

The 570 I put in my 2010 Pro eats the stock 5770 alive without even blinking. Stick the card in, it boots right up, doesn't even need a power cable. Id probably steer clear of Nvidia thanks to Apple. If you really need the boot screen, well you're going to pay more and you're not going to get an ATI and you're still going to be stuck with an older card. If you're good with 10.13.6, just grab the recommended MSI Gaming Radeon RX560 for like $100 and be done. I have peace of mind that my OS which will never Auto Update I'm staying at 10.13.6 (High Sierra) and not moving either!!! Wanting a 10.14 (Mojave) compatible GPU which was why I posted the RX580 Thank you all again for helping me with this.ĪlexNP, which OS are you running again? I wrongfully assumed you were And like its been said, if it ain't broke. Its very unlikely I'll upgrade to the new Pro as I'd also need new audio interfaces. Mine Benchmarks at 32k and all my PCIe cards work just fine. The old Mac Pros with upgraded processors are a beast. I have 2 x MOTU 24I/O which have a 32bit driver and a PCIe interface, so not gonna update OS ever again! Unless MOTU pull their finger out and update it to 64bit, but they didn't for expansion chassis so I won't hold my breath.Īs a side note. I'm not gaming so I'll probably go with the 5770, dead cheap on eBay (UK). Man, ob man, that one costed like a car when it came out! :-P Some are really old and still works! PowerMac 8600AV with 128 RAM.

Right? I love my MacPro! This machine serves me the longest and the best of all power machines from Apple that I own or owned in last 20-25 years. After all, we are talking about machines that are almost for museum. One should be honest and say where's the limit. , starting with 2010 models and onwards it's possible to bump it up for Mojave but hey. Since you have two 6-cores, I'm gonna assume you did the netkas firmware tweak, so that should take care of that. Note that none of these cards support Mojave or later.Īpple says a few GPU's are compatible with Mojave, but you'd need a 2010-2012 Mac Pro. There are a few officially supported options for upgrades: Thou it's obsolete technology it works like a charm. If you're in the States it's fairly easy. Try to get a video card from respected vendor thou. You can get pretty amazing card of that age for peanuts. How much RAM and other specs are up for your consideration. Go to owc ( or any similar site) and look for any PCIe slot cards availability for replacement. It ia a museum piece but I don't do video or graphic editing on this one so it's good enough. It was a default one which I replaced some years ago with ATI Radeon 2600 XT 256 MB. So, let me tell you what I got at the moment in my prethistoric early 2009 (or late 2008, dual machine). I went to the site and via My Upgrades > Mac model > Video upgrades - the result came back with no cards, just cables etc.
