- #INTERIOR IMAGES 2010 2.93 GHZ 8 CORE MAC PRO HOW TO#
- #INTERIOR IMAGES 2010 2.93 GHZ 8 CORE MAC PRO FULL#
Waves, Logic pro x,Final cut pro x, MacOSX El Capitan. I tried rendering a Timeline and Final Cut managed to use a measly 6% of the available CPU resources. 2013 Mac Pro 8 core 3.0GHz Dual D500 GPU 64GB RAM 1TB SSD Apple Trashcan. With all this processing power it’s a shame that Final Cut Pro still doesn’t see most of it. It does make a dramatic difference to boot times and app starts though, my mac boots from the start sound to the desktop in 17 seconds.
#INTERIOR IMAGES 2010 2.93 GHZ 8 CORE MAC PRO FULL#
Regarding the SSD, as noted above it didn’t seem to make any difference in this test so I can only assume apple claims of improvements in rendering relate more to full uncompressed files. The 12 core shows up as 24 processors – all running flat out in compressor.
#INTERIOR IMAGES 2010 2.93 GHZ 8 CORE MAC PRO HOW TO#
Loaded up with 64GB RAM and a Wings PX1 PCIe card with 1TB Samsung 970 Evo SSDTested 100 Fully functionalCosmetically it has some scuffs and scratches but there are no dentsdingsbends in the case anywhere.SpecsProcessing12-Core Two 2. Graphic Display Upgrade On Mac Pro 3,1 2x3,2GHz Quad-core Mac Pro :: 3.2Ghz Quad-Core (2008 Version) - How To Install NVidia 8800GT/8800GTX IMac :: Quad Core I7 And 3.3ghz Difference Mac Pro :: Finding Quad Or 8 Core 2010 For Software Development Mac Pro :: Upgrading Nehalem Octa Core 2.26 Ghz To Mac Pro Westmare Hexa Core 2.66 Ghz Mac Pro. This was a build to order machine when bought new. Later testing actually showed very little difference in using the SSD anyway.Īs you can see, quite a staggering improvement, mostly due to the following… Mid 2010 - Great condition - fresh install of Catalina. The new mac does use an SSD drive for the system but it wasn’t used in this test to make things fair. I used the same file and compressor settings on both machines.īoth machines used a standard WD ‘BLACK’ hard drive for the encode. It had a built-in iSight video camera and. For the test I compressed the ProRes 422 version of my recent short film ‘ Adrift‘ into a 1280×720 H.264 file. The Apple iMac a1312, released in Early 2010, was a 27-inch version powered by a 2.93 GHz Intel Core i7 processor. I set up compressor on both machines to use a quick cluster which allows compressor to use the full power of all of the available cores. – Two 2.93 Ghz 6-Core Intel Xeon ‘Westmere ‘ Processors – Two 2.66 Ghz Dual-Core Intel Xeon ‘Woodcrest’ Processors Once I had the basics installed I couldn’t resist running a few tests to see how it compared to my old machine… My new Mac Pro arrived yesterday so I spent my evening installing apps and getting it set up ready to take over as my main editing machine. Activity monitor showing 24 flat out processors “The 12 Core shows up as 24 CPU’s, all flat out in compressor!”