Two 24" LCD Monitors with FCP / Motion

I have a Mac Pro (early 2009) with the new ATI Radeon 4890 dual DVI video card and one Apple 24" LCD monitor. I'm using this setup for primarily FCP/Motion work. Question:
- Can the ATI Radeon 4890 handle two 24" LCD monitors, or do I need to purchase a second video card?
- Can FCP / Motion handle two video cards?
Thanks!
lance

Can the ATI Radeon 4890 handle two 24" LCD monitors
ABSOLUTELY. There are two monitor connections on the card. One DVI, the other the Apple connector.
Can FCP / Motion handle two video cards?
Yup. Most FCP workstations I have been on, and personally own, are two monitor setups. That is a fairly typical setup.
Shane

Similar Messages

  • External LCD monitors with DVI PowerBook: Banding Issues

    I have a DVI PB and would like to attach an external LCD monitor. I've looked at both Samsung 20 inch and ViewSonic 19 inch versions but whenever I attach them, I get "banding" around the edges of the external monitor. Tonight, I went to CompUSA to look at the Samsung 204B 20 inch. Taking my PB with me, I hooked up and set the resolution to 1600 x 1200 and the Samsung had huge, fat black banding all around the monitor. If you don't know - banding looks like a large, black border going around the screen. The sales guy pushed some auto-set buttons (which is said always work to remove the banding) but it didn't fix the issue. Any suggestions? Is there some secret that I'm not aware of on how to attach and use an external LCD monitor with the PB? One note: I did set the resolution down to 1280 x 1024, which worked fine to remove the banding but it monitor looked horrible. Not the best resolution for a large monitor.
    Thanks,
    B. Rose
    TiBook 800 & iBook SE   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

    Hi, Bill. I can't speak to whatever happened with the Viewsonic monitor, since you didn't tell us about that, but it sounds as though the Samsung was in display mirroring mode rather than extended-desktop mode. The F7 key on your Powerbook's keyboard toggles an external monitor between the two modes. In mirror mode, the external monitor displays exactly the same thing as the built-in display. In extended-desktop mode, it functions as a separate portion of your desktop, and you can drag things (windows, icons) from one monitor onto the other. If you're going to use both displays, extended-desktop mode is probably what you'll want: why keep two copies of the same thing in front of you?
    In mirrored mode, the fact that your Powerbook's display has a maximum resolution of 1280 x 854 means that only 1280 x 854 pixels of the external monitor can be used — leaving wide black borders of untapped pixels around the copy of your PB's display that's centered on the external monitor. In extended-desktop mode, the external display's native resolution of 1600 x 1200 can all be used, provided that your 32MB of VRAM is sufficient to drive the total of (1280 x 854) + (1600 x 1200) = 3,013,120 pixels, at the bit depth you've selected. (You might have to use the extended-desktop mode in Thousands of colors, rather than Millions.)
    Another issue that comes into play with display mirroring is that the 4:3 aspect ratio of the 1600 x 1200 Samsung is different from the 3:2 aspect ratio of the Powerbook's display. If you set the Samsung's resolution to 1280 x 1024 to match the pixel width of the PB display, the top and bottom of the Samsung will be black bands, because the PB isn't manufacturing any pixels to fill those bands. And it will be blurry, because the Samsung has to interpolate to make 1600 pixels look (sort of) like 1280 pixels. Unlike a CRT display, the actual number of pixels in an LCD is fixed. When you change resolution settings on an LCD from its native (maximum) resolution to anything less, the image is always blurred. Only the native resolution can be really sharp.

  • Can I use LCD monitor with beige G3 233 mhz desktop?

    Dear all,
    I have a beige G3 desktop and want to use an LCD monitor with it.
    I work mostly in OS9, but browse and email in OS X 10.3.9.
    My Mas has the original video card in it, the ATI 3D Rage II.
    Could I use a 19 inch LCD monitor with my Mac? Or would it have to be a 17 inch one.
    I read on here that the mac treats lcd monitors just like CRT monitors.
    what is the maximum resolution and monitor screen size I could use with my Mac?
    Please help.
    I only have a dinky 15 inch CRT monitor and would like a bigger monitor for Photoshop and animation work.
    thank you

    Both are probably contributing factors.
    I know this will open up another can or worms, but you could consider overclocking your processor; most G3s will take a speed bump up a notch or two (266 or 300 in your case). It's relatively easy to do- search the forum for more info. As an alternative, a faster G3 chip (350-400) can be had rather cheaply from eBay (~$25). There are also a few 16MB Rage 128 cards on eBay, some as cheap as $10. Just make sure you get the Mac PCI version- AGP won't work. With the new video card and a speed bump, playing videos should be greatly improved. Just don't spend too much money on the old beast.

  • I'm using a viewsonic 19" LCD monitor with a powermac 7100/66.  The only resolution available in the monitor control panel is 640x480.  The viewsonic gives me a message to use 1440x900.  The mac specs state it's capable of 1152x870 @ 8 bit. Help!

    I'm using a viewsonic 19" LCD monitor with a powermac 7100/66 running Mac OS 7.6.1.  The only resolution available in the monitor control panel is 640x480.  The viewsonic gives me a message to use 1440x900.  The mac specs state it's capable of 1152x870 @ 8 bit.  How can I get a higher resolution?

    For unsupported resolutions, one may need to see if there are any software
    solutions; maybe the minimum specs of the display are not met by an 8-bit
    color specification of the video card in the computer.
    Does the display support two kinds of connections, another one, plus VGA?
    Could be the display needs some other support for it to work. Drivers?
    VRAM? A different control panel and (third-party) software?
    The limits may vary due to the VRAM on the card. With enough there, and
    with a VGA connection (or supported converter to/from older Mac DB-15)
    and the video graphics card with minimal supported specs will show that.
    Been several years since I've run any PowerMac, & only used a variety of
    Apple CRT color displays with them. Most times, they were very adequate.
    A wider array of original choices appeared in the Displays control panel...
    So I suspect the lack of video support in the graphics card or VRAM, to be
    a player in this resolution limit you see in the control panel. A later CPU/GPU
    and better hardware, later Mac OS, offered greater support for newer driver
    along with better results.
    There may not be a workable upgrade to a different graphic video card for
    that old a vintage computer; or if there was one, to locate that now may be
    a next-to-impossible mission. Was there any hints in the web site for older
    Macs, the LowEndMac site, or others? Some are no longer current sites.
    In any event...
    Good luck & happy computing!

  • HD TV or LCD monitor with HDMI,DVI supported to preview and color grading

    Finally I got my canon HFS100 and Intensity Pro now what type of the monitor should I get to preview and color grading video via intensity pro between HD TV or LCD monitor with HDMI,DVI supported and how to calibrate monitor via intensity pro.
    Please help.
    narkin

    The main downside is that an HDTV is designed to be used at TV viewing distance. So it would work fine for presentations, where the audience is sitting more than 5 feet away. But at typical computer screen distance of 2-3 feet, it is the same 1920x1080 pixels spread out over a 32-inch screen. Oh, actually, that HDTV you mentioned is only "720p", which is only 1280x720. That may not look all that good at TV distance either, if you are displaying images that are static (non-motion).
    Your eyes will have to work harder to see the same screen real estate, because everything is bigger on the screen. Images and text will not look as sharp (more pixelated) because each pixel is larger. It won't be like using a 30-inch Cinema Display, which has 2560x1600 pixels. Each pixel on that 32-inch 720p HDTV is more than 4 times larger.
    A 1080p HDTV would be somewhat better, because that is 1920x1080 resolution.

  • Problems with two new LCD monitors and my G5 Power Mac

    I bought two of these Westinghouse Digital LCD monitors:
    http://www.macaddict.com/issues/2005/11/reviews/lcm
    When I plugged in the first one, my Mac's power-on light was on, but the Power Mac G5 (1.6 ghz, 1.25 gb RAM) wouldn't boot and the light wouldn't go off. No problems once I unplugged the first LCD monitor. I plugged it into the second one and the Mac turned on once it was plugged in, but at least I had an image. But the computer was frozen; I unplugged and re-plugged it into the first LCD and had an image, but again, it was frozen.
    Any ideas why this is happening? I'm going VGA into the DVI via Apple's adaptor.
    Help and thanks,
    Heath McKnight
    Power Mac G5 1.6 ghz   Mac OS X (10.3.9)   Single processor, 1.25 gb RAM, 80 gb hard drive

    Okay, well this is interesting. If I take the brightness down too much, I see "ghosting" on EVERYTHING, including text. Also, when I shut down the Mac with monitor 2 plugged in, the one that when I plug in the LCD it turns the Mac on, it restarts the computer. I did this twice to insure I wasn't just hitting restart by accident. I'm calling tech support Monday (Westinghouse) and I think I'm taking these "good on paper" 16x9 LCDs back to Best Buy for a full refund. Then, I'll buy something different. I'm bummed out...
    heath

  • Using an external monitor with FCP Studio v. 1.0

    I cannot get my external monitor to display my timeline editing window. I have made the right connections, with firewire from Mac to Sony HDV tapedeck, and with HDMI cable from tapedeck to LCD monitor, but the screen remains blank. The external video setting and the video playback setting both have the HDV 1080i options greyed out, so I can't click on them. I can only have 'none', or playback in full screen desktop. How can I activate the play out via the tapedeck to the monitor?

    Nickmarios wrote:
    However, if HDV cannot be played out of FCP via firewire, how come I can capture from tape and export back to tape with firewire successfully?
    Part of the issue is the Open GOP nature of HDV. Basically, HDV spreads the information for all frames within the time that you've pressed record to the time that you've stopped recording, and then crunches that down. This is way different than other FireWire-supported codecs, like DV, where each frame contains all the information needed by FCP to send a signal out to an external monitor at full resolution.
    Sending out a full resolution via FireWire during HDV editing - where, most importantly, you're not obeying the GOP structure - would require fairly intense system resources, since it must reference other frames (sometimes many other frames). That's why you need a dedicated accelerator, like a capture card, to do that and send out a signal. As mentioned, FCP can send out a (very degraded) letterboxed 4:3 signal via FireWire, but it can't send out a full resolution signal.
    Capturing, however, is a data transfer and much easier on your system. Open GOP is also the reason that long captures get broken up into individual shots (every time you start/stop recording).
    Finally, as Shane mentions, the conform that FCP does prior to Print to Video means that FCP converts your timeline to abide by the (Open GOP) structure of HDV. As you've witnessed, that takes a fair amount of time.

  • LCD Monitor with B&W G3 Tower

    Hello, I am looking to replace my 17" Apple Studio Display CRT on my G3 B&W Tower with an LCD monitor. My questions are: 1) Will my computer (VGA port) accept any current LCD screens on the market, or do I have to stay with Apple's LCD monitors? 2) There are several Apple Studio LCD Displays offered on eBay. They mention DVI and ADC connections. How do I know which models will work with my B&W G3? Forgot to mention that I have upgraded the processor with a Sonnet G4 500Mhz. Thanks.

    Hi,
    your B&W (like mine) should be equipped with a standard VGA output on your video card, which should accept any monitor with a VGA connection.
    I tried a couple of LCD (a Samsung and a Hewlett Packard) which worked flawlessly and did not give me any problems.
    I am not sure whether you can connect any of the current generation Apple flat screens due to the different interface, but you surely can take advantage of any VGA equipped LCD.
    cheers

  • Using dual monitor with FCP

    Hi to all!
    I´ve a NVidia FX5200 dual head (of course!) working wih FCP.
    I bought a SVideo / Video Comp. to connect it to this board ... could it be possible to view my "canvas monitor" in a external monitor (normal TV, for exemple)? This way i would not have to connect my minidv to do the "normal" baypass ... is it possible?
    Can i use this board to do it (?) or some other dual head model?
    Thank you!
    HBars

    What you are proposing may be possible, but I'm not sure it makes sense.
    You can use two monitors, of course, to get extra screen real estate and you don't need a fancy graphics card, most of them support two regular size monitors.
    On ther other hand, you definitely want an NTSC monitor to view the real look of the video. Mirroring your computer monitor is unlikely to be a reliable guide. Connecting the miniDV via firewire and your TV/NTSC monitor to that isn't "bypass" - it's the direct way to get to a real video image to judge color, contrast, etc.

  • Has anyone used the Acer X223Wbd 22" Wide LCD Monitor with their MBP?

    Good afternoon,
    I'm currently thinking about purchasing the 22" Wide Acer LCD monitor to hook up to my MBP, so I can have a bigger screen to render graphics and play games on. I was wondering if there is anyone else, who has experience with this product, that can give me their opinion about it. My financial budget is about $200.00, so I need to find the best monitor for my buck. I have read some good reviews on it, but I'm not sure if those individuals had used it with a MBP. I would appreciate any useful information that anyone can give me. Thank you.
    AMMOCAN

    Thanks J, that's a nice find. I've tried it and it seems to be working seamlessly. As you said, I cannot confirm any multi-touch support and the price that they are asking is certainly not in the private end-user range. Fortunately, according to the terms of use for the evaluation, you only need to calibrate after every 100 touches to keep the driver working indefinitely.
    Terms of Use:
    TERMS OF USAGE
    This software is supplied for evaluation and test purposes only. For use in production systems, driver licenses are required. Please note that click emulation will cease after 100 touches and a calibration or reboot is needed to gain another 100 touches.
    This would appear to be a nice work around until acer decides to distribute a Mac driver or someone develops a cheaper alternative.

  • Connecting to LCD Monitor with HDMI input

    The Macbook Pro Comes with a DVI Cable(Haven't got it with me).Can anybody tell me if I need to get a DVI to HDMI cable to use a 32 Inch LCD Monitor? Thank You
    Macbook Pro 2.16Ghz   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   MacBook Pro

    Hi J.Charles,
    You've actually posted in the forum for the Mac Pro Desktop machine, but that's ok
    The MacBook Pro doesn't come with a cable, you'll need to buy one. The MacBook Pro has a DVI port. DVI is a subset of HDMI, so you can either get a DVI to DVI cable and a DVI to HDMI adaptor, or a DVI to HDMI adaptor.
    With regards to the question of if your LCD TV requires HDMI, since you haven't mentioned the brand/model, only the manual can tell you

  • External 1080p LCD Monitor with Intel iMac

    I have a 17" Intel iMAC. I would like to connect it to a new 40" 1080p LCD Monitor/TV. With the mini-DVI cable, and DVI to HDMI cable, will I be able to view 1920X1080 resolution on the external monitor? Will I be able to use both mirror and extended display modes? I am aware the internal graphic card can support up to 1920X1200 resolution.
    Thanks.
    iMAC Intel Dual Core   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    Welcome to the discussions!
    You should be able to see it in the full 1920 x 1080 resolution. You can use either mirrored or extended desktop, but not both at the same time. It is an "either/or" proposition.
    Does this new display have a DVI port? I would use that if possible. I understand that HDMI is digital, but you will not get a better picture by using it over standard DVI. HDMI is DVI plus audio.

  • LCD monitor with Premiere Elem. 8

    I'm investigating for the best replacement of my Premiere 6.5 / Matrox RT.X100 video editing system and actually testing Premiere Elements 8.
    For previewing, I can only connect my external Samsung 2333 LCD monitor through my Sony DHR-1000NP cassette recorder, which seems crazy to me. Is it possible, and what are the settings, to connect the monitor directly to my PC using the DVI cable (graphics card is Nvidia GTS50)? And is it possible to have preview on both the desktop preview window AND on the external monitor? Or do I need again additional hardware? Thanks for advice.

    Welcome to the discussions!
    You should be able to see it in the full 1920 x 1080 resolution. You can use either mirrored or extended desktop, but not both at the same time. It is an "either/or" proposition.
    Does this new display have a DVI port? I would use that if possible. I understand that HDMI is digital, but you will not get a better picture by using it over standard DVI. HDMI is DVI plus audio.

  • How to employ RAID with FCP, Motion etc.

    Quick question I'm in the process of initialising an 8.0Tb RAID (and boy is it taking a long time in the background) and when I start my next project I'm wondering if there is an optimum way to organise my new workflow. I once remember reading in Premiere Pro that you should keep your project files off your program file drive, and your capture scratch on a third drive, although that's on one of those awful PC's does anything apply like that on Mac with FCP? Should I use the RAID as a capture scratch, and keep project files and everything else where? Any working practices I need to adopt with a RAID?
    And I've tried to find speed test to download to check the speed on write and read on the RAID but can't find the AJA Kona test to download, anybody know of another, hyperlink?

    http://www.aja.com/products/software/

  • Utilizing Three LCD Monitors in FCP

    I am currently used to a dual monitor set up in FCP at work. I am setting up my home studio and I have three DVI capable LCD screens.
    What I need to know is if there is a way to control the monitors and what they display within FCP or OSX. For example, monitor 1 with the timeline,viewer,canvas; and monitor 2 with some bins and exposed desktop, etc. But what I really want is my THIRD monitor to display as an "apple cinima preview" or something like an output canvas, but with a black background like when you print to video (or a scaled full-size image, as if it were acting as an NTSC monitor.
    Is this at all possible???

    Yes.
    Maybe.
    Depends on the cards you are planning to use to power the displays. The cinema preview function is something I never use since all of my stuff is usually NTSC.
    I have used three displays on many of my Macs down through the years and in various applications such as Media 100, Photoshop and After Effects. I always end up going back to 2 displays.
    bogiesna

Maybe you are looking for

  • My iPad was printing to my HP wireless printer and now it won't..any suggestions on what I might try to get it back?

    I was able to print from my iPad to my wireless HP printer and now I can't.  Any suggestions on what to do to get it back?  Will resetting network settings help?

  • Questions in Lync 2013 Pool failover behaviour

    Hello Team, Please let us know answers for the below questions: If Pool A fails over to Pool B in disaster mode. Then the original front ends for Pool A are recovered successfully, and services start. Is it expected that  User Services, Conference se

  • Cisco WLC 5508 and LACP

    Hi Fellows, I wanna know if 5508 Cisco WLC support LACP or not. Actually i work in a project where i must connect WLC 5508 in Enterasys Switches with Link Aggregation. Enterasys Switches support LACP 802.3ad but when i learn Cisco Books i see that WL

  • Editing flex CSS in FB on Eclipse

    I have FB3 installed on Eclipse, which has been working nicely until I started messing around with skins and CSS. Eclipse wants to validate CSS as normal CSS, so it shows an error on every line of my flex skin CSS file ('Property xxx doesn't exist').

  • Non availability of material

    Dear Expert We are facing one problem while creating process order  when we do batch determination system is showing material is not available in quanity this but when we check stock through MMBE it shows there is sufficient stock in unrestricted use