Crossfire help....

Briggsy

New member
So I got a second gpu for my setup to drive my monitor for higher fps when raiding playing wow, tbh I'm a little disappointed with performance but that's what my problem is...

I monitor gpu performance with afterburner to monitor temps, gpu usage etc, but I have noticed that wow doesn't use my second gpu at all even when frames drop a lot, so I done a little research and it seems wow doesn't support crossfire? Anyway....

I decided to run bf3 to see what the gpu usage was like with that and it was the same the second gpu is not being used even when the game is dropping frames, I looked at afterburner and there is no sign of the second gpu in use.

Why is the happening? Is my crossfire setup ok? 3d mark11 gives me a score of 14440 and is recognising my second gpu....setup in sig below.
 
Catalyst control centre? Yes

Yeah, Catalyst.

Strange, are there any settings in your motherboard BIOS you can change ? Also check the crossfire bridge hasn't come loose and is plugged in properly. Apart from that I can't think of anything else.
 
Well it only requires one bridge right?

There are 2places you can attach it, does it go on the first slot or the second?
 
Multi-GPU Crossfire gaming explained

Okay we know, we tend to get a little repetitive with this question & chapter, but honestly... is there anyone who visits this website that doesn't know what SLI & Crossfire is? Well surely the regulars know the idea and principles. But it never hurts to explain what we are dealing with today.

Both NVIDIA's SLI and AMD's ATI Crossfire allow you to combine/add a second or even third similar generation graphics card (or add in more GPUs) to the one you already have in your PC. This way in theory try to double, triple or even quadruple your raw rendering gaming performance (in theory). The more GPUs, the worse the scaling seems to become though, two GPUs in most scenarios, is ideal.

Think of a farmer with a plough and one horse. One horse will get the job done yet by adding a second or third horse, you'll plough through that farmland much quicker and (hopefully) more efficiently as the weight of that plough is distributed much more evenly. That's roughly the same idea for graphics cards. One card can do the job sufficiently, but with two or more you can achieve much more.

So along these lines, you could for example place two or more ATI graphics cards into a Crossfire compatible motherboard, or two or more NVIDIA GeForce graphics cards in SLI mode on a compatible motherboard.
  • A Crossfire compatible motherboard is pretty much ANY motherboard with multiple PCIe x16 slots that is not an nForce motherboard.
  • An SLI certified motherboard is an nForce motherboard with more than two PCIe x16 slots or a certified P55 or X58 motherboard. If your motherboard does not have the SLI certification mentioned on the box, it's likely not SLI compatible. Keep that in mind.

Once we seat the similar graphics cards on the carefully selected motherboard we just bridge them together, with a supplied Crossfire connector or in NVIDIA's case, an SLI connector.

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Once you install/update the drivers, the Catalyst control Center will detect the second GPU, after which most games can take advantage of the extra horsepower we just added into the system.

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Screenshot of two cards with Crossfire (CFX) enabled in the CCC control panel.

Multi GPU rendering -- the idea is not new at all... if you are familiar with the hardware developments over the past couple of years you'll remember that 3dfx had a very familiar concept with the Voodoo 2 graphics cards series. There are multiple ways to manage two cards rendering one frame; think of Super tiling, it's a popular form of rendering. Alternate Frame Rendering, each card will render a frame (even/uneven) or Split Frame Rendering, simply one GPU renders the upper or the lower part of the frame.

So you see, there are many methods where two or more GPUs can be utilized to bring you a substantial gain in performance.

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Here we have an example of two cards bridged for Crossfire mode. If at all possible leave room in-between the two cards for better airflow. Of course things get a little messy cable management wise, you'll need four 8-pin headers PCIe PEG power headers to feed this beast of a machine with enough wattage.​

A question that we receive a lot is this, What is the difference in-between Crossfire and CrossfireX mode ? If you use the very same cards in multi-GPU mode, that is Crossfire. However However if you mix models, say the R7970 with a R6970 .. that's CrossfireX mode.​
 
turn your PC off switch both your cards to 2nd Bios(little switch on the top just after the second Crossfire finger) turn your computer on again. BF3 needs to be running at a high res to use CFX
 
i've now changed my bridge to the second xfire finger and now all seems ok.......

If I switch my cards to 2nd bios what will that achieve?

Thanks
 
Nothing performance wise it would just eliminate any possible problems that could be to do with the cards bios. Unlikely just another thing to wipe off the list of what could be wrong.
 
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