Which is the least expensive dual link DVI video card?


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Are you wanting server grade, average desktop, or gaming? You gave very little description of your needs, cosrocket.

Sorry...I have a 27 inch 2560 x 1440 resolution Asus monitor which I have connected to my MacBook Pro via mini Display Port. I want to get a Windows desktop PC and connect it via DVI but it has to be dual link DVI. I have been given conflicting info as to whether I can run it in full resolution at 60Hz via HDMI. I know it will work fine with dual link DVI so that's why I'm asking. I'm not doing anything intensive. I just want it to work in full resolution at 60Hz.

NewEgg has some pretty sweet cards for cheap too. I roll NVidia, and not ATI. Just a preference.

 

GFX Cards

 

In the case of NVidia, there's basically anything Fermi - which supports both DVI-D and DVI-I straight out.  (My only quibble with Fermi is that full-size HDMI is not universally supported; Kepler and later correct this quibble, though.)

 

Kepler (and even the original GTX750 series ("baby Maxwell")) may be in your price range as well - I'm considering the ASUS GTX750 DIrectCU Silent.  Yes - a true passively-cooled (as in no fan at all) GTX750.  (Quite frankly, I'm surprised we haven't seen one before, as GTX750 has a lower TDP than Mobility Radeon HD54xx or HD55xx, for that matter - and that AMD GPU commonly shipped in a fanless configuration - for HTPC/light-gaming duties.)

 

http://www.asus.com/us/Graphics_Cards/GTX750DCSL2GD5/specifications/

http://www.microcenter.com/product/443438/GeForce_GTX_750_2GB_GDDR5_PCIe_Video_Card

 

One each of DVI-I, DisplayPort, and full-size HDMI.  Like HD5450 (and unlike my GTX550Ti - which it would replace) it needs no external power.

 

It will also support the just-released NVidia DX12 beta Forceware driver (as well as previous Forceware drivers).

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