Power, Thermals and Noise

I started this review complaining about how loud the 15-inch MacBook Pro gets, but with 32x the physical volume the 27-inch iMac is near silent. Even under load the system is very quiet, almost too quiet. Apple chose a very lax fan profile which results in some very high external temperatures. The iMac takes in cool air from the bottom of the display and exhausts it up top behind the display. Playing Half Life 2 Episode Two I measured a maximum surface temperature of 125F at the exhaust vent. Again, unless you're doing something weird with the iMac on your lap this isn't an issue. Keep in mind that the Sandy Bridge CPU in the 15-inch MacBook Pro carries a 45W TDP and what's in the iMac is either 65W or 95W. Add in a larger, hotter hard drive and potentially a beefier GPU and you have a recipe for a pretty warm machine.

2011 iMac Power Usage
27-inch iMac (Mid 2011) Idle Cinebench R11.5 Half Life 2 Episode Two
Minimum Brightness 54.1W 108.3W 149.0W
50% Brightness 86.6W 141.6W 180.0W
100% Brightness 144.5W 198.3W 240.0W

With a large integrated display power consumption obviously varies depending on brightness. At idle, power consumption ranges from 54W to 144W. Under load the range quickly gets ever higher. I measured max system power consumption at 240W running Half Life 2 Episode Two.

Power consumption isn't out of control but you've got a billion transistor CPU, a 1.7B transistor GPU and a high resolution 27-inch display + backlight - it's going to draw some power.

Performance

Having never previously been a fan of the iMac, I don't actually have any historical performance data to compare to. What I do have however are scores from Mac Pros and of course the MacBook/MacBook Pro lines from the past couple of years.

Adobe Photoshop CS4 Performance

The Retouch Artists Speed Test we use for our CPU testing under Windows also works under OS X. We're running the exact same benchmark here, basically performing a bunch of image manipulations and filters and timing the entire process.

Adobe Photoshop CS4 Performance

The high-end 27-inch iMac is a very capable Photoshop machine. A hair faster than the new MacBook Pro, the iMac delivers the same performance as an 8-core Mac Pro from 2009 or 2010.

Aperture 2 RAW Import

For my Aperture test I simply timed how long it took to import 203 12MP RAW images into the library.

Aperture 2 RAW Import Performance

We have a new winner here! The MacBook Pros were always limited by their slower 2.5" hard drive, but the iMac with Sandy Bridge in additional to a speedier disk give us better image import performance than the '09 and '10 Mac Pros. I told you this thing was fast.

Cinebench R10 & 11.5

I’m a fan of the Cinebench tests because they lets me show off both single and multithreaded performance in the same workload. First, the single threaded performance:

3D Rendering Performance - Cinebench R10

3D Rendering Performance - Cinebench R11.5

Sandy Bridge quad-core CPUs make no sacrifices. You get excellent single threaded performance which means general OS usage, launching applications and even rendering most web pages happens as fast as physically possible as the other cores are power gated and asleep. Start multitasking however and you'll see the Core i5 in this machine is no slouch:

3D Rendering Performance - Cinebench R10

There's still no replacement for more cores when it comes to heavily threaded applications, the past three years of 8-core Mac Pros are still faster than the new 27-inch iMac here. I suspect the upgraded Core i7 would at least let the iMac beat the 2008 Mac Pro thanks to Hyper Threading, but the other two systems are simply out of reach. For those users, you're better off waiting for the Sandy Bridge-E Mac Pro update expected sometime in Q4.

You'll notice in Cinebench R10 the 15-inch MacBook Pro is nipping at the heels of the new iMac. Chalk that up to the larger L3 cache and Hyper Threading, both advantages enjoyed by the MacBook Pro. Look at what those advantages do in Cinebench R11.5's multithreaded test:

3D Rendering Performance - Cinebench R11.5

Here the MacBook Pro actually gains on the iMac. More threads and more cache are better suited for the Cinebench workload. If you do a lot of offline 3D rendering and you want the iMac, I'd suggest upgrading to the Core i7-2600 that Apple offers. You get a not insignificant boost in clock speed but more importantly, Intel switches on Hyper Threading which gives you twice as many threads.

Quicktime H.264 Video Encoding

Our final benchmark is more consumer focused. Here I'm taking an XviD and converting it to an iPhone-supported H.264 format.

Video Encoding Performance - Quicktime X

QuickTime doesn't make tremendous use of all cores all of the time, and thus the MacBook Pro loses its threading advantage. The iMac is our new champion of this test.

 

The Peripherals Final Words
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  • utlragear - Monday, June 11, 2012 - link

    And here's the thing. It shouldn't cost any more than the difference for the monitors. But iPeople usually can't comprehend that.
  • khimera2000 - Monday, May 30, 2011 - link

    No 2000$ is not a big deal, and those people that are complaining are the ones that actually want the most out of there money.

    Sorry man hard as it is for me to brake it to you, especially since you have to hear it hear... but nerds know how to shop for computer parts, and they know whats it worth.

    If you want to buy a 2000$ rig only to throw it away two years later and buy another 2000 rig go ahead.

    I will take that same cash, keep the moniter and have 2000$ to spend on my next computer. where as you will have 1000$

    i dont know about you, but I baught a really good moniter when i rebuilt my computer last, and am looking forward to spending that 1k that you will have to spend on a moniter on other cool tech :D

    O ya im also looking forward to the following...

    Upgrading my CPU, GPU, HDD, all me RAM, My Motherboard, and if a deal comes around adding two more moniters :)

    Then again where all broken nerds right? and the above dosent really matter in your world.

    You are right on them not targeting us though. We care about how long the life of our PC will be, what softwear goes into it, and the quality of the componants, where as a mac can be baought off the shelf by any shmuck off the streat.

    Don't beleave me? then you are what Mac is targeting. For everyone else they understand what im talking about. Especialy the part where we research every peace that goes into our rig.
  • rubaiyat - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    I've seen plenty of PC users blow much more than $2000 on their computers, WITHOUT a display. They tend to do it in bits and pieces and never add up the total cost because maths (and spelling) are not their strong points.

    They also have big trouble with equivalency. Perpetually claiming something quite inferior is equal to something distinctly superior, either through ignorance (never seen better) or price-tag fixation.

    I bought my iMac 27" for about $1540. I didn't dumbly pay retail for it any more than you claim you do on your PC parts. No wasting massive amounts of time hunting down parts in magazines, dodgy PC fairs, eBay etc. hastling to fix the eternal problems, then sweating out the repairs because they have essentially no support.

    My time can be better spent getting work done (not hanging out in rank dark rooms wasting the days away playing games). The iMac is beautifully svelte, fast, quiet and works out of the box. Not just a brilliant workstation but also a fantastic media station for after work.

    You can't say I haven't shopped around. I did it for the iMac and got a very fast great deal in an afternoon. I know I got a bargain soon as I negotiated it and took. I had spent vastly more unproductive time going through the PC parts sites and shops, looking for the 'bargains' I could never find.

    Just how do the higher prices you pay in these places, for sometimes cheaply made components, work out to be a "deal"?
  • utlragear - Monday, June 11, 2012 - link

    mostly from broke nerds"? Is that why I have a 5500 square foot home paid for along with over 700k in savings? Keep in mind that some people don't buy apple because they were actually smart enough to understand it's mostly over rated, over priced, slow and outdated hardware out of the box. i7 based PC's came out a YEAR before apple even released them.

    Some people simply don't throw their money like water down a sewer as some college students do while trying to look hip, cool and pretend they are "rich" while they occupy an apartment. Another clue for you, people with lots of money that stay that way, usually aren't iSuckers. Do you know how many times I've heard that dumb, "People don't buy apple because they are broke bs?" Too many times. If you want to buy apple because the marketing is effective on apples credulous marketing demographic, then fine. But don't try to act like it's a great value because it isn't.

    I'd rather buy my family 2 or 3 superior PC's with windows 7. And you are right. For MANY people $2000 isn't a big deal. But again, I don't believe that because that is true I should burn money to apple's delight. If I'm going to drop some cash it might be $15,000 for recording studio gear. Or a new car. Something you can't usually get a break on. .
  • Tros - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    "Keeping your old monitor that is still good to save money makes sense but not on an all in one unit."

    Did you know that the 27-inch iMac works as a driven monitor? This is a new feature that I've yet to see on any other all-in-ones, esp. laptops, tablets, smartphones. The screens I could have saved on laptops, if they were able to be driven by a hardware solution.
  • Penti - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    It's certainly useful when using it together with a MacBook Pro so you can connect it to your screen (iMac) at home or your workstation at work, and still use the built in workstation for other work. But it doesn't have use outside of that. It's not compatible with much else sadly (don't expect it to play nice with your video game console and so on). Neither is it independent from the on board motherboard.

    Neither is it a solution to save the screen. Which you can just get a new one three years later or so with your new iMac any way as Apple doesn't seem to be interested in release a Mac Medium stationary workstation with fast desktop parts. Sure a good external screen will last pretty well for 4-5 years and still be pretty high-end (if it doesn't break). But if your replacing your computer with a new iMac it's pretty pointless argument. If you run a MBP as workstation, a Mac Pro or a PC then you could argument for your external displays though, and the iMacs video in solution wouldn't be worth any thing just as a screen in those setups any way. Not when you can't tear out the motherboard.
  • KoolAidMan1 - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    Mac Pros are too expensive for the vast majority of people, given the performance you're getting. I switched from PowerMacs to iMacs for my Final Cut Studio machine a few years ago and I'm never looking back. Cheaper, nearly as fast, and with a $1000 display built in.

    If a new model comes out, resale value is insanely high so you just ship off the old one and get a new iMac with faster components and an even better display. The move from the 24" iMac to the 27" iMac was one of the most economical upgrades I've ever made. I wish my PC upgrades were as simple and returned as much money.

    Other plus is that it also works as a monitor for my gaming PC. Sadly that isn't an option anymore unless your computer has a Thunderbolt port, but that is my only real criticism of the 2011 models. If you don't intend on using it as a monitor as well as a Mac like I do, then it is really great.
  • Penti - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    And just to clarify the 2011 iMac only works as a target display with 2011 MacBook Pro's, and prior to that you were limited to the mini-displayport input and what the monitor could do with that input. You could with the previous model connect a Mac Pro, MBP, MB, Mac Mini, PC or gaming PC with displayport and possibly consoles with an adaptor but not native. It's preferable if you can feed it with a 2560x1440 TDMS signal. (Computers can be connected with Dual-link DVI-to-DisplayPort adapter for like $200 USD too)

    So it's pretty useless today for use as input if you don't plan on a dual mac configuration with iMac 2011 and MBP 2011. No expensive adaptors that work with the Thunderbolt Mac yet too. Certainly not a great convenient solution for use of your screen with all your favorite electronics at least. That said, I wouldn't use the external 27" Cinema Display with Blu-ray players and consoles either. The previous solution with 2009 late and 2010 mid iMac 27" models wasn't good with gaming consoles and BD-players either it had to use and pass-through the 720p signal to your screen and didn't support 1080i or 1080p. The monitor/iMac didn't accept 1080p signals at all. Which meant you needed a separate $299 USD scalerbox for that. Or get by with 720p. Which basically meant you needed $500 US Dollars worth of hardware with the old model in order to connect a none DP PC/Mac Pro high-res and a BD-player and or console scaled to native res. They could do it better. But that would mean a separate driver/controller board for the monitor/panel.
  • headbox - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    unlike your Alienware/PC hardware, you'll be able to sell the iMac for close to what you paid for it years later. I bought a Macbook Pro for $1800 and sold it TWO years later for $1500, and 50 people people called wanting to buy it. Try putting a 2 year old Dell online for sale- you won't get 50%, if at all.
  • The0ne - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    The fact is people buying Macs are NOT your conventional user, in the least. They will love it because it's sleek, it's compact thus saving space, and as far as the people I know that like them money is not a concern even if it is. Apple consumers are a strange lot, you either accept it or not.

    The example given by headbox is a prime example. Why would anyone pay close to the original paid price for a 2 year old Mac? It's not logical at all in any sense except to own a Mac yet people do it all the time. I can understand if there were benefits to this but there really aren't. It's just "I have a Mac" thingy.

    But make no mistake though, if you are going to get one and keep it for a long time might as well get one with a nice big screen. I have 3 Dell 30"s that I saved up and bought and wouldn't go back to anything less. My eyes are grateful until I use my M17xR2. My eyes aren't that young anymore!

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