

🎨 Power your professional creativity with the NVIDIA Quadro P600 — where precision meets performance.
The PNY NVIDIA Quadro P600 is a professional-grade graphics card built on NVIDIA’s Pascal architecture, delivering 70% improved visualization speed and over double the memory bandwidth compared to its predecessor. Featuring 2GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 2000 MHz and four Mini DisplayPort 1.4 outputs, it supports up to 5120x2880 resolution across multiple monitors. Tuned drivers ensure compatibility with leading professional software, while its low-profile design fits space-constrained workstations, making it an ideal upgrade for demanding CAD, design, and HDR video workflows.
| ASIN | B06X9DWQM6 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #387 in Computer Graphics Cards |
| Brand | PNY |
| Card Description | PNY NVIDIA Quadro P600 with 2 GB GDDR5 memory, GPU clock speed of 1354 MHz, Mini DisplayPort output, manufactured by NVIDIA, and model name Graphic Cards |
| Chipset Brand | NVIDIA |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (94) |
| Date First Available | February 24, 2017 |
| Graphics Card Ram Size | 2 GB |
| Graphics Coprocessor | NVIDIA Quadro P600 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.7 x 2.71 x 0.75 inches |
| Item Weight | 4.5 ounces |
| Item model number | VCQP600-PB |
| Manufacturer | PNY |
| Max Screen Resolution | 5120x2880 |
| Memory Speed | 2000 MHz |
| Product Dimensions | 5.7 x 2.71 x 0.75 inches |
| RAM | 2 GB |
| Series | Graphic Cards |
I**T
Big improvement for Solidworks
Installed easily in our Dell Precision 5810 workstation. A major upgrade to the Nvidia NVS 310 that came from factory. Solidworks no longer lags upon every move. We also added RAM prior to the card which helped marginally as well. I would say this card is a minimum for Solidworks if you dealing with assemblies over 10 small parts. Load times improved, crashes lessened, and imaging sped up. For the money invested this works great for our situation, while not flawlessly we also didn't put $1000 GPU into a $2000 workstation. I believe the p1000 would net gains above the p600 but the price tag is above too.
A**R
Simple Install Four Monitor Video Card
The video card works perfectly on my Lenovo Workstation running Windows 10 (1903). The only caveat is that I needed to purchase four video cables for my particular installation since the supplied cables are not compatible with most older displays that with VGA, Digital or HDMI. Other than that the entire installation took about 30 minutes with the longest part of the install being that Windows 10 initially only recognized one video port. Once I ran an internet driver update, one by one the other three monitors came up. One other thing to note is that even though I plugged the monitors in and set them up in the order displayed on the video card itself that is not how they appear with the Operating System. The video card has the ports listed as 1 2 3 4 but for me port 1 is actually monitor 2 and port 2 is actually monitor 1. Port 3 is actually monitor 4 and port 4 is actually monitor 3. Windows allows you to easily reorder the displays so no biggie with that, but one would think that plugging the monitors into the ports as they are labeled and then placing them on the desk in that order that they would come up that way, but sadly... No. Other than that the displays look fantastic for my use which is mixed business. I hope this helps.
T**M
Amazing for Plex Transcoding
I got this specifically to work as a hardware media transcoder on my server. For what I paid, it is an amazing powerhouse. Yes, there are cards that can have unlimited streams at once, but also cost 10x as much. This can do multiple 4k streams at once, no problem. Unless you have a need for 13 streams, you get a Titan GTX. Otherwise, absolutely best bang for your buck.
A**R
Look at the Radeon 7750.
This card was a pain in the canary to set up. I'm running Win 10 Home in a Dell desktop. First, the card only comes with mini DP to DP adapters, so plan on buying cables. Second, the CD that came with it didn't auto boot, or boot at all. I dug down through the tree to find the driver.exe file and install it. Third, the driver.exe failed. So tried again and did an Advanced install of just the basic driver. That sort of worked. At least I could see my screen now. Contacted NVIDIA chat customer service and the front line assistant lasted 4 lines of exchange before booting me to India and second tier customer service. Okay, he got me up and running, but now my splitter didn't work anymore. Busted back to front line customer service was told "NVIDIA doesn't recommend the use of splitters with their product." Well, I need to have one of my screens echoed to a big screen TV so others in the room can watch what I'm doing, and I need all four of the outputs of the card for 4 monitors. Got offline and played around a bit with cables and discovered that a "Cable Matters Mini DisplayPort to HDMI / DVI / VGA (Mini DP to HDMI / DVI / VGA Male to Female 3-in-1 Adapter in White - Thunderbolt / Thunderbolt 2 Port Compatible-Supporting 4K Resolution via HDMI" adapter that I had purchased so that I could test and diagnose older monitors must be what they call an "active DP" thingy and by running my signal through there to the splitter, it now works just fine! NVIDIA always makes me nervous so in the future I'm going back to Radeon. For the extra $30 I could have gotten a twice as fast card and I've never had problems with their cards in 30 years. Would guess they would have known about and suggested the "active DP" thingy rather than just telling me something just wont work. Anyway, the picture is good now. But if I discover any more limitations to this card in the next week, it's going back.
H**R
Since Quadro cards typically have 4 outputs and can stack very easily due to their size you should have no issues ...
I have three Quadros cards, all different manufacturers and models. All of the cards work flawlessly on both Linux and Windows machines across a wide range of display formats. These cards typically run under 40C when idle and I've yet to see mine past 50C. Very little noise compared to larger cards. I used to run GeForce line of cards but that was a mistake. If you don't care about achieving 300fps in the most cutting-edge video games then you should probably get a Quadro card. Much less heat and noise. The 4x mini-DP out is extremely convenient for multi displays and saves a lot of cable clustering issues. Since Quadro cards typically have 4 outputs and can stack very easily due to their size you should have no issues with display output count, which makes daisy chaining unnecessary.
A**.
All works - good seller
Everything works, it came with a full size bracket, i contacted the seller requesting a shorter one. They shipped it to me. All good. Nice experience so far.
M**I
It worked well for the purpose that we intended to do, that was to make all 3 monitors work in one desktop PC.
G**I
Nvidia P620 is good graphics card .so like it
H**R
Gran tarjeta para equipo de oficina y funciones de 3d para aplicaciones cad
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