The 2019 Mac Pro packs a huge amount of power. It’s designed to pair with the 6K Pro Display XDR (up to six of them) but it can also push up to a dozen 4K displays. Read along for all the external display configurations possible with the Mac Pro.
Apple shared the external display possibilities with the Mac Pro in a support document, and as you’d probably guess, the limits depend on your GPU setup.
Mac Pro: Here are all the external display configurations possible
Here are the options based on 6K, 5K, and 4K displays. Read more about what ports to use to achieve these setups here.
6K displays
- Two Pro Display XDRs or 6K displays with resolutions of 6016 x 3384 at 60 Hz when connected to a single Radeon Pro 580X MPX Module, Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Module, or Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Module.
- Four Pro Display XDRs or 6K displays with resolutions of 6016 x 3384 at 60 Hz when connected to two Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Modules.
- Six Pro Display XDRs or 6K displays with resolutions of 6016 x 3384 at 60 Hz when connected to two Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Modules
5K displays
- Two 5K displays with resolutions of 5120 x 2880 at 60 Hz when connected to a single Radeon Pro 580X MPX Module.
- Three 5K displays with resolutions of 5120 x 2880 at 60 Hz when connected to a single Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Module.
- Four 5K displays with resolutions of 5120 x 2880 at 60 Hz when connected to a single Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Module.
- Six 5K displays with resolutions of 5120 x 2880 at 60 Hz when connected to two Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Modules or Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Modules.
4K displays
- Six 4K displays with resolutions of 3840 x 2160 at 60 Hz when connected to a single Radeon Pro 580X MPX Module or Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Module.
- Eight 4K displays with resolutions of 3840 x 2160 at 60 Hz when connected to a single Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Module.
- Twelve 4K displays with resolutions of 3840 x 2160 at 60 Hz when connected to two Radeon Pro Vega II MPX Modules or Radeon Pro Vega II Duo MPX Modules.
Mac:
- macOS: How to set up Force Click with a Logitech MX Master mouse
- Selling your MacBook? Here’s how to repair the butterfly keyboard for free and get more money
- How to check iPad and Mac Sidecar requirements
- How to create a bootable macOS Catalina 10.15 USB install drive [Video]
- How to sync iPhone and iPad to your Mac in macOS Catalina without iTunes
iPhone & iPad:
- What is mini LED and what could it mean for iPad and MacBook?
- How to find out when your iPhone 11 camera is using Deep Fusion
- How to quickly select, move, and delete notes on iPhone and iPad with two-finger tap
- How to remove Memoji Stickers from your iPhone keyboard
- How to use the Deep Fusion iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro camera feature
- iOS 13: How to use custom fonts on iPhone and iPad
- How to edit messages on iPhone and iPad with two-finger tap
- How to use the ‘Remind when messaging’ feature on iPhone, iPad, and Mac
- How to use the ultra wide camera on iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro
AirPods Pro:
- How to get AirPods Pro ear tip replacements
- How to clean your dirty AirPods Pro and charging case
- AirPods Pro: How to customize Force Sensor controls
- AirPods Pro: How to use Ear Tip Fit Test and change tips
- AirPods Pro: How to use noise cancellation and Transparency mode
- AirPods Pro vs Powerbeats Pro: How specs, size, price, and more compare
- What’s the difference in AirPods and AirPods Pro? Here’s how size, price, and features compare