Disclaimer: This is from Tech Report's article here: http://techreport.com/onearticle.x/8390 ...also I'm far from an expert on this, I just report what i see
Exhibit A: Different Configuration without Mastercards:
So apparently, the connector to the monitor is only connected to ONE of the cards, the other card is merely placed without ANY connections in the PCI-E slot....so they're sharing data through a mysterious NB which may or may not show up in the CF-DR...but most likely will.Curiously, the first thing DFI showed us was what they described as a pair of slave cards running together cooperatively. The DVI output to the LCD display was only hooked to one of the two video cards, and the system was running 3DMark05. I asked how the cards were sharing data, and the gent pointed to the north bridge chip between the two cards.
Exhibit B: AFR with only half the frames
The image compositing engine is the invisible sli bridge if you will, that transfer the data between the two cards when using the dongle. As it suggests here, its not necessary for crossfire, but be warned using AFR or alternate frame rendering (the only mode of crossfire compatible with non-mastercard crossfire) that the frames will skip. In my opinion, the frame skipping shouldn't be too noticeable when one scene is being rendering in excess of 60fps...but i could be completely wrong and it could look like jittery as hell. Point is, you can still benchmark using two slave cards, and magnificiently too...apparently, 2x the score in 3dmark05 is not a problem with two non-mastercard x850xts.I suppose a CrossFire master card with an image compositing engine isn't strictly necessary for multi-card acceleration. He said that you could hook up the monitor to the DVI output on the secondary slave card and see only half of the frames when the cards are rendering in alternate-frame mode
**Requirement for this as stated in the article is that for "dual slave configuration" to work, you need two of the exact SAME cards, down to the exact same bios, along with a crossfire ready mobo for this to work.
Exhibit C: The right way and the wrong way
Apparently, this must have been pretty early in the game for crossfire to require flashing the bios EVEN WITH a mastercard. THe config for normal crossfire is shown here. The configuration of the connectors is too ugly for me to post here also because they've refined it a bit on crossfire's second launch as shown in this instructional flash video: http://www.ati.com/technology/crossfire/images/demo.swf (flash movie looks better when size of window its viewed in is ~640x480)The dude from DFI then swapped in a true CrossFire master card from ATI alongside one of the the X850 XT PE cards and proceeded to flash the slave card to what he said was a Radeon X800 BIOS, so it would match the CrossFire card. Both had dual-slot coolers that looked for all the world like X850 XT cards, but whatever. He then ran 3DMark for us again, this time with the video cables daisy chained as one would expect for a CrossFire config.
That's all from Tech Report...off to T-break for some:
Exhibit D: Crossfire Nex Gen NEW !!
The following is from an interview an an ati official and thus deemed very reliable.
Yup. Value owners rejoice. Explanation:T-Break: Is there any way to have two cards work together without a compositing engine? D. Nalasco, ATI - Yes- in fact the x1300 does just that.
Apparently, the data that is shared between two X1300 is miniscule and thus does not require an interlink for crossfire to work in full AFR mode. This makes it very interesting as initial results show an X1300Pro outperforming x700s in benchmarks and real world performance.D. Nalasco, ATI - Basically after you draw each frame you have to transfer the results- either half of the frame or the whole frame using AFR to the other card. But if your total frame rate is not that high then that’s less frames to transfer. Even on the x1300 we have to do some special things in our driver to minimize the amount of data that goes over the bus
Exhibit E: Slave Crossfire and the difference between High, Mid and Low End NEW !!
Interesting. With an X1800, we're not talking about NO performance increase WITHOUT an interlink (which means dual slaves) we're still going to see a 20-30% increase in performance ! Sure, that may not give enough of a boost to counter GTX SLI right now, but for those with multiple X1k cards lying around and a crossfire mobo, we're talking ~11k stock (based on % estimate) in 05 without the currently non-existant x1800 "xfire edition" card.D. Nalasco, ATI - On an x1800, if you plug them in and not have a link and we were to enable a software crossfire mode over PCI Express, we could still get games to work but they’d be 20-30% faster with the second card which is not really that interesting. You’d want 2x or 80% (gains) and to get those we obviously need an interlink. With the x1300 we could get that 80% in games with PCI Express using some optimizations.
He then mentions that the X1300 will be able to get that elusive 80% performance increase in games !! without an interlink ! Seeing as its official confirmation by ATI and that the x1300 will be at a ~$99 pricepoint means ATI has certainly got something in store for value enthusiasts.
Confirmation that this configuration isn't affected much by dual 16x lanes for 1600XT and up:
T-Break: What happens when we use 16X for both cards. Do we have enough bandwidth at that time to power higher-end cards? D. Nalasco, ATI - I would say, its unlikely but we have to do more experimentation and see how that works out.There you have it...not much interest in dual x16 lanes and recent launch of dual 16 lane sli mobos confirmed that we dont really need them, even for the high-end.T-Break: Until your next generation comes up and within that time we’re likely to have two x16 lanes on a motherboard. D. Nalasco, ATI - The x1300 will definitely run better with that configuration (but) the x1600 is quite a bit faster. Its got three times the shader processors of x1300. Assuming games are limited by shader processing, its gonna be a fair bit faster so its unlikely it would work well on the x1600 without the interlink.
That's all for now. Hope ppl are as excited as I am at the possibilities of crossfire with or without the mastercard. Thx to Tech Report and T-Break for their journalistic inspiration. This analysis is far from perfect and will likely undergo a few changes, but good stuff nonetheless.
Perkam
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