Skip to content

The new 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros powered by the M2 Pro and M2 Max chips have faster SSD write speeds than their predecessors, according to tests and reviews of the new laptops.

Feature Apple MacBook Pro M2 Blue Green
This week, select reviewers and media had the opportunity to review the new MacBook Pros ahead of their availability starting Tuesday, January 24. As part of their reviews, Macworld AND Tom’s Guide tested the SSD read and write speeds of the M2 Pro and M2 Max chips in Apple’s latest laptops.

When Macworld tested with the Blackmagic Disk Speed ​​app, the 16-inch MacBook Pro with the M2 Pro in a 2TB memory configuration achieved a read speed of 5,372 MBps and a write speed of 6,491 MBps. The previous-generation 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M1 Pro chip and 1 TB of storage scored a slightly higher read speed of 5,797 MBps than the 16-inch M2 Pro; however, it scored a lower write speed of 5,321 MBps.

toms guide mbp ssd speed

Blackmagic disk speed results according to tests from Tom’s Guide

Test results published by Tom’s Guide also show that the new M2 Pro has faster write speeds than the M1 Pro, but slightly slower read speeds. Testing the 14-inch MacBook Pro with the M2 Max, the laptop scored similar to the 16-inch M2 Pro, achieving a read speed of 5,319 MBps and a write speed of 6,402 MBps.

Although the new MacBook Pros have slightly slower read speeds according to these tests, users are unlikely to notice a difference in day-to-day performance unless they are working with significantly large files. Storage speed and performance is also affected by other factors, such as storage capacity.

Last year, it emerged that Apple significantly reduced the SSD speed for the base model M2 MacBook Air by including one less SSD chip in the laptop. With 256GB of storage capacity, MacBook Air features a single NAND chip, leading to up to 50% slower read speeds and up to 30% slower write speeds. Previous base MacBook Air models had two NAND chips instead of one. Apple said in a statement that the MacBook Air has “even faster” real-world performance and a “higher-density NAND” chip.

Reviews of the latest M2 Pro and M2 Max chips in the updated 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro praised the new chips’ fast performance, longer battery life, and updated ports like HDMI 2.1 support. Thanks to the efficiency of the new chips, the updated 16-inch MacBook Pro has the longest battery life ever in a Mac, up to 22 hours.

.

[ad_2]