Can I run 2 4K Displays on my late 2015 MBP w/an AMD Radeon R9?

Alright, so I have a brand new late 2015 MacBook Pro 15" with the AMD Radeon R9, and I am going to get some monitors for them. The ones that I am looking at are UHD (4K) SST monitors and I want to be able to run both of them at 60 Hertz. They will be plugged into both of the two Thunderbolt 2 ports (one monitor for each port). Will this work? (I have checked many different sources and they all give me different answers.)

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X El Capitan (10.11.2)

Posted on Jan 15, 2016 10:09 PM

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11 replies

Jan 17, 2016 7:34 AM in response to mabmac20

Hello mabmac20,



This particular model of MacBook Pro does support up to 5120 x 2880 resolution at 60Hz, but only on a single external display, and only when connected via DisplayPort.

Thunderbolt digital video output

  • Native Mini DisplayPort output
  • DVI, VGA, dual-link DVI, and HDMI output supported using Mini DisplayPort adapters (sold separately)
  • Support for up to 5120-by-2880 resolution at 60Hz on a single external display (model with AMD Radeon R9 M370X only)

MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2015) - Technical Specifications
https://support.apple.com/kb/SP719



All my best.

Jan 22, 2016 6:41 AM in response to OGELTHORPE

i also saw this one article and it said:


15" Mid 2014 or Later: This model can drive up to two 4K displays at 60Hz with the NVIDIA GeForce GT 750M. The Mid 2015 15" MacBook Pro with AMD Radeon R9 M370X graphics can also drive one 5K display connected with two Thunderbolt cables.


so does this mean that the older graphics card can run two 4k displays at 60hz and the AMD can't?

Jan 22, 2016 8:54 AM in response to OGELTHORPE

Besides the how-to-connect (two DVI or HDMI to Thunderbolt dongles, one on the default HDMI port and a dongle?) the top-end 15"/2.5GHz MBP only has 2GB of dedicated VRAM for the Radeon GPU. Supposing 32bit color depth, how many frame buffers will there fit in the VRAM? If you want fluid animation, there needs to be at least two, with more better. So, width x height x depth and you do the math.

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Can I run 2 4K Displays on my late 2015 MBP w/an AMD Radeon R9?

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