Apple Power Mac G5 dual 2.7GHz

By Troy Dreier, CNET.com on 14 June 2005

Apple's latest high-end Power Mac G5 is a blazing machine that stands up without blinking to the best of the competition, but we're still annoyed by some of its shortcomings.

1.0
  • Good: DVD drive now supports double-layer discs • Base configuration supports 30-inch Apple Cinema HD monitor • Includes Mac OS 10.4 Tiger and the latest iLife suite • Has higher maximum storage capacity than previous model
  • Bad: Only one optical drive bay • No memory card reader and not enough USB ports •
  • Specs: 512MB • Mac OS X • PowerPC G5 • DDR400 • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$4,899.00

In a flurry of new releases, including the latest version of OS X and new versions of its professional video applications, Apple has boosted its high-end Power Mac G5 line so that the top configuration now has dual 2.7GHz G5 processors. We tested this model and found other improvements -- double-layer DVD support and out-of-the-box support for a 30-inch Apple Cinema HD display -- that will please its target market of video and design professionals. The same curious Apple shortcomings on which we previously commented remain, however, such as the lack of a second optical drive, a minimum of ports, and no option for a flash card reader. We appreciate that the baseline price with the added features remains at AU$4,899, but Apple is really just keeping pace with the march of technology. The Power Mac G5 is still an excellent machine, but no more so than last year's system was at the time.

The Apple Power Mac G5's graceful yet industrial "cheese grater" design hasn't changed with this go-round; it has the same sleek but solid shape and hefty size at 206 by 475 by 511 mm (WDH). As before, you can pull a latch on the back to release a side panel and access the internal slots -- the best accessibility we've seen in any system. A removable clear plastic panel inside the machine sections off different areas so that the fans have to work less. Indeed, the Power Mac emits only a quiet hum while working.

The Power Mac has three free PCI-X slots (not to be confused with PCI-Express, a.k.a. PCIe, the wider-bandwidth expansion bus found in newer Windows-based PCs), but if you choose the build-to-order Nvidia GeForce 6800 Ultra DDL graphics card to populate the AGP slot (as in our test system), it will block the adjacent PCI-X slot. Our system also came with 4GB of 400MHz DDR SDRAM (up from the standard of 512MB) in four 1GB sticks, leaving four slots vacant. A free storage bay lets you add a second hard drive for a possible total of 800GB of storage (ours had the standard 250GB Serial ATA 7,200rpm drive); that's an improvement over the previous high-end Power Mac, which topped out at 500GB. Still, two hard drive bays is the bare minimum for a system in this class.

Apple is stubbornly keeping the number of USB and FireWire ports low, with one USB 2.0 port on the front and two on the back, one FireWire 400 port on the front and one on the back, and a FireWire 800 port on the back. Plug in a mouse and a keyboard, and you'll use up two of those USB ports; however, if you use the Apple keyboard and monitor, you'll gain two USB 2.0 and two FireWire ports on the back of the monitor and two USB 1.1 ports on the keyboard. High-end Windows PCs routinely offer more ports. Likewise, it's increasingly rare for a comparable Windows PC not to have a built-in card reader -- something no Mac has ever had -- or to offer only a single optical drive.

Although the Apple Power Mac G5 has only one optical drive, it's been improved to a 4X DVD+R double-layer drive (it also handles DVD±RW and CD-RW discs). The double-layer support seems designed to coincide with the inclusion of the high-definition H.264 codec in OS 10.4, allowing you to burn an entire high-definition project on one disc.

The base configuration of this Power Mac costs AU$4,899, but the system we tested comes to in excess of AU$9000 with memory and graphics upgrades plus Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and a 20-inch Cinema Display. That's steep, but in line with comparable Windows models once you've added a monitor. Remember to budget extra for speakers (no, AU$4,899 doesn't get you a pair of speakers), a keyboard with dedicated media keys and a two-button mouse with a scrollwheel. Why Apple continues to torment customers with a one-button mouse is a mystery to which only Steve Jobs knows the answer.

The target audience should love that the dual 2.7GHz Power Mac G5 can now drive a 30-inch Apple Cinema HD Display out of the box. Previously that required a graphics-card upgrade, but the high-end Power Mac comes with an ATI Radeon 9650 card that can handle the task. The middle two Power Macs can upgrade to the ATI Radeon 9650 for only AU$90. They normally ship with the ATI Radeon 9600, which can drive two 23-inch displays, while the dual 2.7GHz Power Mac's ATI Radeon 9650 can drive one 30-inch and one 23-inch display. To use two 30-inch displays, you'll need to upgrade to the Nvidia GeForce 6800 Ultra DDL, a AU$695 option found on our test system.

Our Power Mac G5 review unit held up well in CNET Labs' tests and showed itself a match for comparable Intel PCs running at faster clock speeds. In our Adobe Photoshop CS test, the Power Mac was bested only by the Velocity Micro ProMagix DCX, an overclocked 3.2GHz dual-core system. While that's impressive, the Power Mac's built-to-order 4GB of RAM was likely a big help. Compared to the older dual 2.5GHz Power Mac G5 (also with 4GB of memory) that we tested last year, the dual 2.7GHz G5 model took 48 fewer seconds to complete the Photoshop CS test.

On our new Apple iTunes MP3-encoding test, the dual 2.7GHz Power Mac G5 took top honours by a wide margin, likely due to iTunes running more efficiently on the hardware on which it originated. Finally, on our Sorenson Squeeze 4.0 video-encoding test, the Power Mac ran only slightly behind the ProMagix DCX and a white-box system with Intel's new 3.73GHz Extreme Edition chip -- an impressive feat for the PowerPC G5 chip, showing that it's up to the task of matching the latest from Intel.

In our usage tests, the Apple Power Mac G5 was a pleasure, consistently able to handle whatever we threw at it, including processor hogs such as high-definition QuickTime movies and multitrack GarageBand songs. Even when we ran several programs at the same time, the Power Mac performed smoothly, without any visual or audio glitches.

The Power Mac comes with Apple's standard professional software bundle, which is strong in multimedia apps but weak in business ones. It ships with OS 10.4, so you'll get the fun of Dashboard and its widgets as well as the latest versions of QuickTime, the iLife '05 suite (with iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie HD, iDVD, and GarageBand), Mail, Safari, and iCal. Professional designers will like Art Directors Toolkit and Graphic Converter.

In the box, you'll get a slim but comprehensive user guide and a guide to OS 10.4, as well as a pamphlet on service and support options. Apple offers just 90 days of toll-free phone support and one year of repair service standard. For further peace of mind, buy the AppleCare Protection Plan at checkout, giving you three years of phone support and repair service for AU$419. If you decide to help yourself, Apple has a well-organised support Web site. We recommend the user forums, since someone is bound to have had the same problem you're experiencing, and Mac fans are typically helpful to those in need.

Adobe Photoshop CS test (in minutes:seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Velocity Micro ProMagix DCX (4.0GHz Intel P4 560; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)*
2:06 
Apple Power Mac G5 (dual 2.7GHz PowerPC G5; 4,096MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz)
2:34 
Intel dual-core white box (3.2GHz Pentium Processor Extreme Edition 840; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
2:51 
Intel P4 Extreme Edition white box (3.73GHz Pentium 4 Extreme Edition; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
2:56 

Apple iTunes 4.7.1.30 MP3-encoding test (in minutes:seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Apple Power Mac G5 (dual 2.7GHz PowerPC G5; 4,096MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz)
1:13 
Velocity Micro ProMagix DCX (4.0GHz Intel P4 560; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)*
1:53 
Intel dual-core white box (3.2GHz Pentium Processor Extreme Edition 840; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
2:14 
Intel P4 Extreme Edition white box (3.73GHz Pentium 4 Extreme Edition; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
2:38 

Sorenson Squeeze 4.0 video-encoding test (in minutes:seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Velocity Micro ProMagix DCX (4.0GHz Intel P4 560; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)*
3:16 
Intel P4 Extreme Edition white box (3.73GHz Pentium 4 Extreme Edition; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
3:32 
Apple Power Mac G5 (dual 2.7GHz PowerPC G5; 4,096MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz
3:46 
Intel dual-core white box (3.2GHz Pentium Processor Extreme Edition 840; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
4:00 
Note: * CPU and graphics are overclocked.


System configurations:

Intel dual-core white box
3.2GHz Intel Pentium Processor Extreme Edition 840; Intel 955X Express chipset; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 256MB Sapphire Radeon X850 XT PCIe; 160GB 7,200rpm Seagate ST3160827AS Serial ATA hard drive; Windows XP Professional SP2.

Intel Pentium 4 Extreme Edition white box
3.73GHz Intel Pentium 4 Processor Extreme Edition; Intel 955X Express chipset; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 256MB Sapphire Radeon X850 XT PCIe; 160GB 7,200rpm Seagate ST3160827AS Serial ATA hard drive; Windows XP Professional SP2.

Apple Power Mac G5
Dual PowerPC G5 2.7GHz; 4,096MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 256MB Nvidia GeForce 6800 Ultra DDL AGP; 250GB 7,200rpm Maxtor Serial ATA hard drive; Macintosh OS 10.4.

Apple iMac G5
PowerPC G5 2.0GHz; 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB ATI Radeon 9600; 160GB 7,200rpm Maxtor Serial ATA hard drive; Macintosh OS 10.4.

Velocity Micro ProMagix DCX (4.0GHz Intel P4 560; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz)
3.2GHz Intel Pentium Processor Extreme Edition 840 overclocked to 4.0GHz; Intel 955X Express chipset; 1,024MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; 256MB ATI Radeon X850 XT PE PCIe; two 74GB 10,000rpm Western Digital Serial ATA hard drives in a RAID 0 array; one 400GB 7,200rpm Hitachi HDS724040KLSA80 Serial ATA hard drive; Windows XP Professional SP2.

Note: Products in this test are for comparative purposes only and are not necessarily available in the Australian market.

Topics: apple, power, mac, desktop, tiger, g5, 667mhz, sdram, ddr2, extreme

Comments (11)

  • Anonymous gave 1/10 on 28/01/2006 09:40 Report abuse

    Fast

    I use these for video/music/photo editing. I dont actually have this one but I have a similar one. I upgraded the ram from a third party provider. Worked fine for me. It was about 250 bucks for a 2gb stick and 120 for a 1gb stick. It handles at least 8gb of ram but I dont need that much.

  • frank gave 1/10 on 23/10/2005 01:56 Report abuse

    Fast and reliable

    Good connectivity
    Fast to set up out of the box
    Software included is huge

  • anonymous gave 1/10 on 07/09/2005 17:12 Report abuse

    the best computer you can buy

    all computers have problems, Mac, Windows Linux, whatever just because ONE that you tried froze, doesnt mean that they all do,come on they are macs, its windows that specializes in freezing!

  • PC KING gave a review on 23/08/2005 09:10 Report abuse

    Try before you buy!

    Simply walk into a shop, ask them if you can play a few games on it, and even get them to play a AVI file you encoded in uncompressed format at full HD resolution 1080P. I did this and the computer froze on me, i laughed at the guy who wanted to sell me the Mac and walked out!

  • Mac No wannabe gave a review on 23/08/2005 09:03 Report abuse

    Dissapointing

    I am so glad i come to this site, thank you CNET for giving us readers a more personal guide to what the real world thinks about this new Mac. My mate didn't listen to me when i said its not worth spendin the money on, so he bought one and then came whining to me about how poorly it has performed with his video productions. As a fe wothers have mentioned here, he didn't know it only came with 512mb Ram and when he went to upgrade to a 4GB ram they said that will be $2150 thank you, i say to you now, dont buy it, or you will end up like my mate!

  • Biggest Mac Fan gave a review on 23/08/2005 08:53 Report abuse

    Biggest Mac Fan

    I have always bought a Mac, love the OS and the software, but when it came to upgrading a few weeks ago, i decided to go this New 2.7GHZ Mac G5. Wow i thought all my dreams had come true. Spent over $7000 on the system i thought would be enough, but to my dissapointment, the Card was 512mb Ram, spend a futher $2000 getting a 4GB Ram, and a futher $600 on a few more hard drives, which ended up costing over $9600 + extras etc. Playing games still lags, video editing and encoding dont live up to my expectations and i simply waited just under 10K for something i could have done on the toilet readin the CNET reviews about this Mac. Why woudl you do this to me Mac?

  • Never to be a Mac Fan Again! gave a review on 23/08/2005 08:35 Report abuse

    How much did you say?

    I personally cannot see who in there right mind would pay so much for a Computer. 512mb ram would get ya, lets see, NO WHERE when it comes to making top end Video productions. I almost bought one through a IT shop that was willing to give it to me cut price, but decided not to as it was still over the $5000 mark with only 512mb ram and a 1 lazy optical drive and didn't have enough USB ports i required. What has this world come to? Mac you dissapoint me!

  • anonymous gave 1/10 on 03/08/2005 21:43 Report abuse

    A bit to expensive, but the best computer in its class!

    I dont actually own one of these baby's, but i use one for work, compared to other PC's, in particular windows, it performs much faster and more smoothly than any other computer. But the price is a bit of a let down, though.

  • bfirewalker gave 1/10 on 31/07/2005 17:26 Report abuse

    Workhorse, it is! hhmmmm!

    it is a workhorse! no i don't own one, but i use one. you can have all the 10 Ghz CPUs out there but in a Windows interface, sorry. cant get my job done that way... OSX Tiger in a Powermac 2.7 is unbeatable... IT GETS THE JOB DONE, FAST!!!

  • Jim gave 1/10 on 25/06/2005 08:46 Report abuse

    By far the best computer I have owned.

    This is a very serious machine and not aimed at the kiddie crowd. A Dell Precision 670 dual 3.6 Xeon can edge out a dual 2.7 G5 Powermac slightly in a few benchmarks but expect to pay at least $1000 more than the Powermac. I like how Apple only uses 512 MB of RAM, on the base configuration, because I only spent $110 per GB of aftermarket RAM to upgrade my dual 2.7 G5.

    The design of this machine is absolutely stunning and attention to detail is very high. However, don't overlook the operating system! It is also a work of art and very well thought out. Based on BSD unix it is very secure, stabile and feature rich.

    There is so much integration between the core apps that Windows isn't even close. Apple's Spotlight search tool works great! I can't believe how quick it is. Windows won't have anything like Spotlight until Longhorn comes out in 2008 or whenever.

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