Skip to main content

Is a Mac Pro update coming soon? New leaks point to improved AMD Radeon graphics

AMD Radeon Pro W6900X
A purported image of the upcoming AMD Radeon Pro W6900X Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Mac Pro could be about to receive a noticeable boost to its performance. A new range graphics cards called the AMD Radeon Pro W6000 series appear destined for the Mac Pro, and have been not only photographed but also benchmarked. These cards will support AMD’s Navi RDNA2 architecture, offering a substantial upgrade to current Mac Pro graphics performance.

Images of two of the cards have leaked, giving a first glimpse of them out in the wild. However, the photos depict the type of standard PCIe graphics card that usually appears in Windows PCs. Apple’s Mac Pro, on the other hand, uses a proprietary MPX Module to house the graphics card, so the images in question almost certainly do not reflect what the cards will look like inside the Mac Pro, if they are indeed ever offered for sale by Apple.

Even more tantalizingly, one of the cards — the Radeon Pro W6900X — has appeared on benchmarking website Geekbench, where it scored 177,719 in the Metal graphics test. Compare that to the Vega II Duo, currently the top-end GPU available in the Mac Pro, which scored 101,502 in the same test. Exact specs of the W6000 series cards, such as the amount of video memory they possess, are not yet known.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Interestingly, the W6900X card was tested inside a Mac Pro system (code-named MacPro 7,1) with an Intel Core i9 10920X processor, something that is not currently available to be configured inside a Mac Pro. What this means is anyone’s guess — Apple may have been using this processor simply for testing purposes, or it may offer it in future configurations. This seems unlikely, though, as currently the Mac Pro only offers workstation-class Xeon processors.

Still, the leaked images and scores remain intriguing, and could hint at a future graphics upgrade for the Mac Pro. Industry analysts have claimed for months that the Mac Pro is due to be updated in 2021, including with an all-new half-size model, although the full-size version will not yet make the leap to custom Apple Silicon chips. This could be because Apple is waiting for more pro software to be available on the new chip architecture, or because Apple’s high-end chips are not yet ready for production.

Still, given that Apple is actively testing new internal components for the Mac Pro, we might not have long to wait for news of a refreshed version.

Editors' Recommendations

Alex Blake
In ancient times, people like Alex would have been shunned for their nerdy ways and strange opinions on cheese. Today, he…
Want an M3 Max MacBook Pro? There’s a lengthy wait ahead
An Apple MacBook Pro 14 sits open on a table.

If you’ve been holding out for a super-powered MacBook Pro with a high-end M3 Pro or M3 Max chip, you could have a lengthy wait on your hands. That’s because, despite Apple’s plans to launch new Macs later this year, several are reportedly going to miss the cut.

That’s according to journalist Mark Gurman, who claims in a new report that Apple’s flagship 16-inch and 14-inch MacBook Pro models are unlikely to launch until the middle of 2024. Worse, the M3 Mac mini might not see the light of day until late 2024 at the earliest.

Read more
The M3 MacBook Pro may launch sooner than anyone expected
Fortnite running on a Macbook M1.

Earlier this week, we learned that Apple’s next batch of Macs loaded with M3 chips could be set to launch in the fall. Today, a fresh report claims they could arrive ahead of schedule -- but there are reasons to be doubtful.

The idea comes from a paywalled DigiTimes report (via MacRumors), which cites “industry sources” to claim that Apple will introduce a new MacBook Pro -- complete with a 3-nanometer Apple silicon chip that will boast improved performance and efficiency -- as soon as the third quarter of 2023. That quarter runs from July 1 until September 30.

Read more
Apple’s new Mac Pro might be dead on arrival
A blown up view of Apple's 2023 Mac Pro.

After four long years of waiting, Apple has finally transitioned its Mac Pro away from Intel processors. Now, the M2 Ultra is powering the workstation, and even without concrete benchmarks, there's little doubt that the Mac Pro will clobber the previous generation. But it unfortunately also lacks everything that made the previous generation so impressive.

Apple has backpedaled on what made the previous Mac Pro such a monumental step forward for the company, and it's hamstrung the Mac Pro by forcing it onto its own silicon. There's no doubt the M2 Ultra will be impressive when it launches, but the flexibility afforded by the previous generation isn't present this time around.
It will be powerful

Read more