Don’t take that as an absolute, but it’s a good recommendation for 90+% of users. For a small percentage of people, the M2, and especially the M2 Pro improvements will be worth the upgrade. Cost/benefit analysis. If the cost to upgrade (including time to copy all apps and data), less the value of trade-in/resale of old machine will be more than offset by the productivity increase of having a machine that is ~20% faster (10%-40%) for the next 9-12 months, then you should upgrade ASAP. If not, you should wait.
@@piotrd.4850 unless you bought the last of the intel MacBooks. I’m so glad my gut said buy a nice tv. It delayed my purchase for 3 months and I bought a m1 MacBook Pro. I know myself if I went the other way and bought it I would have replaced it within the year.
Could the 120 fps cap on the wildlife extreme test be limiting the gpus? Maybe that's why the difference seems so small. From the graph it looked like both macs were hitting the 120 fps maximum other than a few dips.
Lol, it’s like reading reviews on the new Z06…I’ll never have one but it’s fun to read about. I say this as someone who has a MBA M1 and a few MBA vintage 2012-2013.
I agree. I want to always get the most out of my cooling system and keep my temperatures as low as possible. Fans certainly have a purpose and they should be used.
Regarding the 3DMark test, the "small difference" seems to be because the absolute max score one could get is 20,000. Both machines are trying to achieve 120 fps during the entire test, which the M2 got incredibly close, while the M1 has a lot more drops in the frame rate. A better way to look at these scores would be, M1 Max: 18.79/20 vs. M2 Max: 19.91/20. I think that helps communicate how much better the M2 Max really is!
“Secret battery test whoooaah!” Haha that cracked me up. Luke you are such a natural presenter, its always a pleasure to watch your channel. Great useful review.
Kinda glad I got an M1 MBP 16", heat is the enemy of laptops and my last Intel MBP suffered a swollen battery and screen problems due to the heat it generated.
Got my M2 Max 16 last week and I am absolutely blown away. Granted, she did replace a 2017 MBP and a 2018 Mini, so I was easily impressed. My cat loves how hot it runs, too!
We saw with the M2 MB Air that Apple are confident that 108 degrees are acceptable for these chips to run at. I suspect they have tested them, and there are no long-term issues. Maybe, with the M1, they were overly careful as they were releasing ground-breaking products. So, I have no issues with the temp, and if I did, I would just run the fans at a higher RPM to lower them. Bearing that most of us rarely run at full load, the occasional 100% blowout will be fine.
Maybe they capped the M1's because Apple had to prove the M1's were capable machines that didn't run super hot. That proving was already done, so with M2 they decided to push the silicon to it's limit. I assume they will do the same with M3
Well, they did up the performance by 20-30%... and upped power usage by about the same. With the same cooling solutions and chassis, you get thermals to deal with. This is not at all to say that the M2 MBP is a bad machine, just that you either let it get hot, or use software to adjust the fan curve and possibly get a bit of extra noise.
As always THANKS so much. What about the 14 inch M2 Max with 30 graphic cores? I am upgrading from a 2015 Core i7 quad core macbook pro. Will I notice a difference while using final cut?
Great video! One thing I wanted to point as for the 3dmark test. I think the frame rate is capped at the refresh rate of the display (120fps). I think that's why the test were so close. If you look at the graph displayed under the results you can see it's hitting that threshold.
5:00. It's worth noting that the rate of thermal transfer between two systems (say your CPU and the environment) is in large part controlled by the delta (difference) between those two systems. So by letting the chip run hotter, not only do you get less fan noise (because the fan is moving slower), but you actually get more cooling effect per CFM. Of course, there are other considerations as well, such as component life, but we just have to hope Apple knows what they're doing.
Thanks I just bought today the baseline M2 Max 14" MacBook Pro with 2 TB today to upgrade from my M1 Mac mini. and planning to dock the computer at home. I am so excited!!
Hi, about 3Dmark I think it's probably because it hit 120fps (screen refresh rate max ?), so because it stop at 120fps it cannot show when M2 should hit more than that. As you can see on the graph, it's almost flat on the M2max but fall lot more time on the M1.
Great video and just the kind of analysis I was looking for. If I had one of these, I'd run the fans hard while working on video editing or exporting video/audio. That could maybe help the laptops last longer.
Low fan speeds aren't just for noise. It also affects battery life. Why run the fans higher if they don't need to be? That would literally just waste battery. Apple engineered the system, I'm sure they put A LOT more thought into what temps the SOC can tolerate. Unless the thing is uncomfortably warm on your lap, who the hell cares what temp the cores are?
As someone who really wants a quiet, long battery life, high build quality powerful media and CAD computer. But saving money is quite a big commitment, should I get an M1 pro 16, m2, or something else?
There is a terminal command for Mac that I use all the time on intel machines that will tell you if the cpu is throttling and how much it is throttling. I have not tried it on Apple silicon yet but it should still work.
I think its all about how amazing TSMC manufacturing node is. It clearly looks that chip manufactured by TSMC can easily handle temperatures higher than Intel processors. Its not only Apple - Ryzen 7000 processors also run very hot and AMD told directly that those chips are fine with 90C+ temperatures. If two biggest companies using TSMC 5nm fabs are saying this then I think its safe to assume that its fine as long as those temps dont make laptop too warm to use.
Did i see correctly that the M2 Max has a beefier heat pipe solution than the M1 Max? Good deal, now it just needs a slightly larger heat sink stack so the fans can disipate more heat for the same airflow
Reviews typically say RAM has little to no factor in most tests whether plugged in or not, but I have the same M1 Max MBP with 64 GB and I get slightly more than 120fps and almost 20200 without messing around with any settings in Wild Life Extreme.
Look at that 3D mark graph, it’s clearly capping at 120fps (maximum screen refresh rate). So the reason the gain is so small is that we’ve reached the limit of that benchmark, unless it can be unlocked, I think.
Is it though? I'm not saying it isn't, I don't know! But it seems to me like no one really knows and nobody ever really tested to see if there's actually any truth to that. If there has been proper testing documented on this please let know! I'm very open to read it and be convinced otherwise, but I'm annoyed at everybody stating the durability thing as if it was a fact.
@@meislit9217 I was wondering about the same thing, is it really a problem to have the chips run at those temperatures ? If the chip's lifespan still achieves let's say about 15 years that's probably enough. Weren't they managing temperatures the same way with Intel processors ? And I don't think the CPUs were known to fail ? Like you I genuinely don't know, but I would assume that Apple kinda knows what they're doing (although sometimes they make mistakes for sure)
@@timrault yeah it totally was the case with intel too and has been for over a decade, which seems to indicate it not being much of an issue otherwise macbooks would be failing left and right. Also it's also almost literally the same for virtually every Laptop no matter the manufacturer. To me it seems like the tech geek/nerd community, that likes to obsess and babysit their devices anyways has found a thing to be worried about. And now all of a sudden it's taken as a fact that hight temps are terrible. Fueled by tons of speculation rumors like the other guy here in this comment. But then again I don't really know for a fact either.
@@QualityDoggo apple also wouldn't want their devices to have a bad reputation, especially since with their own chips now it would go even more towards their name. So you're argument is as invalid as mine and doesn't prove anything it's just plain basic pointless speculation. Also high temps have been a thing for years now, and chip failures don't seem to be all that common. (Look at the comment above)
Benchmarks are still suboptimal almost across the board for Apple Silicon so expect temps, fan noise & scores to increase as time goes by as developers get to grips with tile memory & Maxon updates Cinebench with the current Embree library. 3D Mark appears to need some work (where are the power draw figures?) but Gfxbench is quite optimal and showing fair scaling - it was the raster 3D benchmark which showed the M1 Ultra 64 outperforming the RTX3090 (you had to look into the figures).
@@garrusvakarian8709 valid and the 3D Mark graph clearly shows the cap. I was more concerned with Cinebench (old libraries) and Geekbench compute which is only scaling to 2.8x rather than 4.75x GPU core count (GPU compute should scale well) - can't recall if he does GB though.
Guess 2k sports arcade edition and Star Trek game in arcade section isn’t best idea if units get very hot after while or after 10 to 15 min approximately.
Did you make some benchmarks, how the M2 MAX will perform in low power mode? That might give less temperature on the chip, but still a great performance.
I'd rather get an M2 Pro MacBook Pro (for now), if only to avoid the 108° C. temperature issue. Hopefully, Apple with the M3 MacBook Pro models redesign the case with both active fan cooling and passive vapor chamber cooling to keep the SoC running reasonably cool.
Love the video but one mistake you made is in the graphs where you showed Performace, Temperatuee and Fan Speed you made them all percentages. The temperature was supposed to be degrees Celcius not percentage.
Interesting comparison. Regarding the GPU is looks like the improvement is mostly due to the number of cores and that the cores perform marginally better (
This is an actually USEFUL video indeed. I would love to see the same comparison between 14" M1 MAX vs 14" M2 MAX vs 14" PRO, battery-life, thermals and throttling wise :)
We just upgraded everyone to M1 MB Airs, and 2 M1 iMacs last year so there is no need to upgrade at this point. I am noticing the line between Pro and non Pro in the Apple ecosystem is getting more and more defined. For the average user, there would be no issues with the base models.
I agree with Apple. 99% of the time you are not going to be maxing all the cores, and definitely not for a sustained amount of time. You might compile for a few seconds, or spend 10 minutes outputting a video. High temps every once in a while won't hurt anything.
I think people who are buying the 512gb macbook, and want to transfer large files are more often using external ssd. I in fact have an external storage and copying large files from the internal would be faster with faster internal ssd. But I get Lukes opinion as well!
Could you please do a video on the current 14 inch M2 Max vs last year’s 16 inch M1 Max? I’ve heard that the 14 inch form factor is more prone to throttling but I don’t know if I believe it. Also, how does the base/binned M2 Max with 30 GPU cores compare to the full-on M1 Max with 32 GPU cores? That would REALLY be interesting to see! Again, great vid Luke.
I know that it can't be tested but I am curious about the trade off between mechanical fan speed and heat damage. I know I can replace the fans or clean them of dust. I can't replace heat damaged components. 108 degrees is above the boiling point of water. My previous MacBook Pro was 9 years old before I replaced it and those fans ran constantly under load. I would rather it be louder than deader.
Is this still true of the M2 Max on 14"? I've seen games run way slower on the 14" M2 Max vs the 16" M2 Max. Can I increase fan speed on the 14" M2 Max to match performance with the 16" M2 Max? And if so, to what degree? Will the fans be ludicrously loud if I want to match the 16" M2 Max at whisper quiet fan speeds?
Nice overview of the thermal situation. Something I find odd is that certain tech channels (I've seen LTT do it) freak out about these high temperatures and say they'll reduce longevity. But is there any actual evidence of these 100C temps reducing longevity or causing any real harm to Macs whatsoever? Not that I've seen.
@@rrsharizam I believe Collin was asking for actual experimental data to back up people's intuition that heat reduces longevity. Until that data can be supplied, folks are just offering their unsubstantiated opinions. I mean, here's an unsubstantiated opinion. Perhaps Apple has done rigorous tests on the M series chips and found they can run at higher temperatures without a compromise in longevity. Thus, the software engineers have been told to let them run at higher temperatures and lower fan speeds. Who knows? Could be true. Maybe not. Be wary of things that seem to make sense...at least, until someone shows you the numbers. History has shown us on many, many occasions that nature is trickier than we realize.
@@SignorLuigi Apple might have done its own testing and concluded that it is within their own acceptable limit. But to say that higher temperature does not affect longevity is straight up insane. Its life might be reduced by a few seconds, or minutes, or months, who knows? But the point is higher temperature will always reduce the longevity to a certain degree
@@KhoaNguyen-sy6np So, this is ordinary law of thermodynamics and physics... The heat will slowly cook the components, even if the SoC can handle those temps, the components around will suffer from the heat produced. You can put a chicken in the oven at 120 degrees, and it will slow cook for 7-8 hours, or, you can set the oven at 370 degrees and have it done in an hour. Believe it or not, the same concept applies to computer. Things will toast over time, even if the computer is running at 54 degrees all the time... Thats why is not a debate. The true question should be, how high temps the other components can handle and for how long until is broken.
I'm sure Apple has done the testing and likely knows that 110c is fine for the chips long term. Silicon can handle quite high temps before suffering damage. modern chips can easily run at 110c all day every day for years and be fine. However I would personally like more headroom or at least a turbo fans option that turns them on at 80c and maintains a temp below 95c.
The fact the heat sink for the cpu is literally half the size on the m2 pro/max versions probably doesn't help with keeping the temps down either. I'm really curious about how the 14" m2 max thermals perform, but nobody has made a video about it yet...
What happened to the old saying that heat will definitely cause faster degradation of the CPU (SoC), which will shorten lifespan"? Are Apple's Mx chips not affected by such degradation?
I told my partner how much I liked this review, and she said, “I could fall asleep right now.” Lol. (she was sitting next to me while I was watching it.) don’t take a personal Luke. She thinks all tech videos are boring.
So I have a 2010 MacBook Pro 13inch Nvidia Geforce 16GB ram, 1TB SSD. I am looking to get a 13inch MacBook Pro with 16GB Unified, 1TB SSD, M1 or an M2 14inch because I don't really need the touch bar. I need help choosing because all the hype was unified last year with the M1 but this year everyone is demoing the M2 and sticking with the M1. I am a music producer so I just need the internal ssd for program stuff as I use external ssd's to save projects. I need a recommendation to last the next 10 years.
The funny part is that running a pc on a hot temperature WILL ruin the chips after some time. So I‘m not gonna be surprised when a few MacBook Pros will break because of chip failure…
Thats internal temp not out side one.. Apple purpose made chip to run in high frequently and high clock speed so internal temp will br high and its fan kicks in slower too than previous one .. Still it not heats as bad as intel ones
Does this overheating, or high temperature problem happen while simply editing? Like if you're cutting an interview, color grading, adding motion graphics, etc.? Or is it just heating up a lot under video export?
It should just ship with 2 fan curves. One that minimizes temperature, sacrificing sound. Then a second that maximizes sound at the cost of temperature. I get really irritated by my Windows laptops that cranks up the fans while sitting at desktop.
Thank you Luke for explaining to me that I should keep my M1 and forget about upgrades until 3 nanometer tech is here.
Unless you're getting a Mac Mini
There's never reason to upgrade to next generation of Apple - it is good to skip at least THREE.
3nm is a brand, it’s not Actualy 3nm
Don’t take that as an absolute, but it’s a good recommendation for 90+% of users. For a small percentage of people, the M2, and especially the M2 Pro improvements will be worth the upgrade.
Cost/benefit analysis. If the cost to upgrade (including time to copy all apps and data), less the value of trade-in/resale of old machine will be more than offset by the productivity increase of having a machine that is ~20% faster (10%-40%) for the next 9-12 months, then you should upgrade ASAP. If not, you should wait.
@@piotrd.4850 unless you bought the last of the intel MacBooks. I’m so glad my gut said buy a nice tv. It delayed my purchase for 3 months and I bought a m1 MacBook Pro. I know myself if I went the other way and bought it I would have replaced it within the year.
It would be interesting to do a battery test running the fans at stock, 50%, and maxed out while operating the same tasks.
Hi Mark, this reply we both got in our posts, is it a spam msg?
@@giorgos7six yes
@@tadhgd350 doesn’t Luke reply, or fix this spam issue?
if you increase the fan speed it will eat battery life faster. I think Apple sacrificed temp to keep battery life comparable to the M1.
@@giorgos7six kinda hard to fix the spam issues
Could the 120 fps cap on the wildlife extreme test be limiting the gpus? Maybe that's why the difference seems so small. From the graph it looked like both macs were hitting the 120 fps maximum other than a few dips.
about to comment this
I have an intel MBP i9, and I have used it for 3d for five years now. 100 celcius is common, and yet everything still works just fine.
Maybe a thermal paste change
Would be great
These crazy and abritrary videos that are useless to the average person except for us small minority of people are why I’m subscribed to Luke Miani
Lol, it’s like reading reviews on the new Z06…I’ll never have one but it’s fun to read about. I say this as someone who has a MBA M1 and a few MBA vintage 2012-2013.
Most people only need 64 gb ram
Super relevant to me - I’m deciding if I’ll upgrade. Thanks Luke
@@kateofone agree. Depends of the workflow but that's right
I’m sayinnnnn
I would rather have lower temps and a little more fan noise. That's why I use TG Pro.
Same, I don’t like the idea that my SOC is just baking at 104C all the time
fully agreed.
I agree. I want to always get the most out of my cooling system and keep my temperatures as low as possible. Fans certainly have a purpose and they should be used.
Yeah my Dell laptop has that option to adjust the fan speed and performance.
Regarding the 3DMark test, the "small difference" seems to be because the absolute max score one could get is 20,000. Both machines are trying to achieve 120 fps during the entire test, which the M2 got incredibly close, while the M1 has a lot more drops in the frame rate. A better way to look at these scores would be, M1 Max: 18.79/20 vs. M2 Max: 19.91/20. I think that helps communicate how much better the M2 Max really is!
“Secret battery test whoooaah!” Haha that cracked me up. Luke you are such a natural presenter, its always a pleasure to watch your channel. Great useful review.
Kinda glad I got an M1 MBP 16", heat is the enemy of laptops and my last Intel MBP suffered a swollen battery and screen problems due to the heat it generated.
@shaanz Yes they are a greedy company unfortunately
You know what would be a useful M2 Max video? One without a click bait title.
Got my M2 Max 16 last week and I am absolutely blown away. Granted, she did replace a 2017 MBP and a 2018 Mini, so I was easily impressed. My cat loves how hot it runs, too!
haha, careful though. kitty hairs and macbook fans dont mix well =D
Who would knew a new mac would be faster than 6 year old mac.?
I wouldn't even mind having a bit more fan noise when needed that is no problem with these units.
We saw with the M2 MB Air that Apple are confident that 108 degrees are acceptable for these chips to run at. I suspect they have tested them, and there are no long-term issues. Maybe, with the M1, they were overly careful as they were releasing ground-breaking products. So, I have no issues with the temp, and if I did, I would just run the fans at a higher RPM to lower them.
Bearing that most of us rarely run at full load, the occasional 100% blowout will be fine.
Maybe they capped the M1's because Apple had to prove the M1's were capable machines that didn't run super hot. That proving was already done, so with M2 they decided to push the silicon to it's limit. I assume they will do the same with M3
Well, they did up the performance by 20-30%... and upped power usage by about the same. With the same cooling solutions and chassis, you get thermals to deal with. This is not at all to say that the M2 MBP is a bad machine, just that you either let it get hot, or use software to adjust the fan curve and possibly get a bit of extra noise.
Yes, no big deal, and techies, the main viewers of videos like this, should not be worried about using a fan app to vary RPM!
I am buying the 16 inch M2 Pro with 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. Good video!
As always THANKS so much. What about the 14 inch M2 Max with 30 graphic cores? I am upgrading from a 2015 Core i7 quad core macbook pro. Will I notice a difference while using final cut?
Thanks for the heads up Luke about these chips and the tests you did! Can’t wait to see what M3 and beyond bring to the table.
Not much I think except all the improvement will come from TSMC
Great video! One thing I wanted to point as for the 3dmark test. I think the frame rate is capped at the refresh rate of the display (120fps). I think that's why the test were so close. If you look at the graph displayed under the results you can see it's hitting that threshold.
The high temperature is a problem for me if the fans are audible. I'll be interested to see what happens with any upgrades to the mac studio.
5:00. It's worth noting that the rate of thermal transfer between two systems (say your CPU and the environment) is in large part controlled by the delta (difference) between those two systems. So by letting the chip run hotter, not only do you get less fan noise (because the fan is moving slower), but you actually get more cooling effect per CFM. Of course, there are other considerations as well, such as component life, but we just have to hope Apple knows what they're doing.
Thanks I just bought today the baseline M2 Max 14" MacBook Pro with 2 TB today to upgrade from my M1 Mac mini. and planning to dock the computer at home. I am so excited!!
How do you like the 14 ''? How's the battery life and fan noise ? Do you have 30c or 38c?
I’ve ordered the 14” MBP - M2 Max 30c GPU - 32GB - 1TB… I hope it is fine with editing videos professionally with resolutions up to 6K.
Hi, about 3Dmark I think it's probably because it hit 120fps (screen refresh rate max ?), so because it stop at 120fps it cannot show when M2 should hit more than that. As you can see on the graph, it's almost flat on the M2max but fall lot more time on the M1.
Great video and just the kind of analysis I was looking for. If I had one of these, I'd run the fans hard while working on video editing or exporting video/audio. That could maybe help the laptops last longer.
Low fan speeds aren't just for noise. It also affects battery life. Why run the fans higher if they don't need to be? That would literally just waste battery. Apple engineered the system, I'm sure they put A LOT more thought into what temps the SOC can tolerate. Unless the thing is uncomfortably warm on your lap, who the hell cares what temp the cores are?
As someone who really wants a quiet, long battery life, high build quality powerful media and CAD computer. But saving money is quite a big commitment, should I get an M1 pro 16, m2, or something else?
Wow that’s awesome. I need to get a new laptop (my old one is from 2009, 17”), I keep procrastinating, nice work Luke!
Where can we find the wallpaper? 😃
3D Mark has maxium of 120fps so no scaling because of that... It is capped at 120 fps
There is a terminal command for Mac that I use all the time on intel machines that will tell you if the cpu is throttling and how much it is throttling. I have not tried it on Apple silicon yet but it should still work.
And what’s the command, please?
pmset -g thermlog
The TG Pro tip for setting fan speed is absolutely invaluable thanks a lot for that! Strange decision from Apple to let the chips get so hot
its a heat vs battery life/noise tradeoff.
I think its all about how amazing TSMC manufacturing node is. It clearly looks that chip manufactured by TSMC can easily handle temperatures higher than Intel processors. Its not only Apple - Ryzen 7000 processors also run very hot and AMD told directly that those chips are fine with 90C+ temperatures. If two biggest companies using TSMC 5nm fabs are saying this then I think its safe to assume that its fine as long as those temps dont make laptop too warm to use.
Did i see correctly that the M2 Max has a beefier heat pipe solution than the M1 Max?
Good deal, now it just needs a slightly larger heat sink stack so the fans can disipate more heat for the same airflow
Reviews typically say RAM has little to no factor in most tests whether plugged in or not, but I have the same M1 Max MBP with 64 GB and I get slightly more than 120fps and almost 20200 without messing around with any settings in Wild Life Extreme.
Look at that 3D mark graph, it’s clearly capping at 120fps (maximum screen refresh rate). So the reason the gain is so small is that we’ve reached the limit of that benchmark, unless it can be unlocked, I think.
so the best thing to do is get TGpro and set a custom 20% higher vent curve to be on the m1 temp level? right
On the thermals issue, it seems like the biggest problem with running them so hot so long is lessened hardware durability.
Is it though? I'm not saying it isn't, I don't know! But it seems to me like no one really knows and nobody ever really tested to see if there's actually any truth to that.
If there has been proper testing documented on this please let know! I'm very open to read it and be convinced otherwise, but I'm annoyed at everybody stating the durability thing as if it was a fact.
@@meislit9217 I was wondering about the same thing, is it really a problem to have the chips run at those temperatures ? If the chip's lifespan still achieves let's say about 15 years that's probably enough. Weren't they managing temperatures the same way with Intel processors ? And I don't think the CPUs were known to fail ? Like you I genuinely don't know, but I would assume that Apple kinda knows what they're doing (although sometimes they make mistakes for sure)
Apple doesn't want people to keep their devices very long anyways... hmm... convenient :/
@@timrault yeah it totally was the case with intel too and has been for over a decade, which seems to indicate it not being much of an issue otherwise macbooks would be failing left and right. Also it's also almost literally the same for virtually every Laptop no matter the manufacturer.
To me it seems like the tech geek/nerd community, that likes to obsess and babysit their devices anyways has found a thing to be worried about. And now all of a sudden it's taken as a fact that hight temps are terrible. Fueled by tons of speculation rumors like the other guy here in this comment.
But then again I don't really know for a fact either.
@@QualityDoggo apple also wouldn't want their devices to have a bad reputation, especially since with their own chips now it would go even more towards their name. So you're argument is as invalid as mine and doesn't prove anything it's just plain basic pointless speculation.
Also high temps have been a thing for years now, and chip failures don't seem to be all that common. (Look at the comment above)
This old i7 running Ventura was $180. And your videos look fine on it. Laughing all the way to the bank...
Is that a good idea for long term. How can you control the Mac fans manually
Does the mac feel hot when you do everyday tasks?
Cold as ice.
I wish I was there to see the launch reactions of the late 2013 to mid 2015 15in Retinas, because their generational differences are so minimal
Used 14 & 16 M1 Pro mbp are really great deals at the moment. Way cheaper for not much less performance
Any tips on where to find these deals?
102 degrees in cpu... considering the back panel is metal, wouldn't that be a potential hazard for burns on skin?
Kinda weird why Apple hasn't increase the cooling performance?
Benchmarks are still suboptimal almost across the board for Apple Silicon so expect temps, fan noise & scores to increase as time goes by as developers get to grips with tile memory & Maxon updates Cinebench with the current Embree library.
3D Mark appears to need some work (where are the power draw figures?) but Gfxbench is quite optimal and showing fair scaling - it was the raster 3D benchmark which showed the M1 Ultra 64 outperforming the RTX3090 (you had to look into the figures).
@@garrusvakarian8709 valid and the 3D Mark graph clearly shows the cap. I was more concerned with Cinebench (old libraries) and Geekbench compute which is only scaling to 2.8x rather than 4.75x GPU core count (GPU compute should scale well) - can't recall if he does GB though.
Guess 2k sports arcade edition and Star Trek game in arcade section isn’t best idea if units get very hot after while or after 10 to 15 min approximately.
Did you make some benchmarks, how the M2 MAX will perform in low power mode? That might give less temperature on the chip, but still a great performance.
Can you use a 3rd party heat sink pad to reduce the heat?
Can you add a link to the background on your M1 Max MacBook Pro? I really love it!
I'd rather get an M2 Pro MacBook Pro (for now), if only to avoid the 108° C. temperature issue. Hopefully, Apple with the M3 MacBook Pro models redesign the case with both active fan cooling and passive vapor chamber cooling to keep the SoC running reasonably cool.
Love the video but one mistake you made is in the graphs where you showed Performace, Temperatuee and Fan Speed you made them all percentages. The temperature was supposed to be degrees Celcius not percentage.
Interesting comparison.
Regarding the GPU is looks like the improvement is mostly due to the number of cores and that the cores perform marginally better (
This is an actually USEFUL video indeed. I would love to see the same comparison between 14" M1 MAX vs 14" M2 MAX vs 14" PRO, battery-life, thermals and throttling wise :)
Same!
coffe?
This!
MaxTech does those videos
Same!
We just upgraded everyone to M1 MB Airs, and 2 M1 iMacs last year so there is no need to upgrade at this point. I am noticing the line between Pro and non Pro in the Apple ecosystem is getting more and more defined. For the average user, there would be no issues with the base models.
what would be the best convenient solution for fan control or fan curves??
this is really weird, why does my 10 core m1 score the same as your m2 max? on r23 mine scores 14.6k
my base m2pro Mac mini goes hot like hell when play dota2 and the fans are not maxing up at all .... I was worried but now I see its set this way !
I agree with Apple. 99% of the time you are not going to be maxing all the cores, and definitely not for a sustained amount of time. You might compile for a few seconds, or spend 10 minutes outputting a video. High temps every once in a while won't hurt anything.
Please do a more tricky resolve test by adding noise reduction on the clips and see how many fps you can get in real-time playback
100 degrees c?? My ryzen 7 which is known for running very hot only peaks 85 degrees c at max 💀
I think people who are buying the 512gb macbook, and want to transfer large files are more often using external ssd. I in fact have an external storage and copying large files from the internal would be faster with faster internal ssd. But I get Lukes opinion as well!
Nope nope..., internal ssd is crucial for system such as swap memory
Could you please do a video on the current 14 inch M2 Max vs last year’s 16 inch M1 Max? I’ve heard that the 14 inch form factor is more prone to throttling but I don’t know if I believe it. Also, how does the base/binned M2 Max with 30 GPU cores compare to the full-on M1 Max with 32 GPU cores? That would REALLY be interesting to see!
Again, great vid Luke.
Your explanation about thermal throttle is on the point 👌🏼
You can try to throttle this CPU by doing CPU and GPU benchmark rendering at the same time. I wonder how it will perform
I know that it can't be tested but I am curious about the trade off between mechanical fan speed and heat damage. I know I can replace the fans or clean them of dust. I can't replace heat damaged components. 108 degrees is above the boiling point of water. My previous MacBook Pro was 9 years old before I replaced it and those fans ran constantly under load. I would rather it be louder than deader.
unless if you edit 4k videos, get an M2 MBA. My only thing on that is that they shoulda made one with 32GB RAM.
Is this still true of the M2 Max on 14"? I've seen games run way slower on the 14" M2 Max vs the 16" M2 Max. Can I increase fan speed on the 14" M2 Max to match performance with the 16" M2 Max? And if so, to what degree? Will the fans be ludicrously loud if I want to match the 16" M2 Max at whisper quiet fan speeds?
Nice overview of the thermal situation. Something I find odd is that certain tech channels (I've seen LTT do it) freak out about these high temperatures and say they'll reduce longevity. But is there any actual evidence of these 100C temps reducing longevity or causing any real harm to Macs whatsoever? Not that I've seen.
A higher temperature will always reduce longevity. That's not a debate really 🤦♀️
@@rrsharizam
Source?
@@rrsharizam I believe Collin was asking for actual experimental data to back up people's intuition that heat reduces longevity. Until that data can be supplied, folks are just offering their unsubstantiated opinions. I mean, here's an unsubstantiated opinion. Perhaps Apple has done rigorous tests on the M series chips and found they can run at higher temperatures without a compromise in longevity. Thus, the software engineers have been told to let them run at higher temperatures and lower fan speeds. Who knows? Could be true. Maybe not. Be wary of things that seem to make sense...at least, until someone shows you the numbers. History has shown us on many, many occasions that nature is trickier than we realize.
@@SignorLuigi Apple might have done its own testing and concluded that it is within their own acceptable limit. But to say that higher temperature does not affect longevity is straight up insane. Its life might be reduced by a few seconds, or minutes, or months, who knows? But the point is higher temperature will always reduce the longevity to a certain degree
@@KhoaNguyen-sy6np So, this is ordinary law of thermodynamics and physics... The heat will slowly cook the components, even if the SoC can handle those temps, the components around will suffer from the heat produced. You can put a chicken in the oven at 120 degrees, and it will slow cook for 7-8 hours, or, you can set the oven at 370 degrees and have it done in an hour. Believe it or not, the same concept applies to computer. Things will toast over time, even if the computer is running at 54 degrees all the time... Thats why is not a debate. The true question should be, how high temps the other components can handle and for how long until is broken.
12:48 the battery test twist ending and the “Whoaooaaoo” lololol
8:25 The Blender result is not a 40% gain, it's 77% faster or 40% less render time.
6:44 loved that transition haha, X files or where is it inspired from?
00:16 this transition is just on another level. How did you make it?
So Luke, are these M2 Macs worth buying over the M1s ? Let's say I don't have either. Would you consider waiting for the M3 chips?
TBH the M2 stuff is great, but if you're not in a rush I think M3 might be worth the wait!
What if you are a large institution and you need to buy 10-15 macbook pros every year? should we try to buy NOS m1's from retail vendors?
I'm sure Apple has done the testing and likely knows that 110c is fine for the chips long term. Silicon can handle quite high temps before suffering damage. modern chips can easily run at 110c all day every day for years and be fine. However I would personally like more headroom or at least a turbo fans option that turns them on at 80c and maintains a temp below 95c.
They don't have the same cooling system, the heatsink is smaller on the M2
Thats what calculated obsolescence means, that constant temp will kill the chip in less time, someone will do a way to change how these fans work
so what's your say? Is the M2 not good buy for all devices? I'll get a 16inch but I think M1 is still good right
Any comparison benchmarks of these and the Mac Studio models?
The fact the heat sink for the cpu is literally half the size on the m2 pro/max versions probably doesn't help with keeping the temps down either. I'm really curious about how the 14" m2 max thermals perform, but nobody has made a video about it yet...
What happened to the old saying that heat will definitely cause faster degradation of the CPU (SoC), which will shorten lifespan"? Are Apple's Mx chips not affected by such degradation?
Would love to see Logic Pro X Audio track tests across the ecosystem as well
Can you comment on the M2 Max performance when in a 14” model?
Hello. At the same price would you buy a Macbook Pro 14 with an M2 Max 32Gb Ram ou an M3 pro CPU 18Gb Ram? Thanks 😊
How can we raise the fan speed?
I told my partner how much I liked this review, and she said, “I could fall asleep right now.” Lol. (she was sitting next to me while I was watching it.) don’t take a personal Luke. She thinks all tech videos are boring.
The fps seems to be limited to 120 for in your 3DMark test
Why and the GPUs in PC for gaming are used to run two 1440p monitors.
Thank you , this helps , i was wondering why my new M2Max (same config) 16” macbook pro was running hot
So I have a 2010 MacBook Pro 13inch Nvidia Geforce 16GB ram, 1TB SSD. I am looking to get a 13inch MacBook Pro with 16GB Unified, 1TB SSD, M1 or an M2 14inch because I don't really need the touch bar. I need help choosing because all the hype was unified last year with the M1 but this year everyone is demoing the M2 and sticking with the M1. I am a music producer so I just need the internal ssd for program stuff as I use external ssd's to save projects. I need a recommendation to last the next 10 years.
Helpful review-clarifies why I might go M2 Max over M1 Max for my first Apple silicon Mac purchase!
Where can i get that liquid wallpaper?
The funny part is that running a pc on a hot temperature WILL ruin the chips after some time. So I‘m not gonna be surprised when a few MacBook Pros will break because of chip failure…
I expect Apple has tested to avoid class lawsuits down the line, so I suspect you might be wrong there.
Thats internal temp not out side one.. Apple purpose made chip to run in high frequently and high clock speed so internal temp will br high and its fan kicks in slower too than previous one .. Still it not heats as bad as intel ones
iPhone 4 / iPhone 4s situation. Neat!
I would prefer a bit lower temps comparing to low fan speed. 100 is too much. should be below 80, or at least 90.
What about benchmarks on how each chip works with apps like Photoshop, Illustrator and Indesign?
What app do you use to show the CPU temp and ram/cpu usage on the top bar?????
Istat
@@PhuNguyen-my9un is there any decent free app that does the same thing?
Does this overheating, or high temperature problem happen while simply editing? Like if you're cutting an interview, color grading, adding motion graphics, etc.? Or is it just heating up a lot under video export?
Hi it is heating, im using m2 max to esit video usi g premiere pro
It should just ship with 2 fan curves. One that minimizes temperature, sacrificing sound. Then a second that maximizes sound at the cost of temperature.
I get really irritated by my Windows laptops that cranks up the fans while sitting at desktop.