Author

Topic: How many cards can I use with my PC ? (Read 331 times)

legendary
Activity: 910
Merit: 1000
August 18, 2017, 03:30:09 PM
#7
Your motherboard should support 5 GPU-s if you tone down the PCIEXPRESS GEN from AUTO to GEN1 in the board. This will lower your 1080 performance only a bit and it should allow you to run the 4 other cards to mine Ethereum or Zcash as the most profitable coins to mine nowadays. Be sure to buy at least 4 risers , there are tons of them at ebay or amazon.

Also check how many PCIE 6+2 pin connectors your PSU have as the 1080 should have got 2 from it, 1 6 PIN and one 6+2 PIN.
legendary
Activity: 1878
Merit: 1038
Telegram: https://t.me/eckmar
August 18, 2017, 03:16:14 PM
#6
Generally speaking you should be able to have as many GPU's as PCI-E slots on your motherboard, if you use powered risers. Not all motherboards support using all the PCI-E slots for GPU's, so you need to find out how many cards your motherboard supports.

If you plan on keeping the cards in your case, then you can only use the PCI-E x16 slots. The other problem with cards in a case is heat build up from mining. Any more than two GPU's in a closed case and you will likely overheat the GPU's


Any idea where I can find out how many gpu's my motherboard would support?


I mean, wouldn't that only matter if I'm using them in SLI , however-they will only be used for -well mining and 1x gpu for gaming.


It's a surprise to me that I can use pcie x1 slot for x16 card lol

yeah it's used with risers. And you can check info about your motherboard online.

What you asked about ETH. Basically coin is mineable when algorithm is POW, ETH will switch to POS (cannot be mined) but no one knows when. It's expected to crash mining scene as not many other coins can handle difficulty that ETH got (and remain profitable to mine)


Cannot be mined PERIOD or cannot be mined using GPU ?

How could this danger be looming over our heads and people still "investing" 10's-1000's of dollars into building rigs?

Cannot be mined period. Well ETH foundation announced that it's coming, but no one really knows when. Could be before the end of the year or next year or in 2 years, who knows. And if something goes wrong you can always sell your cards to gamers
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
August 18, 2017, 11:33:16 AM
#5
Generally speaking you should be able to have as many GPU's as PCI-E slots on your motherboard, if you use powered risers. Not all motherboards support using all the PCI-E slots for GPU's, so you need to find out how many cards your motherboard supports.

If you plan on keeping the cards in your case, then you can only use the PCI-E x16 slots. The other problem with cards in a case is heat build up from mining. Any more than two GPU's in a closed case and you will likely overheat the GPU's


Any idea where I can find out how many gpu's my motherboard would support?


I mean, wouldn't that only matter if I'm using them in SLI , however-they will only be used for -well mining and 1x gpu for gaming.


It's a surprise to me that I can use pcie x1 slot for x16 card lol

yeah it's used with risers. And you can check info about your motherboard online.

What you asked about ETH. Basically coin is mineable when algorithm is POW, ETH will switch to POS (cannot be mined) but no one knows when. It's expected to crash mining scene as not many other coins can handle difficulty that ETH got (and remain profitable to mine)


Cannot be mined PERIOD or cannot be mined using GPU ?

How could this danger be looming over our heads and people still "investing" 10's-1000's of dollars into building rigs?
legendary
Activity: 1878
Merit: 1038
Telegram: https://t.me/eckmar
August 18, 2017, 11:13:47 AM
#4
Generally speaking you should be able to have as many GPU's as PCI-E slots on your motherboard, if you use powered risers. Not all motherboards support using all the PCI-E slots for GPU's, so you need to find out how many cards your motherboard supports.

If you plan on keeping the cards in your case, then you can only use the PCI-E x16 slots. The other problem with cards in a case is heat build up from mining. Any more than two GPU's in a closed case and you will likely overheat the GPU's


Any idea where I can find out how many gpu's my motherboard would support?


I mean, wouldn't that only matter if I'm using them in SLI , however-they will only be used for -well mining and 1x gpu for gaming.


It's a surprise to me that I can use pcie x1 slot for x16 card lol

yeah it's used with risers. And you can check info about your motherboard online.

What you asked about ETH. Basically coin is mineable when algorithm is POW, ETH will switch to POS (cannot be mined) but no one knows when. It's expected to crash mining scene as not many other coins can handle difficulty that ETH got (and remain profitable to mine)
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
August 18, 2017, 11:07:50 AM
#3
Generally speaking you should be able to have as many GPU's as PCI-E slots on your motherboard, if you use powered risers. Not all motherboards support using all the PCI-E slots for GPU's, so you need to find out how many cards your motherboard supports.

If you plan on keeping the cards in your case, then you can only use the PCI-E x16 slots. The other problem with cards in a case is heat build up from mining. Any more than two GPU's in a closed case and you will likely overheat the GPU's


Any idea where I can find out how many gpu's my motherboard would support?


I mean, wouldn't that only matter if I'm using them in SLI , however-they will only be used for -well mining and 1x gpu for gaming.


It's a surprise to me that I can use pcie x1 slot for x16 card lol
hero member
Activity: 1036
Merit: 606
August 18, 2017, 10:29:33 AM
#2
Generally speaking you should be able to have as many GPU's as PCI-E slots on your motherboard, if you use powered risers. Not all motherboards support using all the PCI-E slots for GPU's, so you need to find out how many cards your motherboard supports.

If you plan on keeping the cards in your case, then you can only use the PCI-E x16 slots. The other problem with cards in a case is heat build up from mining. Any more than two GPU's in a closed case and you will likely overheat the GPU's
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
August 18, 2017, 10:22:33 AM
#1
Hello all,

This is my gaming PC- how many cards can I use my setup ? someone said 6 - now just before I go ahead and purchase cards-I'd like to make sure lol


Also, btw - what is POS - POW  for ETH ? what does that mean and is that a cause of attention for new rig builders?


I have these slots.


Slot 1: PCI-Express x16 Gen 3i
Slot 2: PCI-Express x4 Gen 2
Slot 3: PCI-Express x16 Gen 3i
Slot 4: PCI-Express x1 Gen 2
Slot 5: PCI-Express x16 Gen 3i

and 1500 watt PSU

in my PC - what does that translate into?

16 gb RAM -DDR4

6800k (liquid cooled)

1tb SSD

Currently has 1 x 1080 = I'd like to use that for my gaming monitor.

What equipment I need in addition to new cards?

So suggestions ?

TIA
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