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Labrish
Nyuuz
Apple's M4 Max hits 212W peak draw in heavy workloads
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[QUOTE="Queen, post: 84741, member: 27"] Apple Silicon efficiency myths might die as power usage climbs dangerously high. Enthusiasts fear that the M5 Pro and M5 Max chips landing early next year will guzzle electricity after seeing how the current generation behaves. Stress tests revealed the M4 Max pulling a massive two hundred twelve watts while crunching heavy Adobe Premiere Pro tasks. That upcoming sixteen-core CPU pairs with forty graphics cores on the N3P node from TSMC. Since that architecture offers merely a five percent efficiency bump over N3E, thermals could get ugly. Running six performance cores at four point six one gigahertz definitely sounds like a recipe for excessive energy consumption. Redditor MarionberryDear6170 logged internal temperatures hitting one hundred ten degrees Celsius on the previous silicon. Even the base M5 touched ninety-nine degrees because the lone heatpipe cannot handle sustained loads. Surprisingly, the chassis stayed cool to the touch even while the processor boiled inside during those intense two-hundred-watt spikes. Community discussions suggest thermal throttling saves the hardware eventually. Engineers hopefully implement better cooling solutions for the M6 MacBook Pro series later this year. Speculation points toward vapor chambers finally arriving from the M6 iPad Pro line to manage these increasingly hot chipsets. [/QUOTE]
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Nyuuz
Apple's M4 Max hits 212W peak draw in heavy workloads
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