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#1 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 6
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Hey Digihome.
Have a question I'm hoping you can help me answer. I'm setting up a visual installation for a friend and they would like to link four flat screen TVs to display a single screen (i.e. each TV displays 1/4 of the total image). This would be running off of a laptop with an HDMI out. Question is whether a standard 1x4 HDMI splitter would be the solution? Or do I need something more (i.e. specific program on the laptop)? Thanks! |
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#2 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: The Dandelion City
Posts: 7,133
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A standard HDMI splitter will not do it. A laptop won't either unless it has some sort of video add on, such as a high end external video card or processor. Some PCIe video cards and software drivers have the capability to handle screens in this way. It may require two video cards for 4 screens. There may also be some high end HDMI video processors that will. They are usually quite expensive compared to DIY PC solutions.
__________________
At 20 I had a good mind. At 40 I had money. At 60 I've lost my mind and my money. Oh, to be 20 again. --Scary |
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#3 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: 127.0.0.1
Posts: 1,800
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Take a look at AMD's Eyefinity feature. I haven't seen any 2x2 configurations though. They have 3x1 and 3x2 configurations in the demos that I've seen.
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 302
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Quote:
![]() 2x2 is supported in Eyefinity. See here. |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 6
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Thanks for the help so far.
I looked that the AMD solution. I have an old tower I bought for my parents with an AMD processor in it. Going to see whether it supports 'crossfire' so I can buy a couple of Radeon graphics cards and 'connect' them to give me the 4 screens. Otherwise I'm looking at upwards of $1000 for a proper Quad video card. |
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#6 | ||
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Veteran
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: The Dandelion City
Posts: 7,133
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Quote:
Quote:
__________________
At 20 I had a good mind. At 40 I had money. At 60 I've lost my mind and my money. Oh, to be 20 again. --Scary |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Toronto, ON
Posts: 582
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A quad-head video card shouldn't cost $1000. I was looking into those when you asked your question. I saw ATI FireMV and nVidia Quadro cards that supported 4 displays in the ~$500 range.
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#8 |
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Toronto, ON
Posts: 582
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I don't think you'll be able to accomplish this with a laptop but you can with a desktop and the correct video cards.
The problem with a laptop is that they only have one video out and even if you connected it to a splitter the splitter would deliver the same video output to all the inputs, essentially you'd be seeing the same source repeated on all four displays. (The exception here is the new MacBooks Pros with 15" or 17" displays and Thunderbolt and two Apple 27" Thunderbolt displays. The MacBook Pros can drive the two displays daisy chained using Thunberbolt cables but the limit is two displays.) A desktop on the other hand with a couple of video cards with two outputs each or a single video card with four output could handle this easily. |
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#9 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Craig Henry (Greenbank/Hunt Club), Nepean, ON
Posts: 2,729
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A laptop with a docking station can handle two external displays, with the laptop screen disabled (or mirroring one of the external displays).
I doubt a docking station could do 2x2, though. |
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