• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Apple M4 Chip Benchmarked: 22% Faster Single-Core and 25% Faster Multi-Core Performance

AleksandarK

News Editor
Staff member
Joined
Aug 19, 2017
Messages
2,261 (0.92/day)
Yesterday, Apple launched its next-generation M4 chip based on Apple Silicon custom design. The processor is a fourth-generation design that brings AI capabilities and improved CPU performance. First debuting in an iPad Pro, the CPU has been benchmarked in Geekbench v6. And results seem to be very promising. The latest M4 chip managed to score 3,767 points in single-core tests and 14,677 points in multi-core tests. Compared to the M3 chip, which scores 3,087 points in single-core and 11,702 in multi-core tests, the M4 chip is about 22% faster in single-core and 25% faster in multi-core synthetic benchmarks.

Of course, these results are not real-world use cases, but they give us a hint of what the Apple Silicon design team has been working on. For real-world results, we have to wait a little longer to see reviews and results from devices such as MacBook Pro and MacBook Air, which should have better cooling and possibly better clocks for the chip.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Apr 12, 2013
Messages
6,789 (1.67/day)
Not really, I'm thinking clocks are higher as well. Probably 5-15% just guesstimating based on how underwhelming Apple's IPC gains have been in the recent past.
 
Joined
Aug 25, 2021
Messages
1,061 (1.06/day)
Its a impressive jump to make in the same node and in this short amount of time since the M3
Don't forget there are more cores on M4 CPU, plus higher clocks.

There is just as much as one could get by moving from N3E to N3B. There are no miracles.

I'd imagine IPC uplift is 5-8%. This doesn't translate into equal uplift in real life workloads. In some it could be more than on others. It's certainly more in Geek Geekbench 6.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
1,298 (0.48/day)
Don't forget there are more cores on M4 CPU, plus higher clocks.

There is just as much as one could get by moving from N3E to N3B. There are no miracles.

I'd imagine IPC uplift is 5-8%. This doesn't translate into equal uplift in real life workloads. In some it could be more than on others. It's certainly more in Geek Geekbench 6.
The miracle is the passive cooling for such a powerful SoC.
 
Joined
Oct 10, 2020
Messages
1 (0.00/day)
Processor Intel I7-12700KF | Intel I7-9750H
Motherboard CVN Z690 Gaming Pro| Intel LAPQC71A
Cooling Phanteks One 280 | Intel NUC QC7 Cooling
Memory G.SKILL Trident Z DDR4 3000 8G*4 | Samsung DDR4 Laptop 3200 32G*2
Video Card(s) VastArmor AMD RX-6900XT | Nvidia GTX-1660Ti
Storage Intel Optane 900p 280G / Hikvision C2000 PRO 1TB( *2 ) / WD BLUE 1TB&2TB | Predato GM7000 2TB
Display(s) IC X27Q-QA / ViewSonic VA2719 | BOE HF NV156FHM-N4G
Case Phanteks P500A | Intel NUC QC7 Case
Audio Device(s) Sound Blasterx AE-5 / Sennheiser GSP600 | Realtek Audio
Power Supply EVGA 750W G3 | Intel NUC QC7 230W Power Supply & 94Wh Battery
Mouse Razer Basilisk Ultimate | Madcatz RAT 6
Keyboard Razer Huntsman V2 Analog | Intel NUC QC7 Keyboard
VR HMD Oculus Quest2
Software Windows 11 Insider Preview with Dev
single core 22% faster , more 2 E core and N3E, but multi core only 25% faster?
 
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
3,498 (1.31/day)
Processor R5 5600X
Motherboard ASUS ROG STRIX B550-I GAMING
Cooling Alpenföhn Black Ridge
Memory 2*16GB DDR4-2666 VLP @3800
Video Card(s) EVGA Geforce RTX 3080 XC3
Storage 1TB Samsung 970 Pro, 2TB Intel 660p
Display(s) ASUS PG279Q, Eizo EV2736W
Case Dan Cases A4-SFX
Power Supply Corsair SF600
Mouse Corsair Ironclaw Wireless RGB
Keyboard Corsair K60
VR HMD HTC Vive
Power? Frequencies?
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
7,447 (3.89/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
I wish people wouldn't use Geekbench. It's a very very very loose indicator of real-world performance, and a much better indicator of how well Geekbench has been tuned to accommodate specific architecture in the latest update.

Apple silicon is impressive, mostly by using the most expensive fabrication process available and ditching all the legacy architecture that makes it run anything other than the miniscule selection of Apple-compiled software run at a slower, less-efficient emulation speed. At the end of the day though, it's just your everyday ARM with an absolute shit ton of Apple marketing budget and weasel-wording behind it.

This latest M4 improvement seems to have murdered power efficiency, which was Apple Silicon's biggest prior advantage. It's clear that Apple are discovering the laws of physics just like AMD, Intel, and Nvidia did all those years ago...
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2016
Messages
1,298 (0.48/day)
I wish people wouldn't use Geekbench. It's a very very very loose indicator of real-world performance, and a much better indicator of how well Geekbench has been tuned to accommodate specific architecture in the latest update.

Apple silicon is impressive, mostly by using the most expensive fabrication process available and ditching all the legacy architecture that makes it run anything other than the miniscule selection of Apple-compiled software run at a slower, less-efficient emulation speed. At the end of the day though, it's just your everyday ARM with an absolute shit ton of Apple marketing budget and weasel-wording behind it.

This latest M4 improvement seems to have murdered power efficiency, which was Apple Silicon's biggest prior advantage. It's clear that Apple are discovering the laws of physics just like AMD, Intel, and Nvidia did all those years ago...
Geekbench is used because its possible to compare across different OSes and hardware.
 
Joined
Jun 23, 2011
Messages
395 (0.08/day)
System Name potato
Processor Ryzen 9 5950X
Motherboard MSI MAG B550 Tomahawk
Cooling Custom WC Loop
Memory 2x16GB G.Skill Trident Z Neo 3600
Video Card(s) RTX3090
Storage 512GB, 2TB NVMe + 2TB SATA || 32TB spinning rust
Display(s) XIAOMI Curved 34" 144Hz UWQHD
Case be quiet dark base pro 900
Audio Device(s) Edifier R1800T, Logitech G733
Power Supply Corsair HX1000
Mouse Logitech G Pro
Keyboard Logitech G913
Software win 11 amd64
Its a impressive jump to make in the same node and in this short amount of time since the M3

impressive due to the SME, the highest jump, look at the details of the GB score.
CPU IPC increase is actually meh

hint: object detection
 
Joined
Jun 13, 2019
Messages
487 (0.27/day)
System Name Fractal
Processor Intel Core i5 13600K
Motherboard Asus ProArt Z790 Creator WiFi
Cooling Arctic Cooling Liquid Freezer II 360
Memory 16GBx2 G.SKILL Ripjaws S5 DDR5 6000 CL30-40-40-96 (F5-6000J3040F16GX2-RS5K)
Video Card(s) PNY RTX A2000 6GB
Storage SK Hynix Platinum P41 2TB
Display(s) LG 34GK950F-B (34"/IPS/1440p/21:9/144Hz/FreeSync)
Case Fractal Design R6 Gunmetal Blackout w/ USB-C
Audio Device(s) Steelseries Arctis 7 Wireless/Klipsch Pro-Media 2.1BT
Power Supply Seasonic Prime 850w 80+ Titanium
Mouse Logitech G700S
Keyboard Corsair K68
Software Windows 11 Pro
And still can't run any apps I use. So. Meh.
 
Joined
Mar 12, 2009
Messages
1,084 (0.20/day)
Location
SCOTLAND!
System Name Machine XV
Processor Dual Xeon E5 2670 V3 Turbo unlocked
Motherboard Kllisre X99 Dual
Cooling 120mm heatsink
Memory 64gb DDR4 ECC
Video Card(s) RX 480 4Gb
Storage 1Tb NVME SSD
Display(s) 19" + 23" + 17"
Case ATX
Audio Device(s) XFi xtreme USB
Power Supply 800W
Software Windows 10
geekbench is a joke.

I want to see some classic benchmarks that actually use the CPU cores and not the bunch of accelerators attached to it.

I bet if someone ran something like Pifast or wprime it wouldnt look so good.
 
Joined
Jun 6, 2021
Messages
650 (0.60/day)
System Name Red Devil
Processor AMD 5950x - Vermeer - B0
Motherboard Gigabyte X570 AORUS MASTER
Cooling NZXT Kraken Z73 360mm; 14 x Corsair QL 120mm RGB Case Fans
Memory G.SKill Trident Z Neo 32GB Kit DDR4-3600 CL14 (F4-3600C14Q-32GTZNB)
Video Card(s) PowerColor's Red Devil Radeon RX 6900 XT (Navi 21 XTX)
Storage 2 x Western Digital SN850 1GB; 1 x Samsung SSD 870EVO 2TB
Display(s) 3 x Asus VG27AQL1A; 1 x Sony A1E OLED 4K
Case Corsair Obsidian 1000D
Audio Device(s) Corsair SP2500; Steel Series Arctis Nova Pro Wireless (XBox Version)
Power Supply AX1500i Digital ATX - 1500w - 80 Plus Titanium
Mouse Razer Basilisk V3
Keyboard Razer Huntsman V2 - Optical Gaming Keyboard
Software Windows 11
M4 has a great performance increase of 22-25%, but its nothing compared to Zen 5's 10% increase. *insert clown emoji*
 
Joined
Aug 10, 2020
Messages
97 (0.07/day)
Yet another glorified tablet CPU leveraging the most expensive lithography known to man. Locked down doesn't work with Vulkan, GPUs, or much else. Pass.
 

Fourstaff

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Nov 29, 2009
Messages
10,043 (1.90/day)
Location
Home
System Name Orange! // ItchyHands
Processor 3570K // 10400F
Motherboard ASRock z77 Extreme4 // TUF Gaming B460M-Plus
Cooling Stock // Stock
Memory 2x4Gb 1600Mhz CL9 Corsair XMS3 // 2x8Gb 3200 Mhz XPG D41
Video Card(s) Sapphire Nitro+ RX 570 // Asus TUF RTX 2070
Storage Samsung 840 250Gb // SX8200 480GB
Display(s) LG 22EA53VQ // Philips 275M QHD
Case NZXT Phantom 410 Black/Orange // Tecware Forge M
Power Supply Corsair CXM500w // CM MWE 600w
Stages of grief:
Apple chips are inferior <- we are past this already
Benchmarks are rubbish <- we are here
I don't use their software anyway <- some of us are already here
They are using the latest and most expensive nodes, that's unfair comparison <- one of us is here
Apple chips are actually good <- next step

/S
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
7,447 (3.89/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Stages of grief:
Apple chips are inferior <- we are past this already
Benchmarks are rubbish <- we are here
I don't use their software anyway <- some of us are already here
They are using the latest and most expensive nodes, that's unfair comparison <- one of us is here
Apple chips are actually good <- next step

/S
Apple chips are actually good. They're state-of-the-art ARM.

My issue is with Geekbench being used.

Most of the M1, M2, M3, M4 performance can be attributed to Apple forcing developers to recompile their software specfically for their silicon. They ditched compatibility to gain performance which is a perfectly acceptable trade-off for Apple's walled garden. ARM performance and IPC is a known quantity; Apple are bolstering it with high-speed interfaces to fast storage and fast RAM, a decent power budget and state of the art manufacturing for the best performance and the best performance/Watt. A lot fhe M-silicon's success is down to Apple's software ecosystem and clout with Developers, but this also isn't just your basic tablet; These things have high-end platform componentry and a level of integration that x86 hardware vendors will never get close to. Even if it's just ARM, it's the best example of ARM you'll ever see.
 
Joined
Nov 4, 2005
Messages
11,736 (1.73/day)
System Name Compy 386
Processor 7800X3D
Motherboard Asus
Cooling Air for now.....
Memory 64 GB DDR5 6400Mhz
Video Card(s) 7900XTX 310 Merc
Storage Samsung 990 2TB, 2 SP 2TB SSDs, 24TB Enterprise drives
Display(s) 55" Samsung 4K HDR
Audio Device(s) ATI HDMI
Mouse Logitech MX518
Keyboard Razer
Software A lot.
Benchmark Scores Its fast. Enough.
single core 22% faster , more 2 E core and N3E, but multi core only 25% faster?


Boost clocks and more power gating, no doubt also in their very own special workload that fits their architecture perfectly.
 
Joined
Nov 26, 2021
Messages
1,372 (1.51/day)
Location
Mississauga, Canada
Processor Ryzen 7 5700X
Motherboard ASUS TUF Gaming X570-PRO (WiFi 6)
Cooling Noctua NH-C14S (two fans)
Memory 2x16GB DDR4 3200
Video Card(s) Reference Vega 64
Storage Intel 665p 1TB, WD Black SN850X 2TB, Crucial MX300 1TB SATA, Samsung 830 256 GB SATA
Display(s) Nixeus NX-EDG27, and Samsung S23A700
Case Fractal Design R5
Power Supply Seasonic PRIME TITANIUM 850W
Mouse Logitech
VR HMD Oculus Rift
Software Windows 11 Pro, and Ubuntu 20.04
Stages of grief:
Apple chips are inferior <- we are past this already
Benchmarks are rubbish <- we are here
I don't use their software anyway <- some of us are already here
They are using the latest and most expensive nodes, that's unfair comparison <- one of us is here
Apple chips are actually good <- next step

/S
Apple's chips are excellent, but the point about nodes is a valid one. When the shoe was on the other foot, RISC vendors used to cry ad nauseam about Intel's node advantage.
 
Joined
Apr 12, 2013
Messages
6,789 (1.67/day)
Well tbf AMD users, like me, did as well. It's a valid argument to show why X is better than Y, also Apple's chips have a slightly bandwidth advantage in that form factor. Will be great to see Strix Point(Halo?) with up to 256bit LPDDR5x memory to extract the best out of AMD's biggest advantage in the space i.e. their GPU.
 
Joined
May 30, 2015
Messages
1,884 (0.57/day)
Location
Seattle, WA
Not really, I'm thinking clocks are higher as well. Probably 5-15% just guesstimating based on how underwhelming Apple's IPC gains have been in the recent past.

IPC gains have sucked because it's been the same cores since M1. They haven't done any drastic changes except to L2 caches, fabric/SLC bandwidth, and updates to various fixed function accelerators. The new GPU architecture was rolled out with M2, mildly gimped. The un-gimped GPU was rolled out with M3. Now we have both an improved and fully un-gimped GPU and a real core architecture improvement on both big and LITTLE cores.
 

Space Lynx

Astronaut
Joined
Oct 17, 2014
Messages
16,454 (4.70/day)
Location
Kepler-186f
Processor Ryzen 7800X3D -30 uv
Motherboard AsRock Steel Legend B650
Cooling MSI C360 AIO
Memory T-Create 32gb 6000 CL 30
Video Card(s) MERC310 7900 XT -60 uv +150 core
Display(s) NZXT Canvas IPS 1440p 165hz 27"
Case NZXT H710 (Red/Black)
Audio Device(s) HD58X, Asgard 2, Modi 3
Power Supply Corsair RM850W
Well, we will need to wait and see how powerful passive cooling really is in daily workloads, when tested by reviewers.

true, m3 MacBook air throttles like a mother fucker. lol

Apple really should have bought the AirJet company and utilized it in its design
 
Joined
Apr 12, 2013
Messages
6,789 (1.67/day)
IPC gains have been minimal for much longer than, IIRC they've more or less crawled since 2018(19?) with the A series doing similar stuff.
 
Top