Re: Any recommendations for inexpensive secondhand GPUs?
Posted: Fri May 15, 2020 9:00 pm
The most recent info I can find is a GTX 1050 Ti on Windows running PCIe 2.0: viewtopic.php?f=38&t=34923
Community driven support forum for Folding@home
https://foldingforum.org/
PantherX wrote:The most recent info I can find is a GTX 1050 Ti on Windows running PCIe 2.0: viewtopic.php?f=38&t=34923
Sorry, missed the 1st generation bit, I was referring to 3rd gen. It does seem under these circumstance that Linux your best bet.ZePompom wrote:PantherX wrote:I believe that kiore might be talking about Gen 3. Do note that OS matters too. IIRC, on Windows Gen 3 x8 is the lowest you can go without any impact but for Linux, it is Gen 3 x2. You can read more about it here:
Brief recent discussion: viewtopic.php?f=38&t=34932
Lengthy previous discussion: viewtopic.php?f=38&t=28847
Thanks.
Just try to figure out is 8x PCIe 1.1 is enough, so "4x PCIe 3.0 is enough" doesn't help me, sadly
I do plan to use Lubuntu on my folding machine. I already installed it and made some tests. For SSH, remote desktop and FAH control remote connection.
PantherX wrote:Please do update us if you decide to go down that road as it will be helpful to the wider community now and in future
What I mean to say, is that motherboard manufacturers in general don't update their bioses beyond 2 years.ZePompom wrote: But I don't understand why you say "The best (fastest) GPU that will work in most PCIE 2.0 motherboards, is a 1060 6GB. It's a bit faster than the 3GB."
When I do the maths, even a GTX 1660 can be handled by a PCIe 16x 1.1 (in a folding context), so why a GTX 1060 6GB couldn't and would need at least PCIe 2.0?
MeeLee wrote:What I mean to say, is that motherboard manufacturers in general don't update their bioses beyond 2 years.ZePompom wrote: But I don't understand why you say "The best (fastest) GPU that will work in most PCIE 2.0 motherboards, is a 1060 6GB. It's a bit faster than the 3GB."
When I do the maths, even a GTX 1660 can be handled by a PCIe 16x 1.1 (in a folding context), so why a GTX 1060 6GB couldn't and would need at least PCIe 2.0?
So you're stuck with a board that can read GPUs that are created about 1 or 2 years after the board is.
PCIE2.0 standard is very slow, and very old.
The GTX 1060 range of GPUs are the last ones to be recognized by a bios running PCIE 2.0.
While a 1660 or RTX could run on PCIE 2.0, chances are (quite large) that your motherboard doesn't recognize the GPU.
GPU with OpenCL 1.2 and Double Precision Support - Nvidia GeForce GT 710 or newer (Kepler Architecture)MeeLee wrote:...It would be wise if someone could tell you the oldest Nvidia GPU supported by fah, not sure if that's the GT 600 series, or 500 series, or...