Using Liquid Nitrogen is common in extreme overclock environments where all types of chips are pushed to the limit, whether CPUs, GPUs, RAM, etc. The ability of this material to achieve extreme temperatures of hundreds of degrees below zero makes it ideal for these tasks, but it had never occurred to us that anyone would use it for cool an iPad Pro and see what he is capable of new M4 chip from Apple.
That’s what the Chinese team of enthusiasts has done Geekerwanusing a Kingpin Liquid Nitrogen block, the Cooling T-Rex Rev 4 for CPUs, and placing it directly on the back of the new generation iPad Pro, right where the company’s M4 processor is located.
These results have been achieved with the 6-core M3 variant made up of 3 P-Cores and 3 E-Cores, but it seems that the group has already achieved a variant with 10 cores (4 P-Cores + 6 E-Cores) to see what he is capable of.
With this system, the 3+3-core M4 has managed to operate stably at 4.41 GHz during the test, managing to outperform laptop SoCs such as the M3 Max and the M2 Ultra in the single-core test. Specifically, they have achieved exceed 4,000 points (by a single point), achieving a much higher score than the 3,100 and 2,700 that Apple laptops and desktops with the M3 Max and M2 Ultra usually achieve in GeekBench 6.
Naturally, in the multi-core test it falls below those two, since we went from 6 total cores to 12+4 and 16+8 in the M3 Max variants of the MacBook Pro and the M2 Ultra of the Mac Studio respectively. The multi-core score achieved by this 6-core M4 is 13,595
We will have to wait until the 18th of this month to see the entire process.
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