Apple designed the A19 Pro processor to prioritize energy efficiency over raw performance gains. The chip demonstrates only minor improvements compared to its A18 Pro predecessor in standard benchmark testing. Under normal operating conditions, the processor cannot surpass the underclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 or Samsung's Exynos 2600 chipset. Recent benchmark results show dramatic performance increases when extreme cooling methods are applied to the device.
The enhanced testing produced remarkable scores of 4,019 points in single-core performance and 11,054 points in multi-core evaluation. Industry observers suspect that liquid nitrogen cooling enabled these exceptional results. Reviewer Geekerwan previously achieved similar outcomes using identical cooling techniques on Apple's M4 iPad Pro. The enhanced performance demonstrates substantial computational power that Apple deliberately limits to maintain battery efficiency. These findings reveal significant untapped potential within the A19 Pro architecture.
The enhanced testing produced remarkable scores of 4,019 points in single-core performance and 11,054 points in multi-core evaluation. Industry observers suspect that liquid nitrogen cooling enabled these exceptional results. Reviewer Geekerwan previously achieved similar outcomes using identical cooling techniques on Apple's M4 iPad Pro. The enhanced performance demonstrates substantial computational power that Apple deliberately limits to maintain battery efficiency. These findings reveal significant untapped potential within the A19 Pro architecture.