| SLI vs. CrossFire | ||||||||||||||||
| By Gabriel Torres on April 15, 2008 | Page 5 of 8 | |||||||||||||||
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CrossFire Of course nVidia’s rival ATI couldn’t stay behind and released an equivalent technology to work with video cards based on ATI chips. The main advantage of CrossFire over SLI is that on CrossFire the video cards don’t need to be based on the same graphics chip (GPU) – but there are some limitations to what cards can be used together, as will explain in details (basically the cards can be different but must be from the same family). CrossFire can use the following modes to render images:
Just like SLI, CrossFire is available only to PCI Express cards and you need to have a motherboard with two (or four, in the case of CrossFireX) x16 PCI Express slots and the motherboard must be based on an AMD/ATI or Intel chipset. Keep in mind that depending on the chipset the x16 PCI Express slots can run at x8 speed when CrossFire mode is enabled (more on this later). Also when CrossFire mode is enabled only one video output is available, so you can’t have a multiple monitor configuration under CrossFire, just a single display. So far there are three CrossFire generations: CrossFire, Native CrossFire and CrossFireX. The first generation of CrossFire had two main problems. First they required a “master” card, called “CrossFire Edition”, which was different from the regular model sold around – it had an additional chip called “compositing engine”. For example, there was Radeon X850 CrossFire Edition and the regular Radeon X850 XT video card. You couldn’t use two Radeon X850 XT cards, one of them needed to be the special CrossFire edition. The second major problem was that you needed an external cable to connect the video cards, as you can see on Figure 7. This cable connects the DVI output from the “slave” card to a connector called DMS-59 (or DMS for short), which has the same physical size of DVI but with more pins, or to a connector called VHDCI (Very High Density Cable Interconnect), which is a connector originally used by some SCSI devices, on the “master” card. This version of CrossFire can increase the maximum resolution of your video card up to 2560x1600, the same limit of SLI.
As we mentioned before even though on CrossFire the video cards don’t need to be the same, there is a list of video cards that can be hooked together, as you can see on the table below. Basically the “slave” card must be from the same family from the “master card”. So if you have a Radeon 1900 CrossFire edition you cannot install a Radeon X1800 XL to form a CrossFire system, for example.
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