DDR3 on videocards too fast 4 SFP?
Actually it isn't a 'windows' issue. On some of the older (or cheaper) chipsets with PCIe, the PCIe lanes were grabbing too much 'main' system bandwidth and causing problems for PCI devices that needed a lot of bandwidth. Nforce4 has this issue out of the box and there is an intel i9xx chipset that had it too (iirc). Check the Tech section on this site for more info on known good PCIe implementations.On 2006-08-02 15:56, H-Rave wrote:
I think the pci-e issue probably comes more likely than not from windows, and it's as usual not on the ballness.As for software manufacturers,the interface between the hardware and the programs is,of course,windows.I suppose it's always a problem between the drivers and microsoft Go Figure.
Thank you Brotha' Man Valis,
I will be using the newest 965 chipset from Intel with the Conroe E6700, so I hope I'm safe. Just purchased the eVGA GeForce 6800GT PCI-e w/ 256MB DDR2, not the DDR3. So we shall see. I will be posting about failure/sucsess by month's end. I am hoping that this DP965LT is the new D965PERL, it shall be my VST/SFP DAW 4 Live Performance.
Strength And Honor,
I will be using the newest 965 chipset from Intel with the Conroe E6700, so I hope I'm safe. Just purchased the eVGA GeForce 6800GT PCI-e w/ 256MB DDR2, not the DDR3. So we shall see. I will be posting about failure/sucsess by month's end. I am hoping that this DP965LT is the new D965PERL, it shall be my VST/SFP DAW 4 Live Performance.
Strength And Honor,