07-31-2018, 12:40 AM
(This post was last modified: 07-31-2018, 12:42 AM by joe2gaan.
Edit Reason: Adding another image
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(07-30-2018, 10:38 PM)MobileJAD Wrote:(07-30-2018, 06:07 PM)joe2gaan Wrote:(07-26-2018, 06:42 PM)Pniqolus Wrote:(07-26-2018, 05:14 PM)Firesped Wrote: the PCIe slot is only x4 long. Most GPU are far longer. the only ones that would fit are PCIe x1. Alternatively you would need a m.2 adapter to PCIe x16 slot to fit a GPU.
Not to be rude, but this is not true. Yes, it is only PCIex4, but the slot on the ROCK64 is open-ended, so it can fit longer cards.
Plus there's also a plethora of pcie ribbon cables and slot adapters, if I were to build a system using the Rock Pro 64, I wouldn't necessarily cram a full size GTX 1080ti with a three slot wide gaming cooler on it, and crush the poor SBC underneath it. I could mount the GPU to the side of the SBC in a small pcie chassis like the ones those egpu kits use and run a pcie ribbon cable to the Rock Pro 64.
Right now I just want to know what the Rock Pro 64 would do if a Nvidia or AMD graphics card were plugged into its pcie slot.
Done! Now to install some drivers. This was done in Arch Linux.
Can it output video to the video card? Without any displays hooked up to the SBC?
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I am testing that now. I need to reconfigure my image.