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It seems that pure 2 x DVI dual head video cards are becoming rare. Most cards feature something like 1 x DVI plus 1 x HDMI plus 1 x VGA or some other interface. The idea seems to be that you can just use an HDMI <=> DVI adapter.

One result is that cards are seldom marked " 2 x DVI " anymore, but does this mean that they support simultaneous output on all interfaces? Are all cards dual head these days?

Take Asus's nVidia cards for example, they routinely have 1 x DVI plus 1 x HDMI instead of 2 x DVI, so my question is, are these equivalent to a dual head DVI card, or is there some detail required for dual monitor support?

I use dual-monitor stretched desktops for digital signage projects.

3 Answers

Yes they are dual monitor cards. HDMI uses the same signal as DVI in a different connect (plus it adds audio support). An HDMI-> DVI adapter is just a pin converter nothing more.

So yes a DVI + HDMI card will drive two DVI monitors without a problem, or two HDMI monitors for that matter.

1

Most of these cards, and all of the latest Nvidia cards I have used do support dual (or triple) output no problem - without even breaking a sweat.

DVI and HDMI are pin compatible and you only need the cheapest of adapters in order to output to the other as you said.

So, yes, these are the equivalent to dual head cards.

1

You can get dual monitor, but tripple monitor (even with 3 heads on your card) is not always a guarantee, as I found out painfully, recently when I bought an HDMI/DVI/VGA card. It would only allow DVI or HDMI, not both, you have to disable one port to enable the other.

It was an ATI card -- strangely, the same chipset is used in a DisplayPort card (DisplayPort, DVI, and VGA) and it DOES support the use of 3 monitors.

Bottom line, if you want to run THREE monitors, make sure the card you buy actually supports it, and isn't just a dual monitor card with 3 heads -- and not just the chipset, but the exact card you buy.

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