I've spent a few days looking around for any sort of resources on forums or lucid's websites, or pretty much anywhere else to be honest, to try and solve this problem, but... not having much luck.
So either I'm the only one having this problem, in which case it's me being thick and the answer should be simple, or lots of people are having this problem and just haven't either realised it, or tried to sort it yet.
(I've done lots of testing myself, so this is going to be a bit of a long summary, apologies! I figure that if it helps others that might be having the same problem, it's all worthwhile!
)
So... to sum up. The problem is getting both the Intel on-die HD2500 graphics working WITH the Graphics card, via the Lucid tech stuff, so that games are using what they should be using and quick sync is usable as well.
Both of them definitely work, but getting them both to work together is the problem...
My build (the relevant bits anyway)
CPU: i5-3450
Graphics card: AMD 7770 (XFX, for what it's worth)
Mobo: Asus P8Z77-V
Win7 64 Ultimate (if that matters?....)
Bios has been checked and double checked and is set to enable multi-screen/GPU support.
Latest Catalyst drivers are being used, as are the latest (only?...) 3rd Gen HD Graphics drivers. Latest version of Lucid Virtu is being used.
Initial setup was with the monitor plugged into the mobo's monitor port, the iGPU set as the default renderer in the Bios.
Installed windows, all the supplied motherboard utilities, intel HD graphics driver, Catalyst drivers. Lucid was setup, it detects both, it shows both as active.
Games tested:
Starcraft 2
Civ 5
The Witcher
Total War: Shogun 2
X3: Terran Conflict
Every one of these displayed the logo in the corner upon startup, which I would assume is meant to mean that Lucid is doing what it's supposed to do.
But every one of them was rendering with the HD2500, NOT the 7770.
X3 ran well (it's fairly old), so it's hard to be 100% sure on that one. Starcraft was 'okay' but not great. Civ 5 was okay. Shogun 2 and The Witcher ran like dogs, frankly.
The curious thing is, Shogun 2 shows the 7770 as it's renderer in it's graphics options, so it's being detected in some way, but it's most definitely not being USED.
After much fiddling to try and improve performance, I was beginning to wonder if maybe my graphics card was somehow defective, since the Lucid logo definitely seemed to imply it was switching renderer as it should be (and so did the 7770 being detected as renderer in Shogun 2)
So, to check, I switched things around. Bios now set to use the PCIe as it's default setting, monitor similarly connected to the graphics card.
All games now run like a dream. (and incidentally, Shogun 2 is gorgeous :wub
Now keeping the PCIe as the default, I've tried using Quick Sync to encode (using Media Coder) and am hitting the same brick wall. Error 14 (which, for what it's worth, means it's not detecting the selected encoder, which is set for Intel's Quick Sync)
I've added both the Media Coder exe's to Lucid's application list, but it still refuses to detect it and use it.
So... my question is, how exactly do you get Lucid's virtu software to work properly? It CLAIMS to be working (the logo appearing when games start up would suggest that at least!) but evidence clearly shows that it's not.
Given the number of reviews (Anand's for one!) that have been benchmarking Quick Sync performance using Lucid's software without problems, it obviously SHOULD work... but I must be doing something wrong.
If anyone has any suggestions or helpful advice, I'll gladly give it a try!
Thanks for reading.
So either I'm the only one having this problem, in which case it's me being thick and the answer should be simple, or lots of people are having this problem and just haven't either realised it, or tried to sort it yet.
(I've done lots of testing myself, so this is going to be a bit of a long summary, apologies! I figure that if it helps others that might be having the same problem, it's all worthwhile!
So... to sum up. The problem is getting both the Intel on-die HD2500 graphics working WITH the Graphics card, via the Lucid tech stuff, so that games are using what they should be using and quick sync is usable as well.
Both of them definitely work, but getting them both to work together is the problem...
My build (the relevant bits anyway)
CPU: i5-3450
Graphics card: AMD 7770 (XFX, for what it's worth)
Mobo: Asus P8Z77-V
Win7 64 Ultimate (if that matters?....)
Bios has been checked and double checked and is set to enable multi-screen/GPU support.
Latest Catalyst drivers are being used, as are the latest (only?...) 3rd Gen HD Graphics drivers. Latest version of Lucid Virtu is being used.
Initial setup was with the monitor plugged into the mobo's monitor port, the iGPU set as the default renderer in the Bios.
Installed windows, all the supplied motherboard utilities, intel HD graphics driver, Catalyst drivers. Lucid was setup, it detects both, it shows both as active.
Games tested:
Starcraft 2
Civ 5
The Witcher
Total War: Shogun 2
X3: Terran Conflict
Every one of these displayed the logo in the corner upon startup, which I would assume is meant to mean that Lucid is doing what it's supposed to do.
But every one of them was rendering with the HD2500, NOT the 7770.
X3 ran well (it's fairly old), so it's hard to be 100% sure on that one. Starcraft was 'okay' but not great. Civ 5 was okay. Shogun 2 and The Witcher ran like dogs, frankly.
The curious thing is, Shogun 2 shows the 7770 as it's renderer in it's graphics options, so it's being detected in some way, but it's most definitely not being USED.
After much fiddling to try and improve performance, I was beginning to wonder if maybe my graphics card was somehow defective, since the Lucid logo definitely seemed to imply it was switching renderer as it should be (and so did the 7770 being detected as renderer in Shogun 2)
So, to check, I switched things around. Bios now set to use the PCIe as it's default setting, monitor similarly connected to the graphics card.
All games now run like a dream. (and incidentally, Shogun 2 is gorgeous :wub
Now keeping the PCIe as the default, I've tried using Quick Sync to encode (using Media Coder) and am hitting the same brick wall. Error 14 (which, for what it's worth, means it's not detecting the selected encoder, which is set for Intel's Quick Sync)
I've added both the Media Coder exe's to Lucid's application list, but it still refuses to detect it and use it.
So... my question is, how exactly do you get Lucid's virtu software to work properly? It CLAIMS to be working (the logo appearing when games start up would suggest that at least!) but evidence clearly shows that it's not.
Given the number of reviews (Anand's for one!) that have been benchmarking Quick Sync performance using Lucid's software without problems, it obviously SHOULD work... but I must be doing something wrong.
If anyone has any suggestions or helpful advice, I'll gladly give it a try!
Thanks for reading.
