Apple’s M1 Ultra Benchmarked: 2.6X Slower Than AMD’s Threadripper Pro 5995WX


    As more Apple’s Mac Studio desktops end up in the hands of curious end-users, more details about their performance and features emerge. This time around someone has run PassMark Software’s CPU benchmarks on a Mac Studio equipped with Apple’s 20-core M1 Ultra processor. The chip demonstrated very good single-thread performance, its general CPU performance was ahead of most desktop CPUs, yet it could not compete against high-end workstation-grade processors.

    Single-Thread: On-Par with Alder Lake

    Apple’s CPU developers have always strived to maximize single-thread performance of their designs as they rightly believed that this leads to lower power consumption of their smartphones and PCs. As a result, Apple’s M1 is known for particularly strong single-thread performance and it is not really surprising that an M1 Ultra processor clocked at around 3.20 GHz is on par with Intel’s Core i7-12700 that boosts its fastest core all the way to 4.90 GHz in PassMark’s single-thread CPU performance benchmark (3,896 vs 3,918 points).  

    (Image credit: PassMark Software/Tom’s Hardware)

    Like other M1s, Apple’s M1 Ultra does not increase its clock speed significantly higher than 3.20 GHz. The M1 Ultra’s massive system level caches (SLC) largely provides the maximum bandwidth required for single-thread workloads, even M1 Ultra’s monstrous memory subsystem (800GB/s aggregated bandwidth) but it doesn’t bring much difference with single-thread workloads when compared to M1 Max, M1 Pro or even M1. All of these system-on-chips are great when it comes to single-thread performance.

    General CPU Workloads: 2.6 Slower than Threadripper Pro



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