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English => News => Topic started by: Redaktion on December 04, 2017, 05:17:34

Title: eGPU: Two PCI-e lanes, no problem?
Post by: Redaktion on December 04, 2017, 05:17:34
Conventional wisdom says that Thunderbolt 3 in a 4-lane PCI-e configuration is a must to have a good gaming experience when using external GPUs. Benchmarks by Stephen Burgess of Own or Disown may surprise you.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/eGPU-Two-PCI-e-lanes-no-problem.266658.0.html
Title: Re: eGPU: Two PCI-e lanes, no problem?
Post by: LL on December 04, 2017, 22:37:50
Would be nice to know if this also occurs in GPU compute calculation like rendering  for example with Redshift, Blender Cycles, Octane and other GPU renderers.
Title: Re: eGPU: Two PCI-e lanes, no problem?
Post by: austinlxx on December 05, 2017, 09:01:15
I just built an eGPU rig with a Latitude 7480 (i7-6600u, 32GB RAM, SSD SATA) with the Aorus GTX 1070 Gaming Box.

Here's the odd part though
I'm able to play games like Shadow of War, Divinity 2, etc... at ultra resolution using the internal display. I've researched and the general statement is that you can't utilize the eGPU with the internal display, yet here I am...

Maybe you guys at Notebookcheck can investigate or provide input on this?
Title: Re: eGPU: Two PCI-e lanes, no problem?
Post by: Douglas Black on December 05, 2017, 12:27:57
Quote from: austinlxx on December 05, 2017, 09:01:15
I just built an eGPU rig with a Latitude 7480 (i7-6600u, 32GB RAM, SSD SATA) with the Aorus GTX 1070 Gaming Box.

Here's the odd part though
I'm able to play games like Shadow of War, Divinity 2, etc... at ultra resolution using the internal display. I've researched and the general statement is that you can't utilize the eGPU with the internal display, yet here I am...

Maybe you guys at Notebookcheck can investigate or provide input on this?

Oh you can definitely use the internal display. You will just see a 15% additional performance drop with 4 lanes, and maybe 30% with 2 lanes