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Apple 922-7128 (*)video Card Power Cable For Mac

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Hello, The NVidia GeForce 8800 GT in my early 2008 Mac Pro 3,1 just cut out. Or more specifically the fan no longer fans, and any activity that uses the gpu will crash the computer within seconds. I just spent about 2 hours trying to figure out what my graphics card replacement options are and I am completely overwhelmed. Not only have I always been confused by graphics cards and which are better, but figuring out which ones will work with my computer has my head spinning. The video cards sold on Apple's website all claim they require a 2009 or 2010 model, though people with the same computer as mine have claimed to run the 5770 with no problems.

Anyways, I would appreciate any advice! I am planning on keeping this computer for a long time to come, so I'd like to go with the best upgrade possible (excluding anything too pricey - like the $1200 one on Apple's store). Also, if it's relevant, I am currently running 10.6.8, but planning on upgrading to Lion anyway - so I could always expedite the upgrade if necessary. Thanks ahead of time for any tips!

With Lion the options are bigger. I am using a MP octo '08 with a Sapphire Radeon HD5870 I flashed back in 2010 (bought for £275 on eBay). It runs very well in Snow Leopard.

Apple 922-7128 (*)video Card Power Cable For Mac Download

Apple 922-7128 (*)video card power cable for mac

All I miss is the boot screen and I can live with that. If you are going to Lion then several options open up: The Nvidia Driver update allows team green in, Read all about it here: You can drop in an AMD Radeon HD6870 pretty much straight out of the box in most cases: XFX seem the most likely brand to work. Alternatively, you could use Zeus to flash it.

If you wish to remain in Snow Leopard. Finally you can buy a modified PC card from a good eBay merchant who knows what he is doing: Take your pick. Thanks for the quick replies, both of you! Based on all of that, it seems my best options are either the HD 5870, GTX 570 or GTX 580. It looks like the 580 would require a separate power supply, which I'd rather not deal with, leaving me with the 5870 or the 570. The GTX 570 seems to be the better of the two, so I'm leaning towards that. I do realize that the 570 would not give me a boot screen - so that means to switch between windows/os x I will need to use the bootcamp controls, correct?

Before I make the leap, though, I'd like to verify one thing. In the thread you linked, gpzjock, someone mentioned that to use the GTX 570 in a Mac Pro you need 2 PCIe 6-pin cables which aren't included with the card. I did some searching and the only PCIe 6 pin cables I can find are listed as extensions or splitters (for example: Are any of those what I'm looking for? Or am I missing something?

Thanks again! An AMD 6850 PC card is a drop-in replacement for the 8800GT under Lion 10.7.3, and is claimed to work under 10.6.8 but I haven't tried it. No second power cable needed. I have a Sapphire card, which is quiet even at start-up, unlike the 8800. Reasonably priced solution if you don't need the horsepower of the cards mentioned already. No boot screen, so you are right about using System Preferences/Bootcamp to switch.

Note that my Lion installation doesn't see the Win 7 disk in System Preferences, for reasons not yet clear, though I can get to it using the Win 7 install disk. No problem switching back to OSX.

Apple 922-7128 (*)video Card Power Cable For Mac922-7128

GTX285 remains the fastest officially supported Nvidia video card for Mac Pro 3,1 and up. GTX285 still holds its own even against newer unofficial cards much due to the wide 512bit memory bus (newer cards have narrower memory bus). Reference cards, which most of them are, are also very quiet. There are nice, overbuilt units, weighing 2lbs+. I should also note that while ATI cards are newer and often are thriftier, they have no CUDA capability because CUDA is Nvidia's proprietary technology. Many Adobe products like Premiere CS5 have CUDA acceleration plugins (GTX285 is officially supported).