Bitcoin Forum

Other => CPU/GPU Bitcoin mining hardware => Topic started by: CYPER on July 09, 2011, 04:23:53 AM



Title: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: CYPER on July 09, 2011, 04:23:53 AM
So can I expect any problems mixing 5850/5870/5970/6990 on the same motherboard under Ubuntu?

Would it make any difference which cards I mix or some go better with others? Best combinations in terms of less issues?

Share your thoughts please :)


Title: Re: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: bonker on March 16, 2013, 12:00:51 AM
Popular thread, well.done buddy!


Srsly, im interested too if anyone has any experience



Title: Re: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: Gator-hex on March 16, 2013, 01:41:08 AM
Makes no difference run what you want when they are not crossfired and using it for mining.

You can use LinuxCoin it's all been setup for you and it's small enough to run from a memory stick.

If you're gaming they have to be the same series and crossfired.

If not crossfired you game on the first card and the others can mine in the background without causing any lag.


Title: Re: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: crazyates on March 16, 2013, 05:00:18 AM
Makes no difference run what you want when they are not crossfired and using it for mining.

You can use LinuxCoin it's all been setup for you and it's small enough to run from a memory stick.

If you're gaming they have to be the same series and crossfired.

If not crossfired you game on the first card and the others can mine in the background without causing any lag.

Some people have noticed a drop in performance when crossfired, but I didn't.

I ran a 5870, 5850, and a 5830 in a Frankenfire 3 way CF. I didn't see hardly any drop in hashrate with or without CF. I ended up swapping the slower two and trying it with the 5870 and a 5970, and again CF made no difference.

But to answer the OP's question, yes, you can mine with different cards just fine. The only thing I would suggest is keeping 5xxx and 6xxx cards out of the same rig as any 7xxx cards, due to SDK incompatibilities. 7xxx cards require SDK 2.6 or newer, with 2.8 being the newest. However, 5xxx and 6xxx don't like anything past 2.5, and will run slower with the newer versions.


Title: Re: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: bonker on March 16, 2013, 07:51:02 PM
Makes no difference run what you want when they are not crossfired and using it for mining.

You can use LinuxCoin it's all been setup for you and it's small enough to run from a memory stick.

If you're gaming they have to be the same series and crossfired.

If not crossfired you game on the first card and the others can mine in the background without causing any lag.

Some people have noticed a drop in performance when crossfired, but I didn't.

I ran a 5870, 5850, and a 5830 in a Frankenfire 3 way CF. I didn't see hardly any drop in hashrate with or without CF. I ended up swapping the slower two and trying it with the 5870 and a 5970, and again CF made no difference.

But to answer the OP's question, yes, you can mine with different cards just fine. The only thing I would suggest is keeping 5xxx and 6xxx cards out of the same rig as any 7xxx cards, due to SDK incompatibilities. 7xxx cards require SDK 2.6 or newer, with 2.8 being the newest. However, 5xxx and 6xxx don't like anything past 2.5, and will run slower with the newer versions.


im starting to like some of yoir post. Thx for the everone, im putting rigs together fanatically


Title: Re: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: crazyates on March 16, 2013, 08:48:45 PM
Some people have noticed a drop in performance when crossfired, but I didn't.

I ran a 5870, 5850, and a 5830 in a Frankenfire 3 way CF. I didn't see hardly any drop in hashrate with or without CF. I ended up swapping the slower two and trying it with the 5870 and a 5970, and again CF made no difference.

But to answer the OP's question, yes, you can mine with different cards just fine. The only thing I would suggest is keeping 5xxx and 6xxx cards out of the same rig as any 7xxx cards, due to SDK incompatibilities. 7xxx cards require SDK 2.6 or newer, with 2.8 being the newest. However, 5xxx and 6xxx don't like anything past 2.5, and will run slower with the newer versions.
im starting to like some of yoir post. Thx for the everone, im putting rigs together fanatically
I'm not a total monster.  ;)


Title: Re: Mixing different cards on the same motherboard
Post by: Bogart on March 16, 2013, 08:51:01 PM
I thought that on linux it was possible to run different SDK versions simultaneously on the different cards.

I've never done it myself since I have all 5xxx series.