Up to2%cash back Includes NVIDIA Driver Manager preference pane. Includes BETA support for iMac and MacBook Pro systems with NVIDIA graphics; Release Notes Archive: This driver update is for Mac Pro 5,1 (2010), Mac Pro 4,1 (2009) and Mac Pro 3,1 (2008) users. NVIDIA Titan X 12 GB for Mac Pro 2008-2012 (Much Better Than GTX 980 Ti; Graphics Card Upgrade KIT; 4K and 5K Support) 3.3 out of 5 stars 10 EVGA GeForce GTX 680 FTW 4096MB GDDR5, DVI, DVI-D, HDMI, DisplayPort, 4-way SLI Ready Graphics Card (04G-P4-3687-KR) Graphics Cards 04G-P4-3687-KR. Cards I m referring to: EVGA GTX 680 FTW+ 4 GB After scouring the web I located a modded rom file for the 4GB version of the card. It s obviously the rom from the 2GB Mac card, same one that s been posted here on Mac Rumors. Version number and date are identical. However it s been modified to work with the 4GB card.
Very good question, cdecde12. My best answer is: it depends. Usually Apple has graphics card drivers built into the OS, so it *may* work or *may not*. They haven't exactly published a list of which ones do and don't work for sure. Maybe in Bootcamp or VMware Fusion or Parallels it might work, but that's if you're setting up a virtual machine.
Out of the box---no, probablly not. I haven't heard of a Mac compatible GTX 1060/1070/1080 yet. One may come along in the future. Usually what you'd have to do is get the card flashed with a Mac compatible ROM, which requires a PC and a whole lot of knowledge, none of which I have, or you could send it to MacVidCards.com and see if they'll flash it
which probably will cost you some money. Also, check out xlr8yourmac.com for reports of compatible graphics cards
as reported by Mac users. Darn shame, too. I have a Radeon Sapphire 7950 video card which works fine, but it has 3 gigs of video ram on board and that's it. The R9 series have been reported to work okay, but I can't verify that one way or the other. If that card does *sorta* work out of the box (no guarantees), you probably won't see anything on the screen until the graphics drivers load, so should you run into problems on startup, you're basically out of luck, unless you can live with that
hope that helps a bit
John B
Aug 21, 2016 8:00 PM
This article applies only to video cards that originally shipped with a specified Mac Pro or were offered as an upgrade kit by Apple. Similar cards that were not provided by Apple may have compatibility issues and you should work with the vendor of that card to confirm compatibility.Mac Pro (2019)
Learn more about cards you can install in Mac Pro (2019) and how to install PCIe cards in your Mac Pro (2019).Mac Pro (Late 2013)
*Dual AMD FirePro D300
*Dual AMD FirePro D500
*Dual AMD FirePro D700Nvidia Gtx 680 SpecsMac Pro (Mid 2010) and Mac Pro (Mid 2012)
*ATI Radeon HD 5770
*ATI Radeon HD 5870Learn about graphics cards supported in macOS 10.14 Mojave on Mac Pro (2010) and Mac Pro (Mid 2012). Mac Pro (Early 2009)
*NVIDIA GeForce GT 120
*ATI Radeon HD 4870
*ATI Radeon HD 5870, offered as an upgrade kitThe Radeon HD 5870 card requires Mac OS X 10.6.4 or later and the use of both auxiliary power connections.Mac Pro (Early 2008)Video Card For Mac Pro Nvidia Gtx 680 4gb Early 2008 2013 Ford
*ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
*NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT (part number 630-9191 or 630-9897)*
*NVIDIA Quadro FX 5600
*ATI Radeon HD 4870, offered as an upgrade kitThe Radeon HD 4870 card requires Mac OS X 10.5.7 or later.Video Card For Mac Pro Nvidia Gtx 680 4gb Early 2008 2013 CorvetteMac Pro (Original)
*NVIDIA GeForce 7300 GT
*ATI Radeon X1900 XT
*NVIDIA Quadro FX 4500 (part number 630-7532 or 630-7895)*
*NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT (part number 630-9492), offered as an upgrade kit.*The NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT card requires Mac OS X 10.5.2 or later with the Leopard Graphics Update 1.0 or the computer may not start up properly.Nvidia Gtx 680 Price
* To identify a graphics card part number, check the label on the back of the card.