Hi all,
I've recently come across a Geekbench score that has over exceeded what I've seen possible for the Mac Pro 6,1 online and wondered if it was an anomaly or someone hacking it strangely. The link is here below - https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/15802806 and shows a single score of 887 (one of the highest for it's model) as well as a multi-core score of 9297 (the highest of it's model).
The CPU is a v3 however - something that's not been stated anywhere I can find - Intel Xeon E5-2696 v3 @2.3GHz running 18 Cores.
I've recently upgraded mine to a 12-core v2 chip, but wondered if I should have gone for this chip instead.
That said - is anyone aware that this is possible, is upgrading or hacking with a new chip never listed as a possibility something that is common?
I've recently come across a Geekbench score that has over exceeded what I've seen possible for the Mac Pro 6,1 online and wondered if it was an anomaly or someone hacking it strangely. The link is here below - https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/15802806 and shows a single score of 887 (one of the highest for it's model) as well as a multi-core score of 9297 (the highest of it's model).
The CPU is a v3 however - something that's not been stated anywhere I can find - Intel Xeon E5-2696 v3 @2.3GHz running 18 Cores.
I've recently upgraded mine to a 12-core v2 chip, but wondered if I should have gone for this chip instead.
That said - is anyone aware that this is possible, is upgrading or hacking with a new chip never listed as a possibility something that is common?