MacBooks, especially those equipped with M-series processors, have long been praised by users. However, recent reports have indicated that this may not be the case when it comes to SSD performance. According to the latest tests he base level 14-inch M2 MacBook Pro reportedly has a slower SSD than its predecessor. Here are the details…

The base M2 14-inch MacBook Pro has an SSD downgrade

The base level 14-inch M2 (Pro) MacBook Pro reportedly has a slower SSD than its predecessor. In BlackMagic’s Disk Speed Test, the 512 GB SSD in Apple’s latest flagship achieved read speed scores of around 2,970 MB/s and write speed scores of around 3,150 MB/s, compared to 4,900 MB/s reads and 3,950 MB/s writes that the M1 Pro with a 512GB SSD was capable of.

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This means that the base model of the M2 MacBook Pro has around 39 percent slower reads and 20 percent slower writes than the one released in 2021. The reason for the difference is likely because of to the chips used in the SSD. According to 9to5Mac, the 512 GB SSD in the previous-gen 14-inch had four NAND storage chip. However, the one on the M2 Pro seems to have only two.

These are higher-capacity chips, but they can’t parallelize reads and writes as much, resulting in slower performance. This is not a new strategy for Apple, as both the 256GB M2 MacBook Air and 13-inch MacBook Pro had slower storage than the M1 versions of those laptops. It is disappointing to see that the base-level M2 Pro are measurably worse than their predecessors in terms of SSD performance. Especially considering the 14-inch MacBook Pro costs $2,000. It is worth noting that the SSDs in the new Macs will not be “that” slow. They will still perform well in daily tasks.

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