Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

dmax35

macrumors 6502
Jun 21, 2012
447
6
One of the main reasons I choose to move from a fully loaded iMac to a Mac Pro was obviously the internal expandibilty It's nice not having a bunch of external drives cluttering up my desk etc. Yet alone... not hearing a fan spinning in front of your face during semi intense runs was a nice payoff.
 

OS6-OSX

macrumors 6502a
Jun 13, 2004
945
753
California
As for as video editing goes, search the web to see what speed you can get from 3 HD's internal Raid 0 (free:)). If you try SSD's the speed increases but not much without going 6Gb and bypassing the 3Gb bottleneck.
With my "old" 2008 I can do H.264, R3D, Alexa, P2, Canon 7D, Sony F3 etc.
If you had a Q4000 and PP6 the thought of a new MP of any kind would not even cross your mind. I downloaded the 30 day trial last summer and the combo was like wow:D!
This is the raid speed I get. 4 internal HD's Raid 0 with the ATTO
 

Attachments

  • DiskSpeedTest.png
    DiskSpeedTest.png
    738.7 KB · Views: 74

derbothaus

macrumors 601
Jul 17, 2010
4,093
30
I've tried to look into what other GPU's (better then my 5870) can be put into this thing without major headaches and haven't found much help.

Really? How about these?
http://www.sapphiretech.com/presentation/product/?cid=1&gid=3&sgid=1157&pid=1777&psn=&lid=1&leg=0
http://www.evga.com/products/Product.aspx?pn=02G-P4-3682-KR

The GTX 680 is pretty much twice as fast and a great deal faster than the GTX680mx laptop card in the iMac.
Aside from the supported cards you can get all manner of PC cards flashed and working. There are a ton of faster cards now.
 

michael_aos

macrumors 6502
Jan 26, 2004
250
0
I gave my 2006 Mac Pro 1,1 (16GB, 240GB OWC SSD, ATI 5770, etc) - Geekbench 5972 to my mom.

Bought a Late 2012 Mini 6,2 (16GB, 1.1TB Fusion, 2.6Ghz quad-core i7) - Geekbench 11699 to replace it.

I wish I could go to 32GB of RAM, and I get a little annoyed sometimes when the fan is spinning like crazy when it's working hard, and I miss the ability to natively drive 3 monitors, but otherwise it's very nice.

The old Mac Pro was always silent, but it pumped a lot of heat into the room.
--
 

ctucci

macrumors regular
Dec 16, 2008
167
35
Yer Mom's basement.
Definitely Keep It

You currently have the expandability, the access to internal system components for repair/cleaning, and multiple Xeons.

I wouldn't trade that for a new iMac.
 

wallysb01

macrumors 68000
Jun 30, 2011
1,589
809
How about Thunderbolt? Video editing is really the only area where I need a boost. Everything else I do can be done on the current machine just fine. Even editing can, but I'm always curious about little enhancements that can make things snappier.

I wonder how the iMac affording me the use of TB drives would compare to my MacPro reading from FW800 drives? Somehow I see the iMac winning if it can get to the footage faster then the MacPro. There's always a bottleneck somewhere, but since the processing/gpu power is similar between the machines, the only real difference the iMac can afford is a huge boost in access speed to files I might be editing with.

Forget TB or FW800. You still have 2 HDD bays unoccupied right? So get 2 more 3TB HDD and make a 3 Drive RAID0 with them and your current 3 TB HDD. Then just get an external 4TB drive for Timemachine.

Those 4-core 2.93 Nehelem Xeons are still very good processors. I wouldn't dump them for an iMac just yet. Plus, as others have said, you can add in a much better video card than the iMac carries.

If you can spend maybe $600-700 (GTX 680 + 2x3TB HDD), you should be able to make significant speed improvements to your machine and extend its life for at least another 2 years.
 

Mac Hammer Fan

macrumors 65816
Jul 13, 2004
1,254
456
8 core 2.93? With plenty of RAM? You have a nice machine, reliable and expandable. I would drop an SSD in it. I wouldn't switch (downgrade) to an iMac if I were you.
 

spoonie1972

macrumors 6502a
Aug 17, 2012
573
153
what about a GPU upgrade? you might want to add more power supply for the crazy power consumption cards.

the 2.93 is no slouch, but if you need more CPU the x5680's are slowly dropping in price for a used pair.
 

5050

macrumors regular
May 28, 2009
180
2
I currently own a 2009 2.93Ghz 8-Core MacPro with 26GB RAM, ATI 5870 1GB, and 3TB Internal HD's (non-SSD). One 1TB HD is boot drive, another is Time Machine for boot drive, third is secondary data drive for whatever. I also own two external 4TB GRAID's (one to use, one to backup). For those I use FW800.

I have the same 2009 system, but configured as a 2.26GHz 8-core.

I work in After Effects and Maya. My workstation is used primarily for motion graphics, compositing, and 3d.

Just completed a serious hardware upgrade. Upgraded the procs to 12-core 3.33GHz, threw in a GTX 690, updated system drive to RAID 0 using 2 Samsung 840 pro's, updated media drive to RAID 0 using the Sonnet Tempo SSD Pro combined with 2 Samsung 840 Pro's to get full 6Gb/s bandwidth, and bumped RAM to 32GB (1333GHz). The biggest performance upgrade I saw in my After Effects rendering tests was the GTX 690. Nearly a 20 fold increase in rendering performance from my previous GT 120. The updated procs probably sped things up another 15% or more. I'm curious how things will scale with an additional GTX 690, and even more curious how the Titan fares against the GTX 690 in After Effects.

I would first try updating to a new graphics card and see what that does for you.
 

Macsonic

macrumors 68000
Sep 6, 2009
1,706
97
Maybe try to weigh the pros and cons Your current Mac Pro is still good and probably just add SSD or a better videocard I used to work in a TV editing company. Management tried getting a few iMacs hoping this is a good replacement to the current Mac Pros. After a few months they decided to stick it out with Mac Pros.
 

kylepro88

macrumors regular
Original poster
Jul 30, 2006
247
102
Nashville
All good info, but can someone point me to a really reliable place to explain how to throw a card like the 690 into my machine? The instructions online and reviews from folks are all over the map. I don't want to drop the money on a card that won't work, or make my machine unstable. Definitely open to it though.

----------

I have the same 2009 system, but configured as a 2.26GHz 8-core.

I work in After Effects and Maya. My workstation is used primarily for motion graphics, compositing, and 3d.

Just completed a serious hardware upgrade. Upgraded the procs to 12-core 3.33GHz, threw in a GTX 690, updated system drive to RAID 0 using 2 Samsung 840 pro's, updated media drive to RAID 0 using the Sonnet Tempo SSD Pro combined with 2 Samsung 840 Pro's to get full 6Gb/s bandwidth, and bumped RAM to 32GB (1333GHz). The biggest performance upgrade I saw in my After Effects rendering tests was the GTX 690. Nearly a 20 fold increase in rendering performance from my previous GT 120. The updated procs probably sped things up another 15% or more. I'm curious how things will scale with an additional GTX 690, and even more curious how the Titan fares against the GTX 690 in After Effects.

I would first try updating to a new graphics card and see what that does for you.

You mention 1333ghz ram...that'll work in my 09 mp? I thought that was the next generation's standard. Look at last post here: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/978925/
 

Mac Hammer Fan

macrumors 65816
Jul 13, 2004
1,254
456
I bought 16 GB RAM 1066 Mhz from OWC for my Mac Pro Nehalem 2009 @ 2,66 GHz. They sold me 1333 Mhz RAM instead. When I dropped a Westmere 6c 3.33 GHz in it, the RAM switched to 1333 Mhz. 1333 Mhz RAM is backwards compatible with 1066. It works in a Mac Pro 2009 without a problem and there is an advantage if you upgrade the processor.
 

fastlanephil

macrumors 65816
Nov 17, 2007
1,289
274
I bought 16 GB RAM 1066 Mhz from OWC for my Mac Pro Nehalem 2009 @ 2,66 GHz. They sold me 1333 Mhz RAM instead. When I dropped a Westmere 6c 3.33 GHz in it, the RAM switched to 1333 Mhz. 1333 Mhz RAM is backwards compatible with 1066. It works in a Mac Pro 2009 without a problem and there is an advantage if you upgrade the processor.

That's good to know. A used 2009 or 2010 Mac Pro with a future six core CPU upgrade is an option for me along with the iMac with a RAID depending on what Apple comes out with for the Pro model this year.
 

5050

macrumors regular
May 28, 2009
180
2
All good info, but can someone point me to a really reliable place to explain how to throw a card like the 690 into my machine? The instructions online and reviews from folks are all over the map. I don't want to drop the money on a card that won't work, or make my machine unstable. Definitely open to it though.

----------



You mention 1333ghz ram...that'll work in my 09 mp? I thought that was the next generation's standard. Look at last post here: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/978925/

I've installed the GTX 690, and it's running fine, so if you have any questions, ask away. Got a lot of help from the kind folks here at MacRumors.

Starting out, you'll need an external PSU to power the card. I've heard a few people claiming they were able to get the 690 running on the internal PSU with only PCIe 6-pin to 6+2 pin adapters, but my preference was to be on the safer side with the external PSU. I spent a little more effort researching how to get the card to power up/down, sleep/wake with my workstation, so now it operates exactly as if it were running on the internal Mac Pro PSU. If you want, I can help with that as well.

The second requirement is Mac OS X 10.8.3. You'll need the latest release to run graphics cards like the GTX 690 (and soon the Titan in 10.8.4). The only caveat with unsupported graphics cards on the Mac like the 690 is that you don't get boot screens.
 
Last edited:

macguy93

macrumors regular
Jul 30, 2012
149
1
I use a 2011 3.4ghz (3.8ghz I believe turbo boost) i7 iMac at school with the use if motion and fcpx, And even though that machine has a much higher clock speed than your Mac Pro, that machine still will never come close to the capabilities of your machine. 16 virtual core vs 8, that's a substantial difference in performance. I own a 12-core 2.4ghz (2.67 turbo boost, and that thing halls. If you stick to video work, keep the Mac Pro.

Not to mention, your machine is prob around 4,000 points higher on geekbench than the iMac.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.