If that's what you want. I can't make that decision for you. What you'll be doing if you split the pair of rtx 5000's is reducing the multitasking ability of your workstation.
So were you to run lots of tasks like photoshop and blender unreal engine and so on you would not be able to run so many tasks at once and reducing your ability to render large scenes. Because the 2 cards can share memory. Though I think you can run mgpu with different cards you won't be able to nv link the cards directly.
Also because you're swapping the second hand parts well because you aren't buying new you won't have any warranty on the rtx 3080 so if it's a defective card you will have no recourse. It might be a bit better for gaming but having different gpu's of different specifications probably doesn't help your rendering and blendering any.
Hello everyone. Recently I wanted to improve the quality of my work and try SLI. I have one Gainward RTX 3090TI card, bought a second card and plugged it into the slot. I purchased NVLink Ampere (3 slot) and connected them together. I turned on SLI in Nvidia options, as people describe it on the...
forums.tomshardware.com
There's a thread where someone got sli and nv link to work in Davinci Resolve at 17fps with 2 3090's in sli and nvlink.
Basically if that's not relevant to you then, maybe. Well 'updating' the bios has put you back to the earlier version but, maybe you still have the more recent bios on the other board.
There are probably utilities you could use to make a copy of the bios off the other board but, since it works maybe quit messing with that. If they both had the 7/10/2022 version. Because you'd have to switch out the board to copy well that's going to take some time to find out.
Really if you just want to build a gaming PC then you should probably just sell the workstation and everything else and buy all your PC parts new. A powerful gaming PC will have some 3d application ability but, you don't really know what the workstation can do and, switching the dual CPU architecture for the single CPU architecture means, not so much multitasking ability is available.
If you use the 3080 in your workstation well, you'll get some improvement in your gaming but the CPU's still won't be able to improve the FPS greatly since what counts is the single core performance of the CPU and they won't push the 3080 to it's fullest potential either.
Things you'll have to question is the source of the 3080 - has it been used for mining, or what? Also why is someone offering you a card that is about $1000 new for a card that is about $2000 new?
Something seems a bit dodgy about all this wheeler dealing also because you don't really know what the quadro cards are capable of in your rendering.
'Not using the workstation to it's full potential' well not if you're only gaming on it for the moment dunno what happened to your 'Unreal aspirations'.
So I guess, just don't give strange bioses updates if they ask for one?
Also even if you aren't using the workstation to it's fullest potential, some day you could load it up with apps and pull more power than your mains can handle. What matters isn't necessarily your peak usage but the peak demand of the system.