Will Nvidia graphics card work in this motherboard?
Vineet Reddy
2011-06-29 06:15:11 UTC
Will Nvidia graphics card work in this motherboard?
Motherboard:Gigabyte 880GM-USB3L
Six answers:
Sameer
2011-06-29 10:22:46 UTC
yes.motherboard has one PCI-Ex16 slot so any PCI-Ex16 graphics card will work which is the current specification of graphics cards..does not matter whether it is AMD/ATI or Nvidia.make sure your power supply can handle the card you select before getting it.
I second what's been said above. Also, the only problem you may encounter with NVIDIA cards is if you plan in a SLI setup as most AMD's motherboards don't support it. If you're planning on SLI'ing in an AMD motherboard you must check the specs of the motherboard model you have and find information about the GPU compatibility to check if it can hold AMD CrossFireX and NVIDIA SLI. There seems to be some other ways to allow SLI in AMD motherboards that originally don't support it through software and the such but I don't know how that works so I can't really tell.
Cheers,
Vatanan.
espinal
2016-12-12 19:10:22 UTC
certain. With in straight forward words an noticeably, very few exceptions from the early days of PCI convey, each PCI convey x16 video card works in each PCI convey x16 slot. The early exceptions in contact forums that had capacitors slightly too tall. The video card honestly couldn't extra healthful each and each of how into the slot because it hit the capacitors on the motherboard. That difficulty replaced into solved many years back inspite of the actuality that, and it in straight forward words affected an noticeably few combos of motherboards and video playing cards.
?
2011-06-30 01:47:31 UTC
GPU buyers guide
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Utjw77kHk2o
Power supply Guide ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JG6uw0QFEFI
Low wattage PSU's and GPU's Guide ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTQoH-j5KZY
Masked Musketeer
2011-06-29 06:17:27 UTC
Yes. So long as it's a PCIE-16x based card.
?
2011-06-29 07:14:58 UTC
yup, it will work.
Depends if you are a overclocker.
ⓘ
This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.