I got a lcd tv a few months ago and now I want to hook it up to my computer to run it as a second monitor. What would I need to do to hook it up? The computer is a gateway gt5220 if that helps any.
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Most of this is false.Any Double head nvidia card will support dual monitors. So will their software that runs the nvidia card.
Take note though. Any time you run a second monitor you are going to split the available video processing power in half almost exactly.
Or if you run 2 independent cards your computer will split the bus in half to support each card. (which does almost the same thing in terms of speed)
example: If you have a 2 slot SLI slot motherboard and a SLI bus of 16, each card will take 8.
That only way around this seems to be to have 2 different generation cards but then you run into the problem that the older generation card can't keep up with the newer card. Assuming the machine even has the slots to run 2 different generation cards.
That is about as simple as I can say it.
This IS Not all doom and gloom. When you start trying to run double monitors the best solution is to get high quality card(s). So the drop in power for each monitor is noticed alot less.
Im not sure where i posted false information there please point that out for me
As I said in my earlier post (which has nothing to do with the OP really as he has a single pci-e16x slot) whether the bus gets cut depends on the chipset you have. I have an older nvidia based motherboard that will split to 8x and 8x with dual graphics cards and my current mobo will split it 16x and 4x but there are chipsets that will give you a full 16x on all 16x pcie slots. And just because the bus gets spit down to 8x and 8x doesn't mean you will lose any performance.Or if you run 2 independent cards your computer will split the bus in half to support each card. (which does almost the same thing in terms of speed)
That only way around this seems to be to have 2 different generation cards but then you run into the problem that the older generation card can't keep up with the newer card. Assuming the machine even has the slots to run 2 different generation cards.
For most peoples use, and I'd assume the OP's as he is currently running the integrated graphics on his pc, there is no reason to buy an expensive card just for dual monitors. Unless your gaming or other 3d intensive work, any dedicated card made in the last 5 yrs has enough power to run 2 monitors with no performance issues at all.This IS Not all doom and gloom. When you start trying to run double monitors the best solution is to get high quality card(s). So the drop in power for each monitor is noticed alot less.
Wow. Lots of good information. I like that video card just wondering if my stock power supply will run it? For the most part I will be using it just to have 2 screens. If I play games, its usually WOW or NFSU2 so nothing to heavy in the graphics.
As I said in my earlier post (which has nothing to do with the OP really as he has a single pci-e16x slot) whether the bus gets cut depends on the chipset you have. I have an older nvidia based motherboard that will split to 8x and 8x with dual graphics cards and my current mobo will split it 16x and 4x but there are chipsets that will give you a full 16x on all 16x pcie slots. And just because the bus gets spit down to 8x and 8x doesn't mean you will lose any performance.
As I stated above it will only hurt performance if your card needs more than 8x speeds which few and far between do.
Don't know where this came from but what generation card you run together only matters if you want SLI or crossfire. If you run 2 cards together for multi monitor support it doesn't matter if one is from 1998 and on is brand new, they will not hinder each others performance, just the slower card will be slower but in 2d apps you won't notice. I can run dual monitors on my laptop (laptop screen and 22" LCD) on a 4 yr old integrated chip (ATI 200M)with no performance issues at all in 2d apps.
For most peoples use, and I'd assume the OP's as he is currently running the integrated graphics on his pc, there is no reason to buy an expensive card just for dual monitors. Unless your gaming or other 3d intensive work, any dedicated card made in the last 5 yrs has enough power to run 2 monitors with no performance issues at all.