When you hook two cards together via SLI, they run at the speed of the slowest card.
According to Nvidia, you should only connect two cards that are the same model number together. Haven't verified this, just stating what they have up. You can hook together two different makes of the same card and it'll work fine. (a gigabyte gtx 580 and a zotac gtx 580 linked, for example.).
And I'll mention this again - SLI does not improve WoW performance, actually decreases it somewhat. (This occurs with a few other games as well...). I'd recommend buying one single beast of a gpu and rolling with that instead of paying much more for two cards and being very disappointed.
I'm wondering if I should have my more powerful GTX580 power the slaves and have my 4870 on the master - it's pretty hard to consider doing this..
But it might improve performance a bit more![]()
You CAN run multiple cards independently; however, regardless of whether they are the same model or not, you should NOT use SLI or Crossfire for multiboxing. SLI and Crossfire are designed for running one game in Full Screen mode and may not do anything at all in Windowed Mode. (though I think one of them recently had a driver update to add windowed mode support?)
I've updated ISBoxer.com's multiple video card guide with new info for ISBoxer 38:
http://isboxer.com/index.php/compone...le-video-cards
The new Quick Facts section at the top is relevant whether you're using ISBoxer or not, and pretty much covers all the multi-GPU bases. This stuff hasn't really changed since SLI came out, except for the change in Windows Vista/7
Lax, that is perfect - the exact information I needed.And finally before we move on to the instructions, it will benefit you to understand that using multiple video cards is not the same as multiple CPUs. It is a common misconception that "GPU Affinity" can be configured similar to "CPU Affinity." This is not the case. Direct3D windows are tied to a monitor, not to a GPU. This unfortunately means that you cannot have a window rendered by a GPU that is not powering a monitor. As of ISBoxer 38, ISBoxer automatically selects the monitor for your game instances, based on your Window Layout.
Each GPU will process for it's own screen and not the other - this means it is worth having my old vcard in the machine alongside the new one.
Note one's ATI and one's Nvidia - i couldn't possibly SLI them anyway.
Ok it was JUST this bit I needed to read, thanks Lax for bringing this to my attention.
Selecting a GPU for rendering does not work like CPU Affinity; it is controlled by the monitor assigned to the game, and your video drivers. ISBoxer 38 will automatically render the game with the appropriate GPU.
Last edited by dancook : 02-14-2011 at 12:29 PM
never heard of running both kind of gpu's in one system. Always thought the drivers hammered each other. Learn something all the time
RAF Tour Guide files are obsolete, I went to Zygor
MultiBoxers play with themselves
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