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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  • tipoo - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    *When the MBA gets the HD3000 and Thunderbolt. We need an edit feature, lol.
  • KoolAidMan1 - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    The MBA should work once it gets a Thunderbolt port in the next revision. Current ones do not since they lack it. Also, the only MBPs that can drive the 2011 iMac are 2011 MBPs, nothing sooner without the Thunderbolt port.

    I am very curious to see if someone makes an adapter. I can't imagine that it would be cheap, but there would be at least some market for it.
  • damianrobertjones - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    The hard drive cable/fan issue ALONE ensure that I'll never buy a machine like this. No. Freedom of choice and options is what I'd like and I'd prefer not to have to short any cables.
  • TEAMSWITCHER - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    Why does everyone want an iMac computer, just to crack it open and put a faster/larger/different hard drive in it. Why not just buy it and use it the way it is. That's what having a Mac is all about, buy it, use it, abuse it if you want to, but just enjoy it. I think that Freedom of choice work both ways.
  • tipoo - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    Well, what do you do when your out of warranty and the drive fails? Or you need a bigger one?
  • TEAMSWITCHER - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    I understand the concern, but a hard drive failure is actually a pretty rare event. I have had several Apple computers over the years, most of them notebooks, and never has a hard disk failed on me.

    That said, if your still worried about it you should buy the Apple care extended warranty for $169.00. That'll give you three years of warranty service.
  • mschira - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    lovely machine I am almost ready to buy one, but:

    "you have to buy a pair of suction cups, pull off the magnetic glass cover, remove the LCD, remove the motherboard"

    I don't know. I don't think I can swallow that....
    so again no Mac for me...

    M.
  • GeorgeH - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    If the 27" model was upgradeable it would be my next computer - and the first Mac that I bought personally. Unfortunately the chances of Apple ever making upgradeable hardware are just about zero. If that SATA cable is any indication, their engineers are instead actively working to add BS complexity for no reason other than to keep Mac hardware "special".

    So instead of a Mac I'll just put together another ITX box and hope for the day that someone pairs a nice display with good design and upgradeable hardware.
  • alent1234 - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    the resale values are so good that it doesn't make sense to upgrade them. and most people don't upgrade CPU and RAM that works on the same motherboard chipsets. they wait for a new generation of everything to buy something new.

    i did this years ago and got tired since the motherboards changed every few years anyway making me buy a new motherboard, CPU and RAM. might as well just buy a pre-built computer since it's about the same amount of money
  • GeorgeH - Friday, May 27, 2011 - link

    I'd guess the best GPU in the 27" has about 6 months before I'd want to be upgrading it. I definitely would want a faster SSD than it comes with, and would probably want to upgrade that again in a year or so. The CPU could last me, but Ivy Bridge might be enough of a jump to make me throw some money away just because.

    Also, I actually enjoy tearing computers apart and messing with them as a hobby. Spending an afternoon every year or so ripping apart my hypothetical iMac would be fun for me - selling and buying a new one on the same schedule would be tedious.

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