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3DMark 2011 is the latest from Futuremark. It is specifically made for DirectX 11, which allows for a realistic amount of graphical detail. Like Vantage, it has three presets ranging from Entry, suitable for ultraportables, to Extreme which is naturally adapted for top-end gaming rigs.

Crysis Warhead is a standalone expansion pack of the original Crysis, which at the time of its release was well known for requiring the most powerful hardware to play at maxed settings. Warhead uses an enhanced version of the Crytek engine.

Once again, the ASUS HD 6670 alone performs much better than the integrated solution. However at the "Gamer" settings, even at the lowest resolution tested and overclocked, the framerates are a bit tight for a first-person shooter. Adding the HD6550D horsepower increases the framerates by approximately 35 percent, whereas in 3DMark the score is boosted by around 40 percent.
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I am actually impressed the performance increase was so good when the two were combined
Here's my rig specs:
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-A75-D3H
Processor: AMD A8-3850 (with integrated HD6550 graphics)
Memory: 8Gb Kingston 1600MHz
Video: Gigabyte Radeon HD6670 1GB DDR3 128-bit
HDD: WD 500Gb 7200Rpm
PSU: Inter-Tech Energon 550W
I would be very grateful for a helpful reply.
Cheers.
You may have to enable it via the Catalyst Control Panel. Also, make sure your monitor is plugged in the motherboard video output.
With the 6670 not plugged in I've setup BIOS to use the primary display graphics ONBOARD
- Installed the latest AMD Catalyst (12.8)
- Plugged in the discreet card and swiched monitor cable from onbord DVI to the dedicated DVI
- Enabled in Catalys the AMD Dual Graphics option (there is no Crossfire option only this one)
After I've read some opinions I found out that monitor should be in onbord port as you also mentioned and I've changed it then disabled and re-enabled dual graphics.
Here's a printscreen:
Could it be that I don't have the DX11 installed or enabled somehow?
Also, someone told me that the APUs low bandwidth could slow the dedicated GPU down. That's why the dual graphics works poorly.
Is this possible?
Even though you use slower RAM than our test setup, you should still see the benefits of dual-GPU.