Re: PSUs SLI ready question
As far as I'm aware, SLI ready power supplies can support ATI gfx cards aswell, its just a standard PCIE power connector. The "SLI Ready" bit afaik just means it can support 2 (or more) graphics cards and is certified by nvidia.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
AFAIK it is just marketing. I may be wrong though.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
plenty enough power for the job, it won't have the connectors you need though so you'll want molex to PCIe adapters which should come with the card.
SLi ready means it can SLi a certain number of cards dictated by the SLi Zone website I believe. That doesn't mean they have to be certified to do it though..
Pretty much if it can do SLi it will do xfire of a similar card.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Quote:
Originally Posted by
staffsMike
plenty enough power for the job, it won't have the connectors you need though so you'll want molex to PCIe adapters which should come with the card.
SLi ready means it can SLi a certain number of cards dictated by the SLi Zone website I believe. That doesn't mean they have to be certified to do it though..
Pretty much if it can do SLi it will do xfire of a similar card.
If its quoted as "SLI Ready" it displays the NVIDIA logo, so I'd have thought certification would be necessary :confused: will look it up. Same goes for sli ready RAM
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Quote from Nvidia homepage:
"Only power supplies that pass NVIDIA SLI certification can be called "NVIDIA SLI-Ready certified."
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Did you quote me for a reason there? Not seeing it lol
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Sorry, I'm reading things wrong tonight. Ignore me :) went to bed at 3 in the morning last night and got up at 6. I appologise :)
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Lol no worries it just confused me.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Sli certification and for that matter crossfire certification is marketing nothing more as long as a power supply has sufficient Amps on the 12v rails and number of PCIe connectors the is no reason it could not run multiple cards.
Equally SLi certification is for a particular number and type of cards, so a power supply could be SLi certified for 2x 8600GT obviously this doesn't mean it can run SLi-ed GTX280s.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
The support on these forums is awesome :D
please excuse my ignorence, but is this what you are refering to when you say molex to PCIe adapter:
www.scan.co.uk/Product.aspx?WebProductID=154684
just want to make sure i understand what you are saying :)
does someone have any experience with the reliability of such adapters? cheers!
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
ay that would be one :P and the reliabilty depends on how you load the power supply. All about how many amps youve got on the different rails
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Yeah, mostly they are fine I think. I had some dodgy molex to SATA's before but win some lose some I guess. Most graphics cards come with them as standard though so feel free to use them :)
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Awesome... i guess if they are included with the gfx cards, then it is expected to be just fine :) Thanks a lot for all the info.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
Quote:
Originally Posted by
strike-down
Quote from Nvidia homepage:
"Only power supplies that pass NVIDIA SLI certification can be called "NVIDIA SLI-Ready certified."
As mike originally mentioned and strike quoted, however remember that they never say Which cards they are offically certified for :rolleyes: there have been a couple of none too good psu's that got certified for low end/power nvidia cards, when better psu's of the same rated wattage were sli certified for higher power draw cards.
Re: PSUs SLI ready question
If something is 'SLI certified' then it may just be for 2 6800GT's. Doesnt mean it will take 2 x GTX280's.
This SLI certified thing in SLI zone is nothing more than a gimmick.
When the Corsair 520W first arrived it wasnt certified but had more than enough grunt to SLI.
This is exactly why sites like SLI zone confuse people and should be taken with a pinch of salt.