There are currently no product reviews.:: Apple Video Card Apple Display Video Card Category In this section you’ll find replacement Mac video cards for all Apple desktop & laptop computers. DV Warehouse Apple video card section is a listing of all available display video cards for Apple desktop series, PowerMacs G3, G4, G5 and even the older beige Power Macintosh models. And also listings of all available Apple video cards for the iBook and PowerBook series laptops. All Mac video cards carry a 90-Day warranty.
Please browse around and let us know if you need assistance in picking the right display video card for your Apple desktop or laptop system. We have Mac technicians and Apple parts specialist on call to help answer any questions about your Apple computer system.
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You've got a bunch of options these days and it is all going to come down to wether you want an officially supported Mac card that will show the 'boot screen' or not. Besides those listed above both the and, if you can find it, are supported retail cards. If you are into DIY there are several options for buying PC cards and flashing them yourself. Alternatively you can buy a pre-flashed card from (never used them personally but have read good things). If you want to go down the PC card route start your reading over at MacRumors.
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I'm running a 2009 Mac Pro tower here and I've got an AMD Radeon R9 280X (3GB) card in it, works nicely with a Dell Ultrasharp at 2560x1440 and it will drive up to three displays quite happily. It is an officially supported card in terms of drivers and will pretty much work out of the box on recent versions of OS X, but as kevinmcox mentions above, if the card doesn't originate from Apple you will have to get it flashed with the Mac EFI to be able to see the boot screens. There are a couple of other caveats with some after market cards too, for example a few cards need different power connectors or more power than there is available so require some fiddling with adapters etc, and I think from memory in the case of the 280X, it needs a hardware mod to achieve the full PCI link speed.
I got the card from a local place here in the UK that does pre-flashed Mac cards to alleviate the hassle, but I've seen quite a few people suggest MacVidCards too. Just looking at their site it looks like they've got a fairly comprehensive list of suitable cards for each model of Mac Pro along with some details about their requirements.