The Problem
I'm looking to build a new rig to support three widescreen monitors. I'll be getting two graphics cards with 2 Dual link DVI ports each, for a total of 4 ports. I'll be getting Triple Head 2 Go, Digital Edition (DTH2G). Like many of you I'll be wanting to use my rig in 3 different modes.
1. Stretched image accross the three monitors during gaming, driven by DTH2G. Call this "Gaming via DTH2G" mode.
2. Three independent monitors for 2D work. Using for office, browsing, and software development. This will bypass DTH2G, being driven directly by my two graphics cards. (In this mode one of the connections might pass through DTH2G but only driving one monitor). Call this "2D via Direct-to-Card" mode.
3. Single monitor (through DHT2G probably) for games and other applications that don't warrant, or cannot use, three monitors.
For the purposes of this discussion I don't think we need to bother with mode 3. That'll just fall out of making the other two modes work.
How do we setup our rig to support easy switching between the "Gaming via DTH2G" and "2D via Direct-to-Card" modes? By "easy" I just mean, at most, flicking a few hardware switches and/or a few clicks of some software. I'd like to avoid replugging cables to switch modes.
A couple of easy setups are detailed and confirmed by geniv2 and JKeefe below. The problem is that these setups entail partly using Digital connections (to DVI ports) and partly using analog connections (to VGA ports). I understand that pushing a digital signal through VGA connections entails some kind of signal degradation in virtue of the conversion. So I'm looking to either:
1. Avoid analog connections altogether; or
2. Find out which connections, Digital V Analog, I should use for the first two modes, Gaming via DTH2G V 2D via Direct-to-Card; or
3. Be reassured that going via VGA doesn't matter.
Example Setups
In
"Usability of Triple Standard V Triple Wide" geniv2
posted his or her setup...
here's how my monitors are hooked up:
1st video card 9800GX2 nvidia (dual display)
2nd video card ATI FireMV 2400 (quad display)
Th2g is connect to DVI1 on my 9800gx2
-=-= MONITOR CONNECTIONS =-=-
Left monitor
- DVI to port in FireMV
- Analog to Left output on TH2G
Center Monitor
- DVI to center output on Th2g
- anaglog to 2nd output on 9800gx2
Right Monitor
- DVI to port in FireMV
- Analog to Right output on Th2g
-=-=-= DISPLAY MODES/SETTINGS =--=-=-
I use UltraMon and have hotkey or 2 clicks to switching between screen setting. I mainly use two modes. this is in windows
1) Triple display: 3x 1920x1200 (for regular work)
- L and R monitors are run from the DVI port on the FireMV
- center is run form Th2g via DVI in 1920x1200 res.
2) Matrox Th2g: 3x 1440x900 (for gaming)
- disable DVI output from FireMV to L and R monitor
- th2g runs at 4320x900. Center monitor run by DVI. L & R run by
th2g but in analog mode and the monitor automatically switch to analog input since it autodetects and the DVI feed is stopped.
3) Analog gaming: Single 1920x1200 VGA Direct connection to center monitor
- I have to set SLI output from matrox dvi port to the other port on my 9800gx2 via Nvdia control panel
- I only use this when I need to play games that have to use pesky resolutions or when the game gets " blank screen but runs" because this direct connection to the monitor gives more usable resolution without bugs than say the th2go that only have a limited mode.
I'm surprised it worked out so well with no major bugs other than my Th2g not being able to use single 1920x1200 in games.
Th2g is only used when I game the rest of the time it's useless and my 2nd videocard + ultramon does a better job. and can use my monitor's full resolution.
geniv2's post is enormously helpful. However, it also raises some issues (or confusion) for me in virture of the DVI Versus Analogue (VGA) connections.
Note that geniv2 goes analog for gaming (to 3 monitors via DHT2G) and digital for 2D (to 3 monitors via Direct-to-Cards). If one is forced to choose wouldn't it be better the otherway around? That is, Digital for 3D, analog for 2D? Don't I need to go Digital for 5,040 X 1050 = 3 x (1680 x 1050)?
In the same thread JKeefe
advised us of his or her solution ..
[quote][quote]I switch to single screen 4320x900 or 5040x1050 for gaming only. the rest of the time I switch to triple display mode 1920x1200 via dual videocard and use Ultra Mon to manage my multi monitor.
I presume this "switching" is a simple affair. That is, via a hot key or something.
If so, I imagine your set up is as follows.
1. Primary Card Head 1 -> TripleHeadToGo -> 3 monitors
2. Primary Card Head 2 -> spare port on monitor 1
3. Secondary Card Head 1 -> spare port on monitor 2
4. Secondary Card Head 2 - > spare port on monitor 3.
Is that right? Do monitors generally come with the 2 inputs needed for this?John,
Pertaining to my setup discussed further up in the post, the is pretty much how I have things connected. The only change is line #2 (Primary Card Head 2 -> spare port on monitor 1); this is not necessary because you can have the TripleHead
2Go disaply a single-screen resolution.
Monitors these days usually have at least two inputs, although to do this with the best quality for LCDs requires monitors with dual DVI inputs; these are rare. The input switch on my CRT monitors is a physical slider switch. On LCDs is it usually a momentary pushbutton.
Setting the desktop up like this offers the productivity of a true multi-monitor 2D workspace, with a fully functional Ultramon including the smart taskbar and independent wallpapers, and also allows the benefits the TripleHead
2Go provides for gaming I already had dual-input monitors when I went this route, so my only cost was ~$40 for a cheap GPU.
JKeefe confirms that you can easily have a setup to switch between DHT2G and Direct-to-card mode easily. However, he or she is using an all analog solution (to CRTs) and doesn't have widescreen.
Candidate Solutions
1. Avoiding analog connections altogether
JKeefe suggests a way out of this analog V digital issue: just get a monitor with both inputs that are DVI. If someone can point to a good 20" (or 22") LCD monitor with two DVI ports, that'd be appreciated.
However, there are none on the
Master Monitor list. The listed 20" or 22" monitors mostly come with a DVI and a VGA port.
A second possible way to avoid analog connections might be to fit a double adapter to the monitor's DVI input. Do these exist? Isn't the whole point of the "Dual" in "Dual Link DVI" to allow this?
A third possible way to avoid analog connections might be to use some kind of KVM switch? Could that work? Anybody have this kind of setup?
A forth possible way to avoid analog connections might be to not have a second graphics card at all. Use DTH2G connected to the DVI input ports on the 3 monitors for either gaming or 2D. You might use the GridMove program to assist.
Tyinsar
tipped us off to this program....
One chunk of software I found indispensable with my TH2G is GridMove. It requires a bit of setup at first - though I posted my TH2G grid here: (Link)
The great thing is that (1) it's Free and (2) it's so simple to use once set up: [Win]-[1] resizes the active app to screen 1, [Win]-[2] resizes the active app to screen 1... [Win]-[6] sends the active app to zone 6 etc. (see link above for zones). For me this makes Windows and the TH2G so much easier to use well (productively) both in games as well as outside of games.
I also use it on another system with only two screens and no TH2G / DH2G - though with a different "grid" file.
Tyinsar has only one graphics card (GTX260). Tyinsar, could you confirm that for 2D work TH2G + GridMove is greater than or equal to Direct-to-cards + Ultramon?
Do most of you guys use this forth way (with or without gridmove)?
2. Which connections, Digital V Analog, I should use for the first two modes, gaming (via DTH2G) V 2D
Assuming that I can't, or it is not really important to, avoid analog connections altogether, what is the best setup?
Wouldn't the best be, in contradiction to geniv2's setup up, the following:
* Digital connections -> Gaming via DTH2G.
* Analog connections -> 2D via Direct-to-Card (Possibly with one of the connections passing through DTH2G but in analog mode).