cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Help me understand External GPU/Intel Thunderbolt 3

shahidrahman
Level 7
I just heard someone talk about this and I did a lot of research and asked around about this but I still am lost about its capabilities. I hard you can use a desktop graphics card with your laptop using the external GPU product. I also head the Intel Thunderbolt 3 is being released soon and it can do the same. The thing is when I went to Best Buy, I asked a guy about this and he said that's almost impossible because of the watts needed. He showed me how the gtx 770 and gtx 980 need about 200-300 watts but the intel thunderbolt said it can only do 100. Is this really true? And will this product work with the Asus ROG series?

My Laptop: Asus Rog G751 JT
303 Views
4 REPLIES 4

Clintlgm
Level 14
Yes when you find this information please post it. We here are just users helping other users. As of today Asus has released no specifications for the model G700. As far as the 100 Watts supplied by Thunderbolt 3. Its easy if you have an external Video card you would also have an external power supply for that external card Yes? So far we have no information than what is publicly published. So as I started this reply if you find some hard new information please post it here for us.

http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/io/thunderbolt/thunderbolt-technology-developer.html
http://rog.asus.com/440562015/g-series-gaming-laptops/ifa-2015-rog-gx700-and-g752-gaming-laptops-ann...
G752VY-DH72 Win 10 Pro
512 GB M.2 Samsung 960 Pro
1 TB Samsung 850 pro 2.5 format
980m GTX 4 GB
32GB DDR 4 Standard RAM

Z97 PRO WiFi I7 4790K
Windows 10 Pro
Z97 -A
Windows 10 Pro

Clintlgm wrote:
Yes when you find this information please post it. We here are just users helping other users. As of today Asus has released no specifications for the model G700. As far as the 100 Watts supplied by Thunderbolt 3. Its easy if you have an external Video card you would also have an external power supply for that external card Yes? So far we have no information than what is publicly published. So as I started this reply if you find some hard new information please post it here for us.

http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/io/thunderbolt/thunderbolt-technology-developer.html
http://rog.asus.com/440562015/g-series-gaming-laptops/ifa-2015-rog-gx700-and-g752-gaming-laptops-ann...


Will do. 🙂

Gps3dx
Level 12
I forgot where I found it by some Chinese retailer manufacture & sell M.2 PCI-E ( for output ) extension cable that has PCI-E x16 slot ( for input ), though I not sure the cable length will manage to baypass the length of our laptop with enough comfortably distance
i.e the external slot might sits very near the laptop end, thus heating all your working surroundings.
Asus G751JT
Samsung EVO 850 120GB + 1TB HDD 7200RPM
Cleaned installed Win 10 HOME
My Guides:

  • [POST=538713]ROG LAPTOPS: COMPLETE DRIVER LIST ![/POST]
  • [POST=538713]How to install windows 8/8.1/10 on any UEFI supported laptop the PROPER way[/POST]
  • [POST=538711]HOW TO (EASILY!) UPGRADE FROM WIN7 SP1/8.1 WITHOUT GOING THROUGH THE UPGRADE PROCESS ITSELF ![/POST]
  • [POST=605307]HOW TO REMAP FN+KEY AND SPECIAL BUTTONS: "STEAM", "ROG" & "SHADOWPLAY"[/POST]
  • [POST=539663]Win 10 x64: SETUP USB @SUPERSPEED, NO HANG-UPS! | ACCELERATES USB 3.0/2.0 TRANSFER RATE SPEED TWICE![/POST]

thetanaz
Level 7
"The thing is when I went to Best Buy, I asked a guy about this and he said that's almost impossible because of the watts needed. He showed me how the gtx 770 and gtx 980 need about 200-300 watts but the intel thunderbolt said it can only do 100 "
This is completely irrelevant as it has an external power supply and the thunderbolt is used for information transfer purposes only. Of course you can't power a 200w card through the Thunderbolt port.And about the question of whether or not it will work with the G751 it will but because it's not a thunderbolt 3 as far as I know it will probably limit the transfer speed and might cause some stutters or bugs on high end GPU's ( imagine if you plug a 980 in a 4X pci-e instead of a 16x one it's kinda the same deal).