

- #How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card install#
- #How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card upgrade#
- #How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card code#
- #How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card Pc#
- #How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card series#
#How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card install#
If you are installing a new Nvidia GPU please install the appropriate drivers before installation.The problem of course is finding a graphics cards that are half height that work well.Īnyway, there are a lot of options, if you have any specific questions outside of those, I can do some tests on my bay to figure out stuff. So I mean you COULD invest in a lower profile graphics card for the 2nd slot and put the Red Rocket X into the 12X slot, since it's a double hight card.
#How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card code#
6k with Red Code won't playback in real time without a Red Rocket card, it just doesn't work. Red Code 5k? It's not flawless with the Titan X, it will jump around during playback in DaVinci in real-time render. 4k Red Code? No problem with the Titan X 12Gb card. That leads me to answering the big question. I actually have a Red Rocket in my tower because I need to decode Red stuff on the fly in real time at 6k and you can't do that without some sort of hardware. If you're working with RED material, graphics card and CPU speeds are everything. Then above that, throw a blackmagic card for DaVinci output and a USB3.1 card, which just hit the market. Titan-X 12gb in replace of the stock graphics card. In terms of configuring the machine, the boot drive can go in the 2nd optical drive slot and you can put 4, 8tb drives into the 4 main drive slots. You can get 1tb, 10k boot drives for around $275 today. I personally like the 10,000RPM boot drives because they have less issues with cache's and swap files, which are a problem with SSD's. You can start with a Titan X 12gb graphics card and see if it works for ya, it may.
#How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card upgrade#
I'd buy a low-power 2 proc 5,1 on ebay and upgrade the processors to the 3.43Ghz ones, which are the max you can do. There is a memory speed difference, but it's negligible in the grand scheme of things. Most people with trashcan's wind up doing external chassis and Titan-X graphics cards.ĥ,1 vs 4,1 is limited. The great thing is that today, you can install something like a M5000 graphics card and get FAR better results with transcoding then the trashcan will ever get. I'm a pretty huge fan of the 5,1's for post production and have been setting them up all around Hollywood and they work well.
#How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card series#
So they're stuck using the older series of proc's, which aren't bad, but CAN be very limiting. The biggest problem with them is the lack of support for modern processors. The 5,1 mac pro's hold up really well to the trashcan. Though I'm not sure if that'd offer as much performance as the older Mac Pro. The other alternative I'm considering is jury-rigging a Maxwell Titan X on to the iMac as an eGPU (using an Akitio Node, and a TB3 to TB2 converter). Slower rendering/processing speeds compared to new machines isn't my biggest concern either, it's having a machine that's powerful and stable enough the slog through the heavy workloads of raw projects without crashing - so I don't mind it chugging through things slower, so long as it keeps chugging at all times.

I'm really struggling here, and need a machine that's up to the task. Is there any difference between an upgraded 4,1 and a genuine 5,1 that I'd need to worry about? (I'm mainly just concerned about potential hardware bottlenecks between the two).Īny help would be GREATLY appreciated. I've also found some units for sale, that say they're 4,1 Mac Pros, upgraded to 5,1.

What sort of performance bottlenecks am I likely to face with the older machine? I'm thinking the twelve-core (or is it dual 6-cores?) 3.46Ghz processor, A flashed 12Gb maxwell Titan X, 128GB RAM, PCI-based SSD for the boot drive, a Blackmagic Decklink Mini Monitor (for my reference monitor) and a 4-port USB3.0 Card (to make it all usable in 2017)? I'm wondering how well a maxed-out 5,1 Mac Pro tower might hold up for 5k-6k Redcode, 2.8k Arriraw and 4k Sonyraw material. But the dual-D700 cards have too many issues with Davinci Resolve for it to be a viable option for me. But started considering it recently because I'm getting desperate.
#How to swap out a mac pro 5.1 graphics card Pc#
ProRes and FCPX are both still big parts of my work, so moving over to a PC (as much as I'd like to at this stage) isn't an option. Constant crashes, running out of GPU memory (with the 2GB GTX680 internal card) it's simply costing me more time in issues than it's worth. I've been limping along on a maxed-out late 2012 iMac for a while now, and it's just not keeping up with the intensity of the raw-based projects I'm colour grading at the moment.
