

🚀 Elevate your workspace with 6-screen 4K power — don’t get left behind!
The VisionTek Radeon HD 7750 Eyefinity 6 Edition is a professional-grade graphics card featuring 2GB GDDR5 memory and a 1125 MHz clock speed. It supports up to six independent monitors with 4K UHD resolution at 60Hz via Mini DisplayPort outputs, making it ideal for multitasking professionals and immersive work environments. Compatible across multiple Windows OS versions, this plug-and-play GPU delivers reliable performance without extra power requirements, backed by a 1-year limited warranty and US-based support.




| ASIN | B00C7EPSVS |
| Antenna Location | Office, Professional |
| Best Sellers Rank | #267 in Computer Graphics Cards |
| Brand | VisionTek |
| Built-In Media | Radeon HD 7750 GPU (4) mDP to DP Adapters (2) mDP to DVI-D Passive Adapters* Installation Guide |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 427 Reviews |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 4096x2160 |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00784090031808 |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI-Express x16 |
| Graphics Card Ram | 2 GB |
| Graphics Coprocessor | AMD Radeon |
| Graphics Description | Radeon HD 7750 Eyefinity 6 Edition Graphic Card |
| Graphics Processor Manufacturer | AMD |
| Graphics RAM Type | GDDR5 |
| Graphics Ram Size | 2 GB |
| Graphics Ram Type | GDDR5 |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 10.5"L x 8"W |
| Item Weight | 1.6 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | VisionTek Products |
| Memory Clock Speed | 1125 MHz |
| Model Name | Radeon HD 7750 Eyefinity 6 Edition Graphic Card |
| UPC | 784090031808 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Video Output Interface | DisplayPort |
| Video Processor | AMD |
| Warranty Description | 1 year limited |
R**I
Great Multi-Monitor Card
I was previously using dual AMD Fire pros. During the hurricane lost my other system and had to put something together on a budget. I was able to source a refurbished system that had the processor and memory I was looking for, but only an onboard video option. In my profession, I am constantly remotely connecting to other systems and like the ability of spreading the tasks across multiple monitors. This card is of only a few I found at this price point that would support more than four displays. Most of the other options contain mixed video interfaces. I like the fact that this card has six mini display ports with a thumb screw option. It keeps everything nice and tight and the stress off of the smaller connectors. I was concerned that the overall memory of the card would not be enough to satisfy my needs however, I have been quite impressed with its abilities so far. I currently utilize four of the monitors in a working sense while the other two are dedicated to my Email client and video surveillance. Anyone who has ever used an email client knows what memory hogs they are, but are nothing compared to surveillance displays. This card chugs right along and is able to open additional task windows from various programs simultaneously across the four working screens and a quick and snappy manner. They are significantly faster than my previous set up which combined carried six times more total memory (12). I have been highly impressed with this card for production and monitoring of tasks. This is not for gaming by any means but more of a workstation card. If you are on the fence about purchasing this, I hope my experience helps lead to your final decision
E**L
Easy breezy for 6 monitor set up. True plug and play. Have no issues at all. Really blown away by how easy it was to install an
I did A LOT of research and this was my final card of choice. Needed a video card to have a 6 monitor set up. So far I have hooked up 2 monitors. Will add 2 more tomorrow and last 2 in the near future. I am amazed by how quickly it was up and running (truly plug and play). I couldn't believe how quickly I had the two monitors running. I installed the cd that came with it, plugged in the video card, restarted and that was it....It did not require its own power input which was such a surprise but great news. One less thing to worry about. It is installed on a Dell Optiplex gx280!! with 1gb ram and 3.0 ghz processor. So this is quite remarkable. XP found a driver after I started but I reinstalled the drive that came with it again (just in case). I bought "Mini DisplayPort to VGA Female Adaptor for Mac" because I wanted monitors with only VGA input (or vga as primary display input). There are cables that come with it but for me buying an hdmi to vga was the easiest route. If you need high quality graphics you should purchase "active" adapters. This card has 2GB ram so it's not flimsy by any means. Bought monitors 10-25 bucks on craigslist and needed simple (chrome and office) tasks. Steps. 1. install driver that comes with it on cd 2. shutdown computer, unplug power, press power button to clear charge (IMPORTANT before you touch inside of a computer) 3. install the video card on the pciex16 slot 4. hook up monitors 5. restart Note: Seems like the autorun feature installs driver for windows xp. On the CD however there's a separate setup.exe in the Drivers>Windows7... folder, which you will need to install if you have something other than Windows XP. Initially following the steps above everything worked great but after upgrading to windows 7 and installing the driver that came on the cd I noticed that my 2 monitors only showed up 1 single display on "display settings" (may not make sense but they do lol). Then I noticed that there's an additional folder for a later release of windows on the CD. Note: that the internal graphics card didn't work after I installed the new video card. Theoretically you should be able to have multiple video cards. By the time I got the idea I had already installed windows 7 and the latest update on dell for the internal graphics card on a gx280 (not surprisingly) would only install on windows xp. So if you really need 7 monitors, it seems possible, you'll just have to make sure that the latest driver for the internal graphics card (or dedicated) has an update for the OS you have installed. An XP graphics card driver won't install on a later OS. Note, my gx280 is a small form factor so the bottom of the the card bracket (the silver metal up front) wouldn't let the video card fully plug into the pciex 16 slot fully, but I made an adjustment and it's good now. Note, that you will NOT be able to close the case with this video card inside in a small factor computer (at least the gx280) because it's too tall. 30% of the graphics card sticks out. I'm only using the gx280 as a testing ground to evaluate up-scaling. So I recommend you purchase a full tower or desktop with ample space.
J**Y
GREAT! But expect a headache to get 5+ monitors to work correctly, especially w/ 2 cards "CrossFire"-ed together
I actually got 2 of these cards after I found a lot of cheap 15" LCD monitors and a few multi-monitor mounts to complete my ridiculous office computer system. I don't really do a lot of heavy gaming but you should see how many news channels I can watch at once while most of them lie to me about whats going on in the world and now I take having too many browser tabs open to an unholy level. ;) I'm not sure why I haven't seen any improvement whatsoever from using the CrossFire jumper ribbon in all my tests I've done, but I've tried everything just to get all the monitors to work properly in the first place (also after an ABSURD investment in mini-DisplayPort adapter cables). The cards work ok, but getting all 6 monitors to work off a single card has been PAINSTAKING. I'll try to include a few of the most important details of my expensive and tedious (albeit SUCCESSFUL) venture in getting over 9 monitors to work off of one single system (my previous record was 8, using 3 display adapters) Pro Tip: I finally decided to just go with "straight cables" that are mini-DP on one end, and a mix of VGA, DVI and HDMI for the other end which match whatever my monitors have. This kept me from constantly ordering, testing and returning all the gizmos and doodads that are "PASSIVE" and not "ACTIVE", since a lot of sellers seem to deliberately leave out whether the adapter devices they sell are PASSIVE or ACTIVE. For a single card setup: I noticed that I could not put 6 "digital" outputs on a single card, nor could I put 6 "analog" outputs on a single card. This basically means that if you want to get ALL 6 displays to work on a single card, 2 of them needed to be "analog", which (for ME anyway) means VGA inputs are needed on at least 2 monitors. I got lucky and had a few monitors I picked up in the lot that had both VGA & DVI inputs (Note: I don't have a DP input for any of my monitors, but it might was in "analog mode". Maybe. YMVV.) but I also have a large HDMI monitor I use for "presentation" of videos and such (A super old and heavy Plasma TV). After experimenting with different configurations of which ports connected to which monitors worked or didn't work, I was FINALLY able to get all 6 monitors working on a single card. I was as scientific as possible in my experimenting of how to get it all working and debug my issues, but it wasn't a fully equipped computer lab. I had a bunch of leftover cables and connectors I'd acquired over the years but I didn't have any mini-DP cables, so I used some of the little adapters that came with the card to test out certain configurations with my limited count of VGA-to-VGA, DVI-to-DVI, DVI-to-VGA adapters & cables, and DVI to HDMI adapters & cables... I used to be "that computer guy" that people ask for odd cables and the like from, but now I just keep it all in 2 storage bins in a closet. I'm more equipped than most people in this regard, but I don't have it all. Maybe having a mix with more DisplayPort monitors would work fine too, but those tend to be pricey and you won't find a cheap lot of them used anytime soon. I apparently spent all the money on cables and bargain bin monitors. RECOMMENDATION For 2 of these cards together (7+ monitors): For my experience, I noticed that installing one card at a time is the way to go. DO NOT try to just install 2 cards and hook up every monitor to them, flip the switch and hope Windows will take care of it all for you! It will not... After about 10 total hours of FIGHTING with it in various ways, losing some use of monitors and trying to fiddle with settings and drivers to get them all back, only to lose other monitors when I regained the ones I originally lost... (super frustrating), I finally unhooked EVERYTHING, and started from scratch. I also too the time to LABEL my wires on BOTH ends so that I could figure out which ones work on which devices. It has made moving around the computer FAR easier as I don't have to play with settings and use process of elimination every time I move my desk. I HAD to un-seat one of the 2 of these cards I have everything Windows would automatically update the device driver. I would come home from work to find that half my monitors weren't working and try to figure out what the deal was... it was almost always because of a driver update. Eventually, I got Windows to recognize all 12 monitors on 2 of these cards too by "cheating" and plugging the monitors with more than 1 or 2 input types up to the 2 different cards to "trick" it into thinking I had more monitors than I actually did. This was a neat trick that only worked on some monitors, not others, but it helped me figure out whether I needed to try a new connector / wire / adapter / whatever if I wanted to add more monitors and cap out my walls with all the video the computer is capable of handling (muahahaha!) NOTE: The last 2 driver updates that Windows 10 performed automatically have actually gone swimmingly and I didn't have to touch a thing. THANK YOU TO THE DRIVER DEVELOPERS FOR WORKING THAT OUT! In summary, expect to have to test test test test test test test and TEST some more, LOTS of trial and error, maybe a few times ordering the wrong cables or getting a bunk "PASSIVE" adapter instead of the "ACTIVE" adapters that WORK for us with more than 2 monitors... lots of cussing... and if you don't have a labeling system for your ports on the back of the video card AND on the connector wire end plugging into it AND on the connection end of the wire/cable AND the monitor that its connecting to, YOU WILL have a BAD TIME if you try to move your desk and plug everything back in.
A**E
Easy to Install. Great card for those who need to keep an eye on the Matrix
"Neo, the Matrix has you"... This definitively helped rescue Neo from the Matrix. This is a low power card that was easy to install. It is nice and slim, taking up only one slot even with the heat sync so there was plenty of room for the other hardware required to jack in to the Matrix. The card powers 6 monitors flawlessly had high quality 4k to keep an eye on the green rain that is the Matrix. The card did not have any problems running off of a 250W PSU nor a 500W PSU. Still works without issues in Windows 11. May have to manually install the drivers though.
A**B
continuous crashes with X299 motherboard
There is a hardware flaw in this graphics card that causes it to hang / crash after anywhere from a few minutes to 24 hours using new Intel X299 based motherboards. I have previously used this graphics card with an Intel X99 based motherboard and it worked fine. Likely this is because the underlying graphics chip on this card, the AMD Radeon 7750, is 5+ years old at this point. Unfortunately, there are no other cost-effective solutions to run six monitors on one graphics card out there, but VisionTek needs to update the chipset and hardware for this card before it is usable with modern systems. I tested a variety of hardware combinations using two of these graphics cards and multiple motherboard / processors, one graphics card purchased in 2016 and one in mid 2018 and all combinations produced the same behavior - system works perfectly then crashes after anywhere from a few minutes to 24 hours, with a graphics card failure noted in the sys logs. I spoke to VisonTek support, but they blamed the problem on AMD and were not helpful at all. AMD support was equally unhelpful, attempting to blame other system components or VisionTek. I have since replaced this graphics card with a newer-generation NVIDIA based card and the system works perfectly.
M**S
Works on PCI-E 2.0 Slot - 6 monitors from 1 card!
I was a bit skeptical since our motherboard has a PCI-E 2.0 slot (and the recommendation is a 3.0 slot). The actual packaging of the unit says under system requirements "PCI-Express Based PC with 1 x16 slot" and in the detailed Specs is does say Bus Standard: PCI-E 3.0 x16. I did my homework and ran 3 monitors direct with DP (no need for active adapters), 2 off the white DVI leads provided (passive, only allowed 2 passive) and 1 via HDMI with an Active MiniDP to HDMI adapter (found on Amazon for about $15). Please note: this rig is not for gaming, but rather for business analytics.... not very graphics intensive, but it does have a beefy 750 W power supply which I'm sure helps too. With something open on all six monitors, I was streaming video from 3 different sources simultaneously (Netflix, Max, YouTube) and it was keeping up. I was looking at the GPU performance and it did start to get up around 100%, but it still got the job done. At first I installed the whole driver package that had so much extra stuff from AMD. It actually didn't even work right at first with all that "Catalyst" software installed. I uninstalled it all and then just installed the base driver set and then it worked great.... all 6 monitors were up and running. I was able to rearrange the spacial arrangement in Windows 10 Display settings and it's been working stable ever since. My wife's been bugging me for a 6 monitor rig for years, and honestly, I never thought I'd see the day! But, this card made it happen!
1**6
Fit my needs perfectly
Update 7/3/14 - I took away 2 stars and want to advise anyone who will NOT run all 6 monitors all the time that this card or software will drive you crazy. I don't run all 6 all the time and will often power down to only 2 monitors. I can close, then open a program and all too often it will open in a monitor that is turned off. I have all my setting in CCC correct and the monitors mirror those in my Windows Control Panel but I cannot figure out what is causing this. At times, I can turn 1 monitor off and when I open a program, you can guess which monitor it opens in; yes, the one that is turned off. VisionTek 7750 - I was looking to buy an off the shelf computer after my old one had a run-in with a half-cup of Maxwell House, but I have a 6 monitor set up and anything I found to push that many monitors had a pretty hefty price tag on it due mostly to high end GPU's. I trade stocks so I don't have the need for a GPU that will push 150 frames per second; stock charts are mostly static with a few moving indicators and anything that delivers 2 frames per second would be adequate for my needs. After doing a lot of research and finding this card, I decided it would definitely be cheaper to build my own computer using this card to achieve a 6 monitor setup. It was a good decision. This GPU fit my needs perfectly, and for something that can push 6 monitors, was reasonably priced. Worked right out of the box on my new build, after drivers loaded of course. I did struggle with the Eyefinity setup, but I went through the same thing 2 1/2 years ago with my other rig. Once I got it configured right, it was 'hands off' for the next 2 1/2 years and hopefully I have this one set up correctly too. I can't say how well this would work for a gamer but will definitely recommend this GPU for someone who is looking for a reasonably priced multi-monitor GPU. I see a few comments from people who were having difficulty getting this card to work with different type ports so I wanted to list what I used to help others. I essentially have only 2 different types of monitors and port setups, as follows; 4 Asus monitors (VE278Q) with full size display port receptacles connected using the mini DP to full DP adapters that came with this 7750 card, and these DP cables which I purchased from Amazon - http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0014BQQI4/ref=oh_details_o01_s03_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 I also have 2 Samsung monitors with HDMI ports. I had previously bought 2 mini DP to full DP adapters (I bought these at BBuy years ago and don't have a part or model number) then used this DP to HDMI adapter that I bought from Amazon - http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0017K6BDW/ref=oh_details_o02_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Then I used an HDMI to HDMI cable to the monitor. So for the Samsung monitors I have 3 cables or adapters in-line and it works. It's interesting to note that when I bought these DP to HDMI adapters from Amazon a few years ago, they did not work on the card I had at the time, but they work on this one. At the time, I was told these did not work with my setup because they are not considered an `active' adapter. If you're not confused yet, read Fred's comment on here; he repeats the same thing I heard several years ago and found to be true, yet now they work with this card. I am unable to explain this, but the important thing is that they work now.
A**R
Good graphics card for a low budget.
Great for 2D and manages all screens well. Good for lower graphics games,
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