yawetaG wrote:vlask wrote:Got some medical use mystery cards (radiology)....sadly Eizo have driver download only for registered users and cannot find any info for Fuji...
These likely are interface cards for driving the imaging hardware used for taking X-rays. They probably can only be used together with the imaging hardware and software, which due to the radiation used require special permits and safety measures, and anyway would be completely out of reach for a normal consumer due to their price (starting at at least US$ 10,000...).
The more interesting imaging solutions for computer enthusiasts are those used for normal microscopy. These usually use a firewire card coupled with a special high-resolution camera and specialized imaging software, and mount to a normal microscope using an adapter.
The Eizo VREngine uses an ATI, nvidia or Matrox chipset - depending on age and version. generic drivers will work, but it won't be anything special. The computer built into the phillips based italian x-ray machine we use at my mon's radiology clinic uses an odd nvidia quadro 2000D with a 2gb!!! framebuffer (custom card for phillips?) alongside some dedicated PCI-E hardware witch is hooked up via an internal flex cable to the quadro card adn receives input from the x-ray imaging sensor in the machine trough a Vesa enhanced video connector . The computer itself is a LGA 1366 xeon running at 2.6 GHz (basically an i7 920) with 12GB of ECC DDR3 ram (originally had 6 in 2011 when it was new but I upgraded it to 12). I recently moved the OS to an SSD because the particle generator kept messing with the magnetic disk drives, even tough they are very well screened and the computer is not in the same room as the emitter (it's actually behind an 80cm lead screened wall).
The second card is some sort of accelerator witch I believe would be connected to the VRengine, either externally trough the DVI-like ports, or internally via flex/ribbon cable like in the case of my Quadro 2000D.
Take the heatsink off and see what's under it, or plug it in, install aida64 and google the hardware ID, but don't expect anything special. In your case the PCI cards seem to use a matrox chipset, probably a G500/G550, and the blue PCI-E card is a simple generic display adapter, either a FireGL V3300 or a Radeon HD 2400 PCI.