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Author Topic: how many different "MAC EDITION" gpus were there?  (Read 5 times)

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Offline chrisNova777

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how many different "MAC EDITION" gpus were there?
« on: April 05, 2026, 04:57:19 PM »
how many different "mac edition" gpus were sold for between 2006-2012?
Gemini said
Between 2006 and 2012 (the era of the "Classic" Mac Pro towers), there were 11 distinct GPU models officially sold by Apple or authorized third-party manufacturers (like EVGA and Sapphire) as "Mac Edition" cards.

This count excludes "flashed" PC cards or standard PC cards that work without a boot screen; it only includes cards that shipped with official Mac EFI firmware.

Official Apple & Third-Party "Mac Edition" GPUs (2006–2012)
Year   Model   Manufacturer   Notes
2006   NVIDIA GeForce 7300 GT   Apple/NVIDIA   Standard entry-level card for the Mac Pro 1,1.
2006   ATI Radeon X1900 XT   Apple/ATI   The high-end BTO (Built-to-Order) option for 2006.
2006   NVIDIA Quadro FX 4500   Apple/NVIDIA   Workstation-class card with 512MB VRAM.
2008   ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT   Apple/ATI   Standard card for the Mac Pro 3,1.
2008   NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT   Apple/NVIDIA   Popular mid-range upgrade; often sold as a standalone kit.
2008   NVIDIA Quadro FX 5600   Apple/NVIDIA   Ultra high-end workstation card with 1.5GB VRAM.
2009   NVIDIA GeForce GT 120   Apple/NVIDIA   Standard for the 4,1; essentially a rebranded 9500 GT.
2009   ATI Radeon HD 4870   Apple/ATI   High-end upgrade for the 4,1 and 5,1 models.
2010   ATI Radeon HD 5770   Apple/ATI   The most common "legacy" upgrade card; supported until 2012.
2010   ATI Radeon HD 5870   Apple/ATI   The powerhouse flagship for the 5,1 Mac Pro.
2012   NVIDIA Quadro 4000   NVIDIA   A dedicated Mac Edition workstation card released by NVIDIA.
Late-Era Third Party Additions (Announced/Sold ~2012-2013)
Right at the end of the "Classic" tower's life cycle, two major third-party cards were released specifically for these machines. While they launched near the very end of 2012 or early 2013, they are often grouped with this era:

EVGA GeForce GTX 680 Mac Edition: Released to provide a modern Kepler-based upgrade for the 3,1 through 5,1.

Sapphire Radeon HD 7950 Mac Edition: Released specifically to give legacy towers GCN-architecture support (and a white fan shroud to match the Mac aesthetic).

Key Technical Distinctions
The "Boot Screen" Factor: The defining trait of these "Mac Edition" cards is the EFI firmware. Standard PC versions of these same cards will often work inside a Mac Pro once the OS loads, but you will see a black screen until the login window appears, making it impossible to use FileVault or select a boot drive.

Power Requirements: Most of these cards (except the 7300 GT, GT 120, and HD 5770) require one or two 6-pin mini-PCIe power cables connected directly to the Mac Pro motherboard.