No, sorry, a passive adapter will never work with the current EyeFinity cards on the market.
Here is the relavent passage from Wiki:
The display unit on Evergreen family of GPUs was completely replaced with one that has two DACs which are used to drive the DVI ports in analog mode (for example, when a DVI to VGA converter attached to a DVI port), a maximum of six digital transmitters that can output either a DisplayPort signal or a TMDS signal which is used for either DVI or HDMI, and two clock signal generators needed to drive the digital outputs in TMDS mode. Dual-link DVI displays use two of the two TMDS/DisplayPort transmitters and one clock signal each. Single-link DVI displays and HDMI displays use one TMDS/DisplayPort transmitter and one clock signal each. DisplayPort displays use one TMDS/DisplayPort transmitter and no clock signal.
The issue here is clock signals. There are only two and each of these are used by the DVI/HDMI connections hosting the other two monitors. A true DisplayPort monitor would not require a clock signal from the card, however, when converting the DisplayPort from the card to DVI/HDMI via an adapter, the DVI/HDMI monitor needs a clock signal to operate.
A passive adapter does not deliver the required clock signal.
An active adapter does deliver the required clock signal.
I'm not an electrical engineer, but I am fairly comfortable in saying that by its very nature and definition, a passive adapter
could never deliver this signal. Regardless of who makes it and says it works.
Now for a little rant.
Here is the key to the statement 'it works with EyeFinity' or 'EyeFinity Approved'.
EyeFinity in itself does not imply 3 monitors. EyeFinity works great with two monitors. And guess what? So do these little passive DP>DVI adapters.
Problem is, that isn't real world. Maybe 2% of the people when hearing 'EyeFinity' are thinking dual-monitors. They are thinking 3 monitors minimum. We know it, they know it and you cannot tell me that a Marketing Exec at AMD pulling in $200+k a year doesn't know it.
To come out with a list (http://support.amd.com/us/eyefinity/Pages/eyefinity-dongles.aspx) of "ATI Eyefinity Validated Dongles" with absolutely no mention of using these adapters with 3 monitor configurations is absolute BS, misleading and near criminal in my mind. There is no room for crap like this in the industry, especially from an established firm born in the heart of Silicon Valley.
Yeah, that's right, I played that card.
AMD, you need to get a leash on these ATI guys and I mean quick. This is the same lack of quality thinking and support minded organization that had me not recommending 'your' (then, 'their') products many years ago.
Dave Baumann, while I appreciate your presence and participation on these forums, I am afraid that I need to call you out on this one. If you claim to be the Product Manager for this product line, shame on you for not have a specific stickied post on this subject front and center for everyone to see. And also, shame on you for not demanding the above linked AMD page be clairifed to include details that the passive adapters will not work for >2 displays.
Here is the problem Dave in my opinion.
There is
absolutely nothing wrong with the fact that this card requires an active adapter when using a non native Display Port monitor in a 3 monitor configuration.
There is
everything wrong with the fact that this information is not
clearly communicated by neither AMD nor it's Product Manager.
Period. End. Of. Rant.
Not my problem anymore. Mine works.