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2-14-03 Bryan William Jones
- Product: Sonnet Encore/ST G4
1GHz and Tempo ATA133 Host Adapter
- OS X: Yes
- Company: Sonnet
- Website: http://www.sonnettech.com/
- Category: CPU Accelerator and ATA133
Host Adapter
- Cost: $599.00 U.S. for 1GHz CPU and $99.95
for ATA133 card
- Compatable Models:
- Power Mac G4 (AGP Graphics)
- Power Mac
G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)
- Power Mac G4 (Digital
Audio)
- Power Mac G4 (QuickSilver 2001)
- Power Mac G4 Cube
- Macintosh Server G4
- Test Machine: 1999 Power Mac 450MHz OS X
10.2.3
- Rating: 4 bounces - Pure Lust
To upgrade or not. That was the question....
I use a number of Macs almost daily. My laboratory
computer is a dual GHz Power Mac
ultimate configuration with the big Cinema Display
that was
maxed out even beyond the standard ultimate bundle
from the Apple store. An 800 MHz 12in iBook
serves as a portable system for presentations
and work on the road and I divide my time between
two older Macintosh workstations at home. One
of the systems at home is a massively upgraded
Powermac 9600 with RAID arrays and a 500 MHz
G3 and the other is a G4 450. While the G4 450
was a powerful machine in its day, my research
is starting to push the limits of that machine
and I have been considering what to do with it.
Since a lot of work is actually performed at
home on weekends and evenings, I entertained
the purchase of a new G4 to replace it, but an
upgrade was also another option.
CPU upgrades for Macs are not new to me with
the first CPU upgrades I've used going back to
the Daystar upgrades purchased for my old Mac
IIsi and Iici many years ago (for which Sonnet
still makes upgrades for). In addition to Daystar
I have used CPU upgrades from most of the other
manufacturers as well including Newer
Technology,
Powerlogix and
a couple of third party manufacturers, but I
have yet to have tried an upgrade from Sonnet which puzzles me somewhat
as Sonnet has apparently been building acceleration
products for the Macs since 1986 and is the leading
supplier of CPU upgrades for the Mac market.
Transparency of operation combined with performance
and 100% compatibility are the most important
things to me and I don't much care for being
able to clock the chips to get an extra few MHz.
I want reliable performance that allows me to
preserve my investment in my computers and yet
continue to allow me to be productive without
constantly having to tweak things to keep them
running. So, when it came time to upgrade the
G4 450, I thought I would give Sonnet a try with
their 1
GHz G4 Encore ST upgrade.
I have heard good things lately about the upgrades
from Sonnet and was encouraged when I heard that
many of Newertech's engineers were hired by Sonnet
as I felt Newertech was one of the better upgrade
manufacturers before they went out of business
a few years back.
I should mention that options for computer upgrades
include more than memory and CPU improvements.
For instance, since I perform a bit of my screening
work in Photoshop,
fast hard drives are a requirement for me and
was the first item I considered upgrading in
my system. However, SCSI drives are expensive,
especially for a home workstation that supplements
what I have in the lab. Even standard configurations
from Apple are still shipping with ATA 100 drives.
Therefore, after hearing about Sonnet's
Tempo ATA 133,
I was interested in combining that with a couple
of ATA 133 drives from Maxtor and
to date, I have been very impressed with the
performance and transparent operation of
the Sonnet ATA 133 card combined with those Maxtor
drives.
So, I thought if Sonnet had put the same effort
into CPU upgrades as they do with their ATA cards,
they would certainly be worth a try. In addition
to the hard drives, I had invested quite a bit
of money in memory and video cards and calculated
I could save over a thousand dollars by purchasing
an upgrade versus a new Macintosh even if I transferred
the hard drives because I would have to purchase
1.5 to 2.0 GB of DDR RAM for a new machine as
well.
Now, I should say that there are a number of
reasons to upgrade your computer, but honestly,
upgrading is not always the best solution or
even an option given some systems such as the
current iMacs. However, for many, computers are
a significant investment and one can save many
hundreds to thousands of dollars by upgrading
versus purchasing a new computer especially when
you have invested lots of money in memory, storage
and other tangible and intangible investments
such as time. In terms of time saved and thus
money, when one has a significant investment
in software, simply installing a new CPU can
be a much simpler task than installing all of
your software and settings in a new computer
system.
So, assuming that one is looking at performing
an upgrade rather than purchasing new, running
the numbers in my case gives us the following:
a new base G4 from Apple would cost $1500 and
inexpensive RAM from a good source like Other
World Computing would
run another $210 for a grand total of $1710 minus
tax. Going to the Sonnet website, a G4 upgrade
at 1GHz was $599 which got me thinking, I suppose
that I could have sold the old G4 450 for probably
$500, but the delta still would have been around
$600 and I would have the hassle of selling it,
transferring data, erasing hard drives etc...etc...etc...
Upgrading was a much better option at this point
not to mention it being the more environmentally
conscious decision. Sonnet it was.
The upgrade comes with straightforward instructions
on how to upgrade along with the chip on a daughtercard
and an extender for replacing the CPU's on dual
processing machines. Installation is trivially
easy, especially with Apple's case design that
debuted back in early 1999 with the Blue and
White G3's and took all of about six relaxed
minutes with a Philips head screwdriver and hemostat
(needle nose pliers work too). In short, the
Sonnet instructions for the upgrade instruct
you to open the case, remove the old heatsink
and reuse it for the upgrade which I must admit
initially did not completely please me as I would
like a much larger heatsink with possibly a fan
to facilitate cooling. In fact, I would even
be willing to pay another $20-40 for a larger
heatsink/fan combination possibly as an option
considering that the power plug is already in
place on the upgrade for use in the digital audio
models. Granted, the Powerbooks with 1GHz G4's
do not have nearly the cooling capabilities of
even the small desktop heatsink in the G4 450,
so cooling is probably not an issue, and after
running this upgrade for a full week for 24 hours
a day under heavy CPU loads without a problem,
the heatsink, while warmer than before was not
unbearably hot to the touch and the machine ran
error free. But I would feel better with more
capable cooling for this chip for long-term reliability.
As for the fan in the case, it runs a bit more
now and the air coming out of the back does feel
warmer than before but not any different than
the air coming out of the dual GHz machine. Besides
the easy of installation, another big plus for
me with this card was that there are no switches
to set like I had to with the Newertech cards
and Powerlogix cards in the past and no software
to install like with all previous upgrade cards
I have ever tested either. You just plug it in,
reboot and it works. You get an instant speedup,
kind of like a supercharger for your Mac.
Minor complaints with the heatsink aside, I
am very happy with the performance of the chip,
especially for the price. Subjectively, the perceived
performance increase was immediately apparent
and OS X is much faster
and comparable to the experience with the dual
GHz Quicksilver at the lab. Quantitatively, since
I spend a lot of time in Photoshop, a rigorous
test of series of filters, transformations and
image operations using functions that are both
optimized for Altivec and those that are not
were in order. These tests revealed a 58% increase
in performance over the stock 450MHz CPU. Image
operations in ImageJ and
IDL take
place almost instantly versus my having to wait
as I did before. Image classifications take place
62% faster, background tasks like printing take
place much faster than before and oh yeah, frame
rates for the Radeon 8500 card increased 66%,
so those interested in 3D games should find them
much more playable than before and at higher
resolutions. Also, 3D rendering of image reconstructions
in Vectorworks has
significantly dropped from 30 minutes to 12 minutes,
10 seconds, and the time for exporting
Quicktime movies
from iMovie has been cut in half.
A quick benchmark with Xbench revealed a score of 55.28 before the upgrade
and 96.87 after which is pretty respectable considering
that my completely tricked out dual GHz Quicksilver
with GeForce Ti video card scored 111.65 on Xbench.
 |
A graph of the
performance differences between the stock
G4 450 and the same machine
with the Sonnet 1Ghz G4 upgrade. Categorical
values have been
normalized to fit within the graph. This
demonstrates graphically the
increase in scores on the benchmarking application
and the 3D
framerates, while illustrating the decrease
in time required for
various tasks completed in their respective
applications with the
Sonnet upgrade. |
Another very important factor with a number
of CPU upgrades from different manufacturers
has been sleep and deep sleep. Problems have
been reported from many folks with CPU upgrades
from other manufacturers, when they tried to
either put their machines to sleep or wake them
from sleep which can result in a crash. But Sonnet's
upgrade appears to work flawlessly which is nice
as it avoids having to wait for your system to
cold boot every time you want to use it with
CPU upgrades from other companies.
All told, I spent the last week giving the system
as complete a workout as possible and I can certainly
say this upgrade is well worth the price of admission.
Perhaps I should have even gone for the 1.2 GHz
model which most likely would have outperformed
my dual GHz system at the lab in many tasks,
but I am certainly more than satisfied with the
performance and the price of admission for this
upgrade. The quality is top notch and the ease
and transparency of operation is something that
all upgrade manufacturers should aspire to. Oh,
and purchasing a Sonnet Encore/ST G4 upgrade
(any speed) between
February 1 and March 31, 2003 will net you a
free 32MB Flash storage
USB keychain drive.
- Bryan William Jones What do you think? Talk about it in our Forums...
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