Hello,
I'm looking to sell my long-serving early 2011 Sandy Bridge MacBook Pro 8,2 and replace it with a Mac Pro 5,1.
My reasons for upgrading are:
32GB sounds like plenty for now and I can always upgrade later. Am I likely to see much of a performance hit using four DIMM sockets instead of three? I understand the Westmere CPUs are optimised for 3-channel use.
Will I be able to take my Crucial CT960 SATA-3 SSD out of my MBP, plug it into the AngelFire, and slot it straight into the Mac Pro (it has 10.12.6 installed)? Life would be a lot easier this way, though I understand there may be performance benefits to a fresh install. The reason for the AngelFire is that I don't wan't to drop back to SATA-2 and lose SSD performance. Is this something I'd ever notice in reality, though?
Given the only GPU-intensive work I'm likely to do is using FCP X, I reckon going the AMD route is best. Has anyone any experience of the RX 560 driving a 4K panel? Will I get boot screens/recovery partition etc? The whole area of 4K and HiDPI display seems to be a bit of a minefield, but I'm not sure which were legacy problems now resolved, and which still apply.
Thanks for any advice.
/csd
I'm looking to sell my long-serving early 2011 Sandy Bridge MacBook Pro 8,2 and replace it with a Mac Pro 5,1.
My reasons for upgrading are:
- I've started using VirtualBox to run a couple of VMs (Windows 10 and Ubuntu), and am finding the 16GB memory limit restrictive
- Same as above (but to a lesser extent) goes for CPU threads
- The MBP has had two replacement logic boards due to the design fault with the discrete GPU implementation. However the early 2011 models are now officially obsolete, so I'm unlikely to get another replacement should it fail again.
- The MBP spends 99% of its time lid closed attached to a Thunderbolt display, so I'm not really using the mobile capabilities anyway. Because the lid is closed, I'm convinced the thermal performance isn't as good as it could be, hence the worry about the GPU failing again
- Westmere W3680 3.33 GHz six-core CPU
- 32 GB RAM
- RX 560 GPU
- AngelFire PCIe SATA-3 HBA
- LG 27UD58 4k IPS monitor
32GB sounds like plenty for now and I can always upgrade later. Am I likely to see much of a performance hit using four DIMM sockets instead of three? I understand the Westmere CPUs are optimised for 3-channel use.
Will I be able to take my Crucial CT960 SATA-3 SSD out of my MBP, plug it into the AngelFire, and slot it straight into the Mac Pro (it has 10.12.6 installed)? Life would be a lot easier this way, though I understand there may be performance benefits to a fresh install. The reason for the AngelFire is that I don't wan't to drop back to SATA-2 and lose SSD performance. Is this something I'd ever notice in reality, though?
Given the only GPU-intensive work I'm likely to do is using FCP X, I reckon going the AMD route is best. Has anyone any experience of the RX 560 driving a 4K panel? Will I get boot screens/recovery partition etc? The whole area of 4K and HiDPI display seems to be a bit of a minefield, but I'm not sure which were legacy problems now resolved, and which still apply.
Thanks for any advice.
/csd