3 Monitors, Big Problem

Discussion in 'Hardware' started by rossmedia, Sep 2, 2003.

  1. gnome

    gnome

    Do you mean to infer that "ATI cards are compatible with all other cards"??
     
    #11     Sep 2, 2003
  2. TGregg

    TGregg

    Just wanted to note that I run 850e and 3 PCI Matrox G450s (in the slots farthest from the AGP port) and a GeForce4 4600 (nVidia) card. But, that would be ancedotal evidence.
     
    #12     Sep 2, 2003
  3. Not at all but I have the combination working on XP Pentuim and Windows 2000/Athalon so Im pretty sure it will work. Of course if your using the third monitor for some highend graphics application you may not be happy with it but for charting it works fine.
     
    #13     Sep 2, 2003
  4. nitro

    nitro

    H2O,

    Everything you say is right on. However, "...this would not affect the AGP" is not quite correct.

    On my SuperMicro motherboard, the AGP slot shares resources with PCI slot 1.

    nitro
     
    #14     Sep 2, 2003
  5. nitro

    nitro

    I am not sure this would work on all motherboards. On my SuperMicro MB, if I have an AGP card, I need to stay away from PCI slot 1.

    This is nowhere to be found in the manual that came with the MOBO - it was only discovered by talking to tech support.

    nitro
     
    #15     Sep 2, 2003
  6. gnome

    gnome

    Interesting. I was told by the tech where I bought mine to have them closest to the AGP.... must be MOBO specific.
     
    #16     Sep 2, 2003
  7. AGP slot?, AGP card? please explain, would that be the slot where my Matrox card is? Also, I use the 3 monitor setup for trading not for and high end graphics or games. I'm not well versed in motherboard, PCI..stuff. Appreciate all the info. If I can't get the 3rd monitor working today I'll just return it for something that hopfully will. Thanks.

    Rossmedia
     
    #17     Sep 2, 2003
  8. gnome

    gnome

    AGP is the primary/default video card slot. PCI = the other 4-6 slots that look alike... probably white.

    You need to decide whether you want to use Nvidia or Matrox... then check with tech support and find out which of their other cards or combos would be compatible. (In case you haven't guessed, you can't just throw any cards into your computer and expect they will work together.... some will, many won't.)

    Many ETers have multiple card setups... Matrox, Nvidia, ATI, Appian.... but mixing brands and drivers is more likely to lead to problems.
     
    #18     Sep 2, 2003
  9. Remind me that the geeks shall inherit the earth :D


    It's good to be the geek.


    peace

    axeman
     
    #19     Sep 2, 2003
  10. I have read in several reference guides that you should put your PCI slot Graphics Card in the FARTHEST SLOT away from the AGP Card, in an effort to avoid conflicts.

    As for going into the BIOS, your BIOS will tell you which "IRQ" your video cards are being supported on. There is a possibility that you have a conflict due to the fact that your video cards are "competing" for the same IRQ.

    In any event, I have a 3 monitor set-up ( one digital and 2 CRTS ) that works fine with an AGP card that is Nvdia Chipset based, and a PCI card that is also Nvdia Chipset based. Everything is recognized by Windows XP, and worked out great the first time.

    IN my opinion, having Video Cards ( AGP and PCI ) that are of the same "chipset" like ALL Nvdia, does in fact help.
     
    #20     Sep 2, 2003