphics cards clocked differently and with various memory configurations. This means we are able to use Radeon X1900XTX, X1900XT or even lower clocked Radeon series graphics cards with the master board. It isn't widely known but you can mix and match cards from different ranges as well, as I did in an experiment before writing this article, using a X1900XTX master and X1950XTX slave. When swapping out the master card for the newer X1950 series however I ended up with a black screen when booting in windows, requiring me to reboot into VGA safe mode and deinstalling the driver, so it would be safe to assume that there may very well be a few issues if you go down this road.
another one. but yeah, i guess those are still the same memory type.
Originally posted by: nanaki333
well i don't know what to tell you then if you won't believe 2 of the links i pasted. one of which where the guy says he tested an x1950 with an 1900.
http://www.techreport.com/revi...crossfire/index.x?pg=1
not that it matters, but there's something else where it says you can mix the cards with different memory configurations. even says an x1800 can mix with a slower XL.
make sure the ati tech does extensive testing before taking his word though. you wouldn't want to hear him say "how it should work".