So we received a couple of Mac Pro 1,1′s which were having issues and decided to see what we could make from them. The idea being to make a powerful, modern Mac as cheaply as possible. The Mac Pro 1,1 is a great place to start – it has masses of internal expansion, and can be grabbed cheaply second hand sources, often for less than £ 100.
The basic issue with the Mac Pro 1,1 is that as factory setup and running it will not run above Mac OS 10.7.5 – this limits it's usability; especially with Applications like Adobe CC or even modern apps like Photos or iTunes. It also limits some upgrade options; especially with Graphics cards like our R9 – as these earlier OSes do not have the drivers needed.
To start with much of this work has been done by others; I will try and link back to sources as much as possible. That said many people have done similar things in different ways – so I will try and justify my methodology as well (or at least explain the logic behind the decision).
The short short version:
Mac Pro Graphics Card Upgrade
1) Upgrade the firmware to Mac Pro 2,1 (add support for newer CPUs)
2) Upgrade the CPUs to 2 x Quad Core 3.0Ghz Xeons.
New graphics cards for Mac Pro from Apple are not available anymore. We offer a powerful NVIDIA graphics card upgrade KITs for Mac Pro 2008–2012 (3,1 4,1 5,1) based on latest powerful NVIDIA graphics cards. Get acceleration in Final Cut, AVID, Adobe Premiere, After Effects, Da Vinci Resolve, Cinema4D, and others. ATI Radeon HD 4870 Graphics Upgrade Kit for Apple Mac Pro 4.0 out of 5 stars 43 PowerColor AMD Radeon RED Dragon RX 580 8GB GDDR5 1 x DL DVI-D / 1 x HDMI / 3 x DisplayPort Graphics Card (AXRX 580 8GBD5-3DHDV2/OC ).
- Which card should I upgrade to? Since this article was written Apple has published a list of macOS Mojave supported graphics cards. These specific third-party graphics cards are Metal-capable and compatible with macOS Mojave on Mac Pro (Mid 2010) and Mac Pro (Mid 2012): MSI Gaming Radeon RX 560 128-bit 4GB GDRR5. SAPPHIRE Radeon PULSE RX 580.
- This video I upgrade my aging 2009 Mac Pro 4,1 from a Nvidia GT 120 to a much more powerful GTX 660 Link for 6 Pin Cable: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0.
3) Upgrade the RAM to above 16GB (we went to 32GB but anything above 16GB should be fine) Virtual arduino for mac.
4) Install 4 x HDDs (defiantly Matched in size – preferably matched in brand, model etc) – Setup as a RAID 0 – and Test.
5) Upgrade the Graphics Card (we used our R9) – you need to have at least 512 MB VRAM.
6) Install Mac OS X 10.11.6 onto the RAID and modify the boot.efi and list
7) Boot and enjoy!!
So these steps in detail – with reasons and processes.
1) Upgrade the firmware to Mac Pro 2,1 (add support for newer CPUs)
Resize the image by a percentage: Choose 'percent' from the pop-up menu next to the Width and Height fields, then enter the percentage in those fields. Force the image to keep its original proportions: Select 'Scale proportionally.' If you change either the width or height, the. Resize form access. You don't need to pay for Photoshop or another photo editing app to resize images and make them smaller on a Mac. You can use Preview which comes as part of MacOS and resize images for free. You can fit the images to a box, resize by the longest side, save in PNG, JPEG, GIF, TIFF, and BMP format. You can even extract the first page of a PDF document, convert it to an image, and resize it.
There is a useful forum here: which has a utility to do this. I followed the instructions and rebooted with the long tone and off you trot! This is needed to add support for the newer CPUs we had in store.
2) Upgrade the CPUs to 2 x Quad Core 3.0Ghz Xeons.
We had these in store from a failed Mac Pro 2,1 which had logic issues – but they can be purchased from eBay very cheaply – there is a great list here on MacRumors which can help you decide which suit your budget / needs. If you want to run lots at any one time then going from Dual Core to Quad Core can be helpful (I wanted to get virtualization working to support legacy OSes at the same time) – otherwise going for higher clock speed is more helpful for processes such as video encoding.
3) Upgrade the RAM to above 16GB (we went to 32GB but anything above 16GB should be fine)
If you trust the second hand market; you can pick up some real bargains for 667mhz RAM for these Machines (we do see some customers with issues from second hand RAM but would image it is a small number given how much it appears on eBay etc) – we do sell new modules here.
You MUST have above 12 GB RAM to run El Capitan without it falling over at random intervals – when we had it up and running with 8GB (waiting for a stock delivery) it would fall over every 10 mins or so at random times – since the upgrade it is up for days without any bother.
4) Install 4 x HDDs (defiantly Matched in size – preferably matched in brand, model etc) – Setup as a RAID 0 – and Test.
I had 4 x 3TB HDDs from a previous project which were no longer being used – a bit of a miss match of brands (a pair of Seagate 3TB, and a pair of WD Green 3TB drives). Once these were installed in the Mac Pro I used Target Disk mode via Firewire to a Mac Mini and setup as a RAID 0 using SoftRAID. Using target mode meant that we could install the latest SoftRAID drivers and not have issues later with older versions etc.
This RAID gives over 500MB/s read and write speed (as tested with BlackMagic Disk Speed Test) – and you could expect more with newer and matched drives. Not bad for 12TB of storage!
I used RAID 0 as this Mac will be backed up to a Time Machine server and also be acting as a Media Backup – so failure accounted for.
5) Upgrade the Graphics Card (I used our R9) – you need to have at least 512 MB VRAM.
Video Cards with less than 512 MB VRAM cause issues on these early Mac Pros with the later OSes. I replaced the stock GT with a flashed R9 270x 2GB VRAM. Other cards will work; however the 270x is within the Max power draw spec, has nice out of the box driver support in 10.11.6 and full Dual-link DVI.
6) Install Mac OS X 10.11.6 onto the RAID and modify the boot.efi and list
I used the Mac Pro in Target disk mode attached to a 2012 Mac Mini running 10.9 – this allowed me to install 10.11.3, create an account and complete all the usual upgrades to 10.11.6 so that I knew it was a fully working install. – Effectively using the Mac Pro as a big hard drive enclosure!
Once it was all working I booted back into the Mac Mini and followed the instructions here:
This involved replacing the boot.efi and adding a line item to the plist. (I went for grey as I am a traditionalist!).
4) Install 4 x HDDs (defiantly Matched in size – preferably matched in brand, model etc) – Setup as a RAID 0 – and Test.
I had 4 x 3TB HDDs from a previous project which were no longer being used – a bit of a miss match of brands (a pair of Seagate 3TB, and a pair of WD Green 3TB drives). Once these were installed in the Mac Pro I used Target Disk mode via Firewire to a Mac Mini and setup as a RAID 0 using SoftRAID. Using target mode meant that we could install the latest SoftRAID drivers and not have issues later with older versions etc.
This RAID gives over 500MB/s read and write speed (as tested with BlackMagic Disk Speed Test) – and you could expect more with newer and matched drives. Not bad for 12TB of storage!
I used RAID 0 as this Mac will be backed up to a Time Machine server and also be acting as a Media Backup – so failure accounted for.
5) Upgrade the Graphics Card (I used our R9) – you need to have at least 512 MB VRAM.
Video Cards with less than 512 MB VRAM cause issues on these early Mac Pros with the later OSes. I replaced the stock GT with a flashed R9 270x 2GB VRAM. Other cards will work; however the 270x is within the Max power draw spec, has nice out of the box driver support in 10.11.6 and full Dual-link DVI.
6) Install Mac OS X 10.11.6 onto the RAID and modify the boot.efi and list
I used the Mac Pro in Target disk mode attached to a 2012 Mac Mini running 10.9 – this allowed me to install 10.11.3, create an account and complete all the usual upgrades to 10.11.6 so that I knew it was a fully working install. – Effectively using the Mac Pro as a big hard drive enclosure!
Once it was all working I booted back into the Mac Mini and followed the instructions here:
This involved replacing the boot.efi and adding a line item to the plist. (I went for grey as I am a traditionalist!).
A tentative reboot with the 'Alt' key and the 10.11.6 RAID appeared – selected and then the login appeared! It lives! Make sure that the hard drive is selected in the startup disk panel to avoid a long delay on boot and it has been up and running ever since!
So now I have a Mac Pro, running El Capitan 10.11.6 with 32GB RAM, 12TB hard drive operating at similar speeds to a modern SSD, the wonderful R9 270X with 2GB VRAM and two displays. Daily it runs four web browsers with approx 10 tabs in each, Parallels with various older OSes from 10.6.8 server upwards, Photos, eMail, Facetime (with a USB webcam), iTunes, iWork and all the usual office tasks and all for less than the cost of a iPad!
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Best Video Card Upgrade For Mac Pro 3 1
So about a year ago I bought the Ati Radeon 5770 upgrade kit for my Mac Pro and it has been okay but I wanted to take it to the next level. It would be insane to buy the 5870 for $430 right? When the latest greatest cards blow that one away.
Is there any easy way to get a newer card from the ATI 6000 or 7000 series or the NVIDIA cards to work on a mac pro safely. I was going to buy a card from best buy but the geek squad dude said the card would destroy my mother board as I have a Mac Bios, even if I use it only with windows 7 via boot camp. Is that true? I believe my mac pro has pci 2.0 so the 3.0 cards would not work? Maybe that is what he meant?
Also it would be of course ideal to use this card for osx and windows but if I could just ad a second card to use only for windows I would be okay with that.., if i have to modify my bios or something that sounds risky.
UPDATE I just saw this post! Does anyone have any experience with this? If I upgrade to osx mountain lion will I see a performance upgrade too? I am on snow leopard. I am using FCP 7 as well and wonder how the compatibility with be.
http://nrsotw.blogspot.com/2012/09/gtx-660ti-in-mac-pro-and-davinci.html