

These times are similar to what we see with a baseline 2017 iMac Pro.

Macbook 16 novabench score pro#
The export took two minutes and 35 seconds, half the time of the video.Ĭonducting the same test in Premiere Pro (with apps like Safari and QuickTime running) the five minute video took three minutes and five seconds to export. In Final Cut Pro X, we exported a five minute 4K video while also running other apps at the same time to test export conditions under heavy RAM usage. Of course, benchmarks aren't reflective of real world usage, so we also did some testing of apps pro users might take advantage of. the 15-inch MacBook Pro's score of 19065.Ĭombined, the updated GPU and the new thermal architecture of the 16-inch MacBook Pro have brought some notable performance improvements. In an OpenCL test, the 16-inch MacBook Pro scored 30608, compared to the 15-inch MacBook Pro's score of 17904, and in a Metal test, the 16-inch MacBook Pro scored a 29840 vs. There are even more significant gains with the new 5500M GPU. That's an increase of 16.5 percent, which is a decent performance boost considering these machines have the same processor. The 16-inch machine earned a single core score of 989 and a multi-core score of 6733, while the 15-inch machine scored 972 in the single-core test and 5781 in the multi-core test. Starting off with Geekbench 5 testing, the 16-inch MacBook Pro outshined the similarly specced 15-inch model that was released earlier this year when it came to multi-core performance. It has a 2.3GHz Intel Core i9 processor (turbo boost up to 4.8GHz), an AMD Radeon Pro 5500M GPU with 4GB GDDR6 memory, a 1TB SSD, and 16GB 2666MHz DDR4 RAM. We tested the base 8-core model, which is the higher-end model priced at $2,799. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos.
