I'd like to see a credit for MacEFIRom and Netkas, as without the linked firmware updater, much of what is possible would not be possible.
Okay, I've changed "required" to "recommended" and added the Xserve.
I do have a concern about it when I was researching 1,1 CPU upgrades to Clovertown processors. Some people reported they worked fine (other than the "unknown" label). Others reported they worked fine most of the time, but unfortunately had occasional kernel panics--and then when the firmware update came out and they updated, the kernel panics went away. There were multiple reports of these KPs that went away with the firmware update, so I hesitate to indicate that they work 100% without it.
I'd like to see a credit for MacEFIRom and Netkas, as without the linked firmware updater, much of what is possible would not be possible.
A note - the Clovertown CPUs in the chart are all 4 Core CPUs, the L5335s, L5320s, and E5320s are listed as "2 Core" currently.
You can add X5472, X5450 and X5460 to 3,1 table.
Is there any noticeable difference between the stock 2.8 E5462 in the 3,1 Mac Pro and the 3.16 X5460?
Hard to say, same can be questioned for every CPU that is close to another in terms of cores / clockspeed. I don't think it would be noticeable in everyday use but it would shave off some seconds for other full load tasks.
Is there any noticeable difference between the stock 2.8 E5462 in the 3,1 Mac Pro and the 3.16 X5460?
Amazing article! I have a 5,1 with a single 2,8 GHz Quad-Core Xeon (W3530?) and I'll definetely study what options I have.
An idea...it would be interesting if more experienced users could link good places to shop for CPU's.
Thanks again
The good link's CPU sell fast. Anyway, some users suggest that get a whole used server and only extract the CPU is cheaper than just buy the CPU. And the CPU in the server most likely never be OCed, always have proper cooling, etc. You can also sell the parts you don't need, which get some money back.
In single-threaded performance the fastest 3,1 processor the 3.2 GHz X5482 is 98% of the performance of the fastest Apple configured 5,1 (3.07GHz X5675) & 90% of the performance of fastest possible 5,1 CPU (3.46GHz X5690).Depends on usage. In single threaded tasks it's 10% faster than 5462, in multi threaded about 8%.
There's no practical sense in upgrading 3,1 CPUs at all, except the situation when you have an uniprocessor one.
Here gain is pretty good.
https://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench3/1835159
In single-threaded performance the fastest 3,1 processor the 3.2 GHz X5482 is 98% of the performance of the fastest Apple configured 5,1 (3.07GHz X5675) & 90% of the performance of fastest possible 5,1 CPU (3.46GHz X5690).
This demonstrates two things, firstly that the 2008 Mac Pro 3,1 still has very decent performance for today's applications & secondly that Moore's Law ran out of steam some years ago in terms of single stream performance.
Unfortunately, you can't compare GHz for GHz in that manner. There are lots of other things that figure in to the equation.
I wasn't comparing GHz as it doesn't make sense with different architectures. I was quoting benchmark figures for the Xeon processors.Unfortunately, you can't compare GHz for GHz in that manner. There are lots of other things that figure in to the equation. Here's 3GHz vs 2.93GHz...
I wasn't comparing GHz as it doesn't make sense with different architectures. I was quoting benchmark figures for the Xeon processors.
CPUMark
Intel Xeon X5482 @ 3.20GHz Single Thread Rating: 1379
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+X5482+@+3.20GHz
Intel Xeon X5675 @ 3.07GHz Single Thread Rating: 1405
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+X5675+@+3.07GHz
Intel Xeon X5690 @ 3.47GHz Single Thread Rating: 1520
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+X5690+@+3.47GHz
Incidentally those two Geekbench results are not comparable as they are two different versions of Geekbench & two different versions of OS X. I was also quoting the X5482 2.2GHz part which has a Geekbench single core score of 1872 which is still 87% of the single core performance of the 2.93GHz X5570 you quote.
Bottom line the single threaded application performance of the Mac Pro 3,1 is still pretty decent compared to the 5,1 & single threaded CPU performance barely increased in five years.
I wasn't comparing GHz as it doesn't make sense with different architectures. I was quoting benchmark figures for the Xeon processors.
CPUMark
Intel Xeon X5482 @ 3.20GHz Single Thread Rating: 1379
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+X5482+@+3.20GHz
Intel Xeon X5675 @ 3.07GHz Single Thread Rating: 1405
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+X5675+@+3.07GHz
Intel Xeon X5690 @ 3.47GHz Single Thread Rating: 1520
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Xeon+X5690+@+3.47GHz
Incidentally those two Geekbench results are not comparable as they are two different versions of Geekbench & two different versions of OS X. I was also quoting the X5482 2.2GHz part which has a Geekbench single core score of 1872 which is still 87% of the single core performance of the 2.93GHz X5570 you quote.
Bottom line the single threaded application performance of the Mac Pro 3,1 is still pretty decent compared to the 5,1 & single threaded CPU performance barely increased in five years.
I don't know I don't have a 5,1 but all the benchmarks you keep linking to show that the single threaded CPU performance of the 3.20GHz X5482 is pretty comparable to the Xeons in the 5,1 e.g.Believe what you like, but a Mac Pro 3,1 with 3.2GHz X5482 does NOT give 98% the performance of a Mac Pro 5,1 with 3.07GHz X5675. It's not even close.