Devices have been tested for power and functionality, and are. This card was pulled from a working machine and tested in Sierra, High Sierra and even Mojave systems. Pulled from a Mid Mac Pro. Works per specifications, absolutely no issues. Check model for compatibility. More refinements More refinements
OS Required Apple MacOS X 10.6.4 or later. Mac Video Memory. Technology GDDR5 SDRAM. ATI Radeon HD 5770 - graphics card - Radeon HD 5770 - 1 GB. Jan 29, 2013 For 5770 / 5870 you must have at least 10.6.4+ installed for them to work, which means that they will work in 10.7.x and 10.8.x as well. If you did not experimented with system kexts, your OS should not be a problem. It seems like the card is faulty. Description: Driver for ATI Radeon HD 5770 The AMD Catalyst™ Software Suite, AMD Catalyst™ 13.4 contains the following: AMD Catalyst™ Display Driver version 12.104 HydraVision™ for Windows Vista® and Windows® 7 Southbridge/IXP Driver AMD Catalyst™ Control Center / AMD Vision Engine Control Center Download ATI Radeon HD 5770.
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Very Good to Excellent condition. Custom Bundle see all. Tested for key functions. All ports work properly.
Mac Pro mid 2010 ATI Radeon HD 5770
Apr 01, 2016 This is how to flash an ATI Radeon HD 5770 graphics card for use on a Mac Pro. This method should work for most variants of this card, and should work with any model Mac Pro. To complete this process, you'll need a flash drive, a PC running Windows, a PC with a PCIe slot to use for flashing, and a machine running Mac OS X. The Radeon HD 5770 Mac Edition was a graphics card by ATI, launched in July 2010. Built on the 40 nm process, and based on the Juniper graphics processor, in its Juniper XT variant, the card supports DirectX 11.2. The Juniper graphics processor is an average sized chip with a die area of 166 mm² and 1,040 million transistors. Feb 25, 2015 ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB NOT for mac pro I ordered a new video card for my 3,1 Mac Pro and accidentally ordered the ver that doesn't say 'For Mac Pro' not realizing that there was any difference. 2011 17' MBP 2.2ghz, 16gig ram, OS 10.11.6 Rep Power 44. Originally Posted by redflyr. I ordered a new video card for my 3,1 Mac Pro.
Memory Type see all. Verified working with Mac OSX Pulled from a Mid Mac Pro. Hhd by Thu, Jan 3. Alaska, Hawaii, and to the other territories governed by the United States.
Guaranteed Delivery see all.
Card has been disassembled, cleaned, and new Arctic MX-4 thermalgrease reapplied. Got one to sell? Modified Item see all.
Aux power cable included. External hard drive mac os. Listing includes the card only; no other cables or accessories are include. This card is needed in the mac pro to get to the boot screen.
![Ati Ati](/uploads/1/2/7/1/127125569/829202722.jpg)
Apple ATI Radeon HD Computer Graphics Cards for sale | eBay
Within 2 miles 5 miles 10 miles 15 miles 20 miles 50 miles 75 miles miles miles miles miles miles miles miles radeom of. Pictures are of an identical item. More refinements More refinements Electronics Cafe specializes in used electronics. Mac GPU computing support.
Genuine Apple graphics card. This graphics card is used and functioning properly. Item Location see all.
Guaranteed 3 day delivery. Appropriate For see all. Guaranteed by Fri, Jan 4. Buying Format see all. For Mac Pro 1,1.
Mac Pro mid ATI Radeon HD | MacRumors Forums
Removed this graphics card from a Mac Pro Server Mid this past week. Normal signs of cosmetic wear and scratches. This card will not run Mojave, but is fine for High Sierra. Both cards are in perfect working condition, and support multiple monitor output.
Has lived in one Mac Pro only. Show only see all. Canon mx726 driver mac os x.
Radeon Hd 5770 Update
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Hi, Ive been experiencing some fan spin-up issues on my Mac Pro 1,1 (late 2006 1st gen. Intel model). After posting at discussions.apple.com, I was encouraged to run Apple Hardware Test to test for any hardware faults. Unfortunately, ever since I replaced my old graphics card with a new one (The nVidia GeForce GT 8800 for Mac, which had worked great for years, 'burnt out', and Apple Corp. recommended the ATI Radeon HD 5770 as the best/only replacement option available for the Mac Pro 1,1), I've been having graphics card issues which prevent me from running (or more accurately, viewing) pre-boot processes, such as Apple Hardware Test.
The Mac Pro is fully updated, running OS X Snow Leopard, 10.6.7. It has 6 GB of RAM -- plenty for my purposes -- and I run system maintenance routines weekly to correct permissions, etc. In preparation to diagnose my fan issue, I went ahead and 'flashed' the PRAM, and reset the System Management Controller (SMC) for good measure.
I first noticed a change in the boot process after installing the 5770 graphics card. As everyone knows, after pressing the Mac's power button, a chime is heard. After a moment or two of darkness, the grey screen & Apple logo appear, followed eventually by Finder. Ever since I installed the 5770 however, the screen remains blank until JUST before OS X has fully loaded (sometime AFTER the grey Apple logo would ordinarily appear on-screen, but before Finder opens up).
At first, I didn't think much about it. Everything else seems to work just fine..until I tried booting (while pressing the 'd' key) from my system disc, to run Apple Hardware Test. As best as I can tell, everything loads up normally, except that I can't see it. After hitting power, and pressing 'd', the optical drive spins up, and I can hear that the system disk is being read, and then everything quiets down, and there I am sitting in front of a blank screen. I'm fairly sure the computer is not frozen because it responds to key combinations like 'control-command-option-eject', the keyboard shortcut for 'fast shutdown'.
I have experimented with various other start-up key combinations (like 'c', or 'command-option-p-r' to flash the PRAM, etc.), and have confirmed (just by listening to the sounds that the Mac Pro makes while it's booting, for lack of any visual confirmation) that those 'low-level' boot processes are in fact working properly.
My suspicion is that the new 5770 graphics card isn't being initialized early enough in the boot process, maybe as a result of the boot ROM upgrade that took place when I installed it. System Profiler identifies my current boot ROM version to be 'MP11.005C.B08'. A quick Google search confirms that this version is associated with Mac Pros which have been upgraded with the ATI Radeon HD 5770 graphics card.
So now I'm now stuck without the ability to run ANY kind of pre-boot diagnostics, etc. at ALL anymore. Additionally, I can't enable/disable my firmware password, because I can't see the EFI password prompt when I boot holding down the 'Option' key (After the brief 'Option'-boot period, it was clear that my system was doing one of two things; 1. Stalling/Crashing somehow 2. Booting to the EFI password entry prompt as it was supposed to, but failing to route that low-level process to the video card -- all I could see is the blank screen).
So, dear reader, thank you for having the patience to read about my problem. Not being a qualified technician, I understand that many of my assumptions may be speculative, but I believe that I've been thorough so far.
Fortunately, this problem is not debilitating for me right now, but I can foresee having troubles in the future (like when it comes time to upgrade the OS to Lion). If the ATI/Apple engineers haven't written a firmware/boot ROM fix (assuming that is what's needed) by then, Perhaps it will finally be time to buy a new computer :/
Please do not hesitate to re-post this on any other forum where you believe it might be relevant. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer!
-kapok
Mac Pro 1,1, 6 GB RAM, OS X 10.6.7, ATI Radeon HD 5770 GPU
The Mac Pro is fully updated, running OS X Snow Leopard, 10.6.7. It has 6 GB of RAM -- plenty for my purposes -- and I run system maintenance routines weekly to correct permissions, etc. In preparation to diagnose my fan issue, I went ahead and 'flashed' the PRAM, and reset the System Management Controller (SMC) for good measure.
I first noticed a change in the boot process after installing the 5770 graphics card. As everyone knows, after pressing the Mac's power button, a chime is heard. After a moment or two of darkness, the grey screen & Apple logo appear, followed eventually by Finder. Ever since I installed the 5770 however, the screen remains blank until JUST before OS X has fully loaded (sometime AFTER the grey Apple logo would ordinarily appear on-screen, but before Finder opens up).
At first, I didn't think much about it. Everything else seems to work just fine..until I tried booting (while pressing the 'd' key) from my system disc, to run Apple Hardware Test. As best as I can tell, everything loads up normally, except that I can't see it. After hitting power, and pressing 'd', the optical drive spins up, and I can hear that the system disk is being read, and then everything quiets down, and there I am sitting in front of a blank screen. I'm fairly sure the computer is not frozen because it responds to key combinations like 'control-command-option-eject', the keyboard shortcut for 'fast shutdown'.
I have experimented with various other start-up key combinations (like 'c', or 'command-option-p-r' to flash the PRAM, etc.), and have confirmed (just by listening to the sounds that the Mac Pro makes while it's booting, for lack of any visual confirmation) that those 'low-level' boot processes are in fact working properly.
My suspicion is that the new 5770 graphics card isn't being initialized early enough in the boot process, maybe as a result of the boot ROM upgrade that took place when I installed it. System Profiler identifies my current boot ROM version to be 'MP11.005C.B08'. A quick Google search confirms that this version is associated with Mac Pros which have been upgraded with the ATI Radeon HD 5770 graphics card.
So now I'm now stuck without the ability to run ANY kind of pre-boot diagnostics, etc. at ALL anymore. Additionally, I can't enable/disable my firmware password, because I can't see the EFI password prompt when I boot holding down the 'Option' key (After the brief 'Option'-boot period, it was clear that my system was doing one of two things; 1. Stalling/Crashing somehow 2. Booting to the EFI password entry prompt as it was supposed to, but failing to route that low-level process to the video card -- all I could see is the blank screen).
So, dear reader, thank you for having the patience to read about my problem. Not being a qualified technician, I understand that many of my assumptions may be speculative, but I believe that I've been thorough so far.
Fortunately, this problem is not debilitating for me right now, but I can foresee having troubles in the future (like when it comes time to upgrade the OS to Lion). If the ATI/Apple engineers haven't written a firmware/boot ROM fix (assuming that is what's needed) by then, Perhaps it will finally be time to buy a new computer :/
Please do not hesitate to re-post this on any other forum where you believe it might be relevant. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer!
-kapok
Mac Pro 1,1, 6 GB RAM, OS X 10.6.7, ATI Radeon HD 5770 GPU