How many monitors can radeon 6850 support




















You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. Can I connect two large monitors to Radeon HD ? Thread starter Jskid Start date Jul 25, I would like to connect at least two monitors to it. How large can the monitors be? For example could I connect two 28"? Must they use different connections? Physical size won't matter. Reactions: ZedRM. Click to expand Depends on what you use the PC system for, upgrade budget, and current power supply - a Radeon HD is W-ish graphics card, so if you wanted to stay in the same ballpark figure, regarding power, then something like a Radeon RX would fit the bill.

It has up to 3 DisplayPort sockets so it could easily run 2 big, high resolution monitors. It was released 3 years ago, though, so isn't the most up-to-date model; so if your system could cope with an additional power requirement of W, then the latest Radeon RX would do just as well.

Downstream it seems to be a I have updated the software as well. PCI refers to important components integrated on the motherboard, and Unknown could be as well. Getting these installed will add to the list of available features on your system as well as improve stability and speed. You can obtain drivers from the vendor HP, Dell, etc. After doing that, I suggest uninstalling the ATI software, rebooting, reinstalling it, and rebooting again.

Should be good to go after that! Don't forget that you often need to enable the 2nd monitor either from Windows display properties or from the ATI Catalyst control panel. JimInKS, That is not necessarily true. Thanks for the tips. I've tried installing the mystery devices, but Windows cannot find the drivers for them online, so refuses. I've deactivated them; it seems to make no difference.

I've been into Windows display properties to activate the 2nd monitor, and extend the desktop onto it, but nothing happens.

I have the latest ATI drivers. I reinstalled them recently when CCC stopped working suddenly, the solution eventually was to uninstall. NET down to vsn 2. I think you need to get those devices installed and apparently you don't have the experience needed to do so. Often windows update will NOT find drivers and I generally don't let it handle the task of finding drivers for unknown devices.

It can screw things up. As stated, it should be done and the motherboard manufacturer or specific hardware manufacturer will have the drivers. You just have to know how to look for them and install them. If you're out of your skill league or out of patience, it may be time for a professional.

Quote JimInKS Even if the analog pins are present on the connector I wouldn't put it past a manufacturer to not support them with a particular chip set. Just checked the XFX page you mention. If so is that a problem? And what is Display Port? In order.

Could be, depends on the monitor. The interface is primarily used to connect a video source to a display device such as a computer monitor, though it can also be used to transmit audio, USB, and other forms of data. Backward compatibility to VGA and DVI by using adapter dongles enables consumers to use DisplayPort fitted video sources without replacing existing display devices.

Although DisplayPort supports much of the same functionality as HDMI, it is expected to complement the interface, not replace it. I notice there are adaptors on Ebay. Tim, Yes, I noticed those specs. And yes, you are correct that it means one of the DVI ports is dual link while the other is single link. An exciting feature that started in the Radeon series , and now continued on the series graphics cards is Eyefinity.

You will have no problem connecting say, three 30" monitors at x The graphics card can take that resolution and in fact combine the screen resolution and play in it.

ATI's Series graphics cards will be able to drive one to six monitors per graphics card depending on the limitations we just mentioned in the previous chapter about monitor connectivity. We've tested this live in action, and Eyefinity works really nicely. You can combine monitors and get your groove on up-to say x pixels separated over several monitors -- multiple monitors to be used as a single display.

Personally I like to game on three screens. It's really immersive. If you are bold enough to go for a multi-monitor setup, it really is ideal to get three screens for flight sims, racing games, role playing games, real-time strategy Huge maps! Eyefinity is modular and thus allows users to rearrange the number of discrete images created in addition to their shape according to your liking. Guru3D users and gamers will no doubt find this setup to their liking.



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