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xxxalpinexxx80

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I saw somewhere i believe evga that you can have 3 gpu at 1 time since there selling the 3 bridge like fore 20 bucks, does any one know if 3 8800gts will work and does it work with evga 680i a1
 
I saw somewhere i believe evga that you can have 3 gpu at 1 time since there selling the 3 bridge like fore 20 bucks, does any one know if 3 8800gts will work and does it work with evga 680i a1

Tri-SLi works with the 169.21 ForceWare beta drivers. eVGA sent me an email this morning offering me a 780i for $89.99. Basically, I'd be stepping up to the board and returning my 680i.

I'm not sure if it would work with the 680i. There are three PCI-E slots, but the third slot runs at X8. The 780i has three X16 slots and support for PCI-E 2.0.

EDIT: Tri-SLI only works with the GTX and the Ultra.
 
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I don't believe it does work, but also remember that the third slot is only 4x electrically.
 
since i have an evga board im i able to use step up, and if i use step up how much does it cost and what would be the benifiets instead of the 680i
 
since i have an evga board im i able to use step up, and if i use step up how much does it cost and what would be the benifiets instead of the 680i

First, you have to register your motherboard at the eVGA website. For me, it is $89.99. I believe you have the same board, so you'll probably get the same deal.

The only benefits are Tri-SLi and PCI-E 2.0 support. That's it.
 
my god u can TRI SLI NOW , but but .............. how , i mean the connectors , thats soo awesome !!
 
First, you have to register your motherboard at the eVGA website. For me, it is $89.99. I believe you have the same board, so you'll probably get the same deal.

The only benefits are Tri-SLi and PCI-E 2.0 support. That's it.
Which brings up another issue. Only two of the PCI-E x16 slots are using the new 2.0 standard, the third slot still runs on a traditional PCI-E x16 slot, which may cause some latency issues.
 
Do video cards nowdays use all the bandwidth anyways?
There is a difference between running cards at 8x and 16x, so I'd imagine it's using close to the full 16x speed. However the article I was reading wasn't saying that it was a bandwidth issue, but that the two PCI-E 2.0 slots go through the northbridge, while the third PCI-E x16 slot goes through the south bridge, which is causing some major latency problems with Tri-SLI. The article also stated that this is why the 780 boards are delayed, because they are trying to fix this issue.
 
[-0MEGA-];845207 said:
Which brings up another issue. Only two of the PCI-E x16 slots are using the new 2.0 standard, the third slot still runs on a traditional PCI-E x16 slot, which may cause some latency issues.

Yeah, I didn't know that. Doesn't really seem worth it. nVidia should focus on improving dual-SLi before releasing this added technology, IMO.
 
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Wow! lol

Anybody know what case that is, it looks great!
 
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