Recommended Posts

Hello, my boss has an existing setup with 2 monitors being powered by a Radeon HD card. I don recall the model number.

Anyhow it works great but now he wants to throw a 3rd monitor in the mix and this card does not support that. Can anyone recommend a video card that can support 3 monitors and is under $100.00?

I would prefer Nvidia but AMD is OK also. Ideally we would need a PCI X 16 card and that contains outputs for VGA, DVI and HDMI. This is how each one of the monitors can connect.

Right now he is using DVI and HDMI ports.

Thanks for the help!

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1057724-video-card-for-3-monitors/
Share on other sites

It would only be possible with an ATI card that does Eyefinity.

These are the only capable cards.

  • AMD Radeon? HD 6870 GPUs
  • AMD Radeon? HD 6850 GPUs
  • ATI Radeon? HD 5970 GPUs
  • ATI Radeon? HD 5800 Series GPUs
  • ATI Radeon? HD 5700 Series GPUs
  • ATI Radeon? HD 5670 GPUs
  • ATI Radeon? HD 5500 Series GPUs
  • ATI Radeon? HD 5450 GPUs
  • ATI Mobility Radeon? HD 5400 Series or higher GPUs

You can also have multiple video cards in a single system. I personally use two ATI 4960's to drive three monitors. They don't have to be identical cards, but it sure does un-complicate driver issues if they are the same. So it may be possible to just add on another video card for that third monitor as opposed to replacing the existing one entirely.

I have one of the eyefinity cards. one 32", one 21" and one 19" monitor. I do not play game videos, using VLC, on all 3 monitors at once. I believe i spent about $150 for the card with 1gb on it.

I'm out of town for a few days, but in case you want to know the specific card send me a PM and I can get the specific details Wed.

You will have to have HDMI and/or DVI conections

i really enjoy my hd5830, and it can be had on ebay for 100 or less and it does 3, pretty good miner card also for the money

  • Output 2 x Dual-Link DVI
  • 1 x HDMI
  • 1 x DisplayPort
  • GPU 800 MHz Core Clock
  • 40 nm Chip
  • 1120 x Stream Processors
  • Memory 1024 MB Size
  • 256 -bit GDDR5
  • 4000 MHz Effective

Wow thanks for all the feedback. I like the one on Ebay and the Asus. We will just stick with one card but thanks for the advice on two of them.

James I appreciate it but the cost needs to be under $100.00

Yeah I'm quite sure you'd need something like this though someone can correct me if I'm wrong. So keep in mind that's another 25 bucks there.

EDIT: This says it supports 3 monitors and it's just two DVI ports and HDMI (so obviously no need for an adapter on this one). Just keep in mind the size of the heatsink for the system you're putting it into.

Yeah I'm quite sure you'd need something like this though someone can correct me if I'm wrong. So keep in mind that's another 25 bucks there.

EDIT: This says it supports 3 monitors and it's just two DVI ports and HDMI (so obviously no need for an adapter on this one). Just keep in mind the size of the heatsink for the system you're putting it into.

Another issue is what the card will be used for. Gaming is a big use - but some non-gaming *application* software (TD Ameritrade's ThinkOrSwim, for example) can also use three displays. A bargain non-gaming/light-gaming Eyefinity card is the VisionTek HD6670 2GB GDDR3 PCIe card. It falls below your $100 cutoff (even when not on sale) and can be found at retail (Best Buy and MicroCenter) and online (Newegg, Amazon, microcenter.com. etc.)

AN identical card is also avaiilable from XFX.

You know he uses ThinkorSwim every day! No gaming done here all business apps and internet.

+jeston are you sure that what you are saying applies to all Eyefinity cards?

I want to make this simple for him

+jeston are you sure that what you are saying applies to all Eyefinity cards?

I want to make this simple for him

100% positive. Take a look here for more information as well as a list of validated adapters.

Edit:

Yeah I'm quite sure you'd need something like this though someone can correct me if I'm wrong. So keep in mind that's another 25 bucks there.

EDIT: This says it supports 3 monitors and it's just two DVI ports and HDMI (so obviously no need for an adapter on this one). Just keep in mind the size of the heatsink for the system you're putting it into.

Hmm that is interesting... I'll have to look into this a little more.

You know he uses ThinkorSwim every day! No gaming done here all business apps and internet.

That was meant more for other folks - not the OP. I have ThinkOrSwim's thinkDesktop (the paperMoney version) installed here, and I certainly can see why the triple-monitor play would be of use to a trader (even though I use it with just one display - due to lack of space for additional displays).

The other reason I would prefer the HD6670 is that (unlike most other Eyefinity-supporting cards) it doesn't require anything more than what comes through the PCIe bus power-wise - even better, it only takes up *one slot*.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Audacious 4.6.1 by Razvan Serea Audacious is a lightweight, open-source audio player that emphasizes simplicity, performance, and sound quality. Designed for Linux, Windows, and macOS, it supports a wide range of audio formats, internet radio streaming, and playlist management. Users can customize the interface with Winamp-style skins or modern themes, making it flexible for different preferences. Audacious also includes an equalizer, advanced audio effects, and a plugin system for extending functionality. Its low resource usage makes it especially suitable for older computers or users who value efficiency without sacrificing playback quality. Audacious key features: High audio quality – delivers clean, gapless playback with minimal distortion. Wide format support – plays MP3, FLAC, Ogg Vorbis, AAC, WAV, WMA, and more. Internet radio streaming – supports Shoutcast, Icecast, and other online streams. Winamp skin support – classic, nostalgic look for users who prefer the old-school style. Modern GTK-based interface – clean, simple UI with a more modern feel. Customizable themes – change appearance through skins and themes. Advanced playlist management – organize, save, and edit playlists with ease. Equalizer – fine-tune audio output with a built-in graphical equalizer. Audio effects – built-in DSP options like crossfade, replay gain, and more. Plugin system – extend functionality with additional components. File metadata support – displays and organizes music based on tags. Drag-and-drop support – quickly add songs or playlists. Global hotkey support – control playback without switching windows. Bit-perfect output modes – bypass system mixers for pure audio output. ReplayGain support – normalizes track loudness automatically. Cue sheet support – play entire albums from a single audio file with .cue. MPRIS2 integration – integrates with Linux desktop environments for media controls. Advanced resampling options – adjust playback quality with different resampler settings. Gapless playback – seamless transition between tracks encoded properly. Crossfade plugin – blend one song into the next smoothly. Last.fm scrobbling plugin – track listening history online. Remote control support – control Audacious via command-line or scripts. Lyrics plugin – display song lyrics if available. Alarm / timer plugin – start or stop playback at set times. SOX resampler plugin – high-quality resampling for audiophiles. Spectrum analyzer / visualization plugins – visual feedback while playing music. Headphone crossfeed effect – simulates speaker listening for headphones. Customizable buffer size – tweak latency and playback smoothness. Audacious 4.6.1 changelog: Use XDG cache dir to store temporary files (#1817) Accept embedded lyrics in more cases (#1818) Bump .so and plugin ABI versions retrospectively (#1819) Include Georgian translation (#1820) Fix build on systems using musl instead of glibc (#1823) Download: Audacious 4.6.1 | 48.2 MB (Open Source) Download: Portable Audacious 4.6.1 | 69.8 MB View: Audacious Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • I really wonder if this has to do with the built in VPN or "private DNS" of browsers that trip up legal requirements like cookie consent and Cloudflare (to avoid all the botnet attacks we get). And BTW some botnets still manage to get past Cloudflare, we are constantly having to tweak it to block malicious traffic that ultimately cause a DDoS.
    • CPPC states can also be messed around with in most UEFI settings but aren't as robust as the ones that the Windows Scheduler can provide! Make sure you look into what your motherboard also has before customizing for the Windows Scheduler.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      rolfus earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      518
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      199
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      93
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      79
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!