Yes but it wouldn't make much of a difference. You have to understand that cooling is a process, and not a magical enchantment you can just enhance with stronger "cooling" parts.Could apple use vapor chambers in macbook pros to cool down the i9 properly ?
Of course it could, but they didn't. Maybe they will in the future, who knows.Could apple use vapor chambers in macbook pros to cool down the i9 properly ?
Yes but it wouldn't make much of a difference. You have to understand that cooling is a process, and not a magical enchantment you can just enhance with stronger "cooling" parts.
Besides, a "vapor chamber" is just a square shaped heat pipe, which the MacBook already has.
Yes, the Razer has one, and it has a much more potent GPU, yet it doesn't have thermal issues that the MBP has.Well apparently a vapor chamber is much more efficient than heat pipes because there is more surface area to transfer heat. Maybe the issue is with the heat transfer from the cpu to the heatsink and not the fans, in which case a vapor chamber would help.
Yes, the Razer has one, and it has a much more potent GPU, yet it doesn't have thermal issues that the MBP has.
Yes, well that may be the case, and it also means the vapor chamber takes up a lot more room in the chassis. Also, just sticking a vapor chamber on a hot device does nothing to cool it, you also need heatsink fins attached to it, and that takes up even more room. You also need a fan/s capable of pushing sufficient airflow through the larger cooling apparatus to make a difference, which also takes up additional room...Well apparently a vapor chamber is much more efficient than heat pipes because there is more surface area to transfer heat.
I have to disagree, as I was using the Razer and comparing it to the MBP, it ran cooler. It still ran warm, and it can get toasty, but that laptop could do things the MBP could never, i.e., play top level games.It has all of the "issues" of the MBP in this regard — its CPU doesn't seem to get any more thermal headroom and it goes experiences comparable degree of thermal throttling.
I have to disagree, as I was using the Razer and comparing it to the MBP, it ran cooler. It still ran warm, and it can get toasty, but that laptop could do things the MBP could never, i.e., play top level games.
Simple, it does not thermally throttle even with that powerful GPU and its vapor chamber. I think you're reading too much into this.And of course it is better at playing games! Its GPU is like four times faster! But what does this fact have to do with CPU cooling?
Simple, it does not thermally throttle even with that powerful GPU and its vapor chamber. I think you're reading too much into this.
You look at something like the Surface Book 2 which has a decent enough nvidia gpu while remaining usably thin
The MBP doesn't throttle either I'm really confused about the point you are trying to make.
Yes, well that may be the case, and it also means the vapor chamber takes up a lot more room in the chassis. Also, just sticking a vapor chamber on a hot device does nothing to cool it, you also need heatsink fins attached to it, and that takes up even more room. You also need a fan/s capable of pushing sufficient airflow through the larger cooling apparatus to make a difference, which also takes up additional room...
Apple already uses wide flat heatpipes which are like elongated vapor chambers; they're equipped with heatsinks only at the ends, where there's room for them, as well as for airflow going through them. Vapor chambers aren't a magic wand that vanishes heat into thin air. Just ask the trashcan Mac Pro!
No, unless Apple produces a larger chassis for the i9. Vapour chambers do improve cooling efficiency, however you still need to shed the heat. So the whole cooling system must be capable of not being overwhelmed by the CPU's TDP.
On the Razer, same as my primary it's designed for performance, with a more substantial cooling solution than the MBP, so I would expect it to run cooler and not throttle under CPU only bound workloads. Some OEM's bolstered their cooling solutions for the 8th Gen CPU's Apple chose not to simple as that.
With Intel's 8th Gen CPU's the short-term Turbo limit was raised to a minimum of 90W if the cooling system is not capable or the power train then optimal CPU performance is to attainable.
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I didn't mean to imply that you had, sorry for any confusion I may have caused. I just wanted to point out that vapor chambers aren't a universal fix-all to everything whereas heat is concerned. There's pros and cons to everything. That's all.Have I ever said that a vapor chamber turned heat into thin air ?
True, the CPU isn't as powerful, but the combination of CPU+GPU unquestionably is. Call it smarter design and choice of components if you will. Remember that the SB2 is a year old machine. Its i7 CPU is about 5-10% slower than the 2017 MBP i7, yet the dGPU is twice as fast. I'll take that 10/10, both for gaming and non-gaming purposes.Which SB2 achieves by a) using a low-wattage CPU (even in the 15" model) and b) placing the CPU and the GPU into different compartments, each of which is almost as thick as the entire MBP. The SB has to sacrifice a lot in order to get that powerful GPU in.
Have I ever said that a vapor chamber turned heat into thin air ? Whatever that means... When you say it takes more room, well maybe apple can create more room. You're response seems to be based on a lot of assumptions:
1) It would take more room
2) The current fans couldn't keep up with the heat load.
Have you looked at the new razor blade vapor chamber design? It's pretty small... And it is cooling a GPU that has a much higher TDP than the wimpy 560X
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It stands to reason that the fans on the macbook are capable of blowing out more heat than they currently are. When people apply liquid metal thermal paste, the temperature drops considerably, so my thinking is that the bottleneck in heat dissipation is located between the cpu and the heatsink not the exhaust fans. So I'm not sure what you mean when you say the heatsink would be overwhelmed. Theoretically if the heatsink is more efficient at absorbing heat with the same fans you should be able to get lower temperatures.
No your not your just trying to be smart, and playing with semantics.
I'm sorry but my first hand experience is that it does a better job.Which it isn't,
just like you were bragging how the 2016 model could hold full Turbo indefinitely, now the 2018 MBP has issue the narrative is a full 180...
I'm sorry but my first hadn't experience is that it does a better job.
We are all entitled to our opinions, and mine is that the Razer with its vapor chamber offers superior cooling then the MBP's heat pipes.