Originally posted by: Praytus
Been a while since I looked into the technology, but do both cards in a crossfire config need to be from the same manufacturer and part number?
Originally posted by: AmberClad
No.
In theory, you can even Frankenfire a 4850 and a 4870, for example. (In practice, it's not really a great idea.)
Originally posted by: nRollo
Originally posted by: AmberClad
No.
In theory, you can even Frankenfire a 4850 and a 4870, for example. (In practice, it's not really a great idea.)
The "flexibility" of CF has never really been the advantage it was originally made out to be as the slower card(s) slow down the more powerful ones due to load balancing constraints.
Originally posted by: nRollo
Originally posted by: AmberClad
No.
In theory, you can even Frankenfire a 4850 and a 4870, for example. (In practice, it's not really a great idea.)
The "flexibility" of CF has never really been the advantage it was originally made out to be as the slower card(s) slow down the more powerful ones due to load balancing constraints.
Originally posted by: dakels
Originally posted by: nRollo
Originally posted by: AmberClad
No.
In theory, you can even Frankenfire a 4850 and a 4870, for example. (In practice, it's not really a great idea.)
The "flexibility" of CF has never really been the advantage it was originally made out to be as the slower card(s) slow down the more powerful ones due to load balancing constraints.
4870+4850 is not better then 4870 alone? Granted I doubt its even close to optimal but it's worse then 1 4870? Is the difference so marginal its not worth it? I assume it's also conditional on the application.
Its not a technical limitation, Nvidia allowed mixed and matched SLI with different spec'd parts as far back as G80 GTS with the 96 and 112SP variants. You could even SLI 320MB and 640MB GTS. I've also read similar from an EVGA tech saying you could SLI 192 and 216SP GTX 260s, although you'd only get 192SP SLI. If anything its probably a driver limitation preventing this with vendor ID strings. Lowering performance to the lower of the two is also probably a consideration for preventing such pairings.Originally posted by: apoppin
it is a feature that evidently Nvidia cannot implement due to technical considerations
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did you focus guys ever find out if GTX280 and GTX285 can SLi together ?
- i would prefer to do that instead of buying two 285s
Originally posted by: chizow
Its not a technical limitation, Nvidia allowed mixed and matched SLI with different spec'd parts as far back as G80 GTS with the 96 and 112SP variants. You could even SLI 320MB and 640MB GTS. I've also read similar from an EVGA tech saying you could SLI 192 and 216SP GTX 260s, although you'd only get 192SP SLI. If anything its probably a driver limitation preventing this with vendor ID strings. Lowering performance to the lower of the two is also probably a consideration for preventing such pairings.Originally posted by: apoppin
it is a feature that evidently Nvidia cannot implement due to technical considerations
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did you focus guys ever find out if GTX280 and GTX285 can SLi together ?
- i would prefer to do that instead of buying two 285s
As for 280 and 285 SLI, even if you could, why would you? You'd get 280 SLI performance, and in that case you could save by just buying a 280. Unless you want to bench the 285 separately, paying more for less in SLI doesn't make any sense.