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Find best value and selection for your ati radeon hd 2600 pro imac search on eBay. World's leading marketplace. Home » ATI Radeon HD 2600 Pro AGP (Microsoft Corporation WDDM 1.1) Use the links on this page to download the latest version of ATI Radeon HD 2600 Pro AGP (Microsoft Corporation WDDM 1.1) drivers. All drivers available for download have been scanned by antivirus program.
The Radeon HD 2600 XT Mac Edition was a graphics card by ATI, launched in February 2008. Built on the 65 nm process, and based on the RV630 graphics processor, the card supports DirectX 10.0.
The RV630 graphics processor is an average sized chip with a die area of 153 mm² and 390 million transistors. It features 120 shading units, 8 texture mapping units and 4 ROPs. ATI has placed 256 MB GDDR3 memory on the card, which are connected using a 128-bit memory interface.

The GPU is operating at a frequency of 700 MHz, memory is running at 800 MHz. Being a single-slot card, the ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT Mac Edition does not require any additional power connector, its power draw is rated at 45 W maximum. Display outputs include: 2x DVI. Radeon HD 2600 XT Mac Edition is connected to the rest of the system using a PCI-Express 1.0 x16 interface.
I have the set up you describe, and it works, but with a catch. I have an early 'early 2008' 3.1 Mac Pro, and have two monitors and two display cards - a 23 inch monitor hooked up to the 2600 and a 30 inch HP monitor hooked up to the Apple branded ATI 5770 card. You probably need the apple-branded ATI 5770 card rather than a cheaper Windows version of the card, as the graphics card needs EFI-aware firmware to run properly on a Mac Pro, which the windows cards don't generally have. There are workarounds, which let you use a cheaper Windows 5770 card, but they are beyond my technical skills. Also, you need an auxilliary power cable which goes from the card to the motherboard, which apple supplies with the apple-branded card.
The ATI 5770 should be installed in slot one, and the 2600 moved to slot two. The glitch I have is that sometimes, maybe one time in 10 or 20, when waking up from sleep, the monitor hooked up to the ATI 5770 behaves bizarrely. Either it has 'fuzz' on the image, it blinks on and off repeatedly, or, occasionally the image is corrupted. Not everyone with this setup experiences these glitches, but some do, judging by comments on this forum.
The 'fix' is to reset the graphics card by using the control-shift-eject keyboard shortcut, which turns off the displays, followed by pressing any keybaord key (I use return) to turn them back on. The problem is with the computer, not the graphics card, I have tried two different 5770 cards - different types of glitches, but both had the problem. I'm running the 10.7.4 version of Lion.
Well if money were no object then yes I can see your point, but the 5770 is affordable and would be a big step up from the 2 x 2600XT cards that I have installed at the moment, modo uses open GL to display, and processor only for rendering, it doesn't acess or need to access CUDA functionality, it already has one of the fastest and best renderers on the planet, second only to maybe vRay, but not by much quadro cards are overpriced these days, they are usually underclocked to ensure reliability and often fall short of much more affordable cards performance wise. My choices are a single 5770 to run both monitors or a 5770 plus the 2600XT if the different cards don't play nice together then I'll just buy one 5770, it's not a big deal, I'm just looking for the specific answer. Drivers have never been that good, the Quadro drivers, not the hardware, too. Maybe the 5870 would make sense, but I would also after TWO YEARS hope that ATI 78xx or maybe Nvidia could not make a GTX 660? Or something to have a 'Mid-life' refresh.