Which Mac Mini is faster?

Hi. In the near future I’m considering purchasing a Mac Mini.

I’ve heard a lot of talk about how the 256gb drives are much slower than 512gb versions and I fully understand the why’s about this so won’t go into it.

Storage space isn’t an issue as I keep nothing on the internal drive except those files I’m currently using so everything is kept on external drives, photos, music, movies etc.

I know that occasionally drive space is used as virtual memory when the ram is fully utilised so drive speed will be important here, so going by what I know, 512gb would be the better option.

This brings me to my question.

Which would be the faster of the two?

Option 1, 256gb ssd, as I don’t need the storage, and 24 gb of ram.

or

Option 2, 512gb ssd with 16 gb of ram.

I appreciate any help you guys can provide on this.

Currently I’m considering the M2 Mini but should the M3 Mini be released in the near future I would opt for that providing there isn’t a huge price increase.

I should also state the most intensive tasks I’ll be using it for will be photo editing in Photoshop.

Posted on Mar 4, 2024 2:59 AM

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Posted on Mar 4, 2024 6:07 AM

bay243 wrote:

Hi. In the near future I’m considering purchasing a Mac Mini.
I’ve heard a lot of talk about how the 256gb drives are much slower than 512gb versions and I fully understand the why’s about this so won’t go into it.

I should also state the most intensive tasks I’ll be using it for will be photo editing in Photoshop.

First, if you are looking at reports that say the 256GB SSD is slower than the 512GB SSDm while they may be correct in fact you won't see much practical difference unless you are doing truly disk-intensive work, which photo editing is not. Keep in mind, these are SSDs, not 5400rpm notebook drives.


If Photoshop is your main app and your "most intensive task" is photoediting then by all means lean toward more RAM. 16GB minimum, 24GB better ... especially since you cannot upgrade RAM after purchase.


I have used Photoshop for many years on many different Macs, beginning with CS6 on Intel C2D models and now on CC2024 on an Intel i9. All had internal 7200rpm HDDs except for my newest iMac that has an SSD. Most of my images are 12-24MB and I have often worked on 100MB+ images with multiple base layers & adjustment layers. (I do photo restorations.) I have never felt constrained by the CPU or disk performance. But with Photosop, RAM makes a big difference.


An M2 Mac mini w/16GB RAM & 512GB SSD would be perfectly fine for photo editing. 24GB RAM would be even better in the long term.

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Mar 4, 2024 6:07 AM in response to bay243

bay243 wrote:

Hi. In the near future I’m considering purchasing a Mac Mini.
I’ve heard a lot of talk about how the 256gb drives are much slower than 512gb versions and I fully understand the why’s about this so won’t go into it.

I should also state the most intensive tasks I’ll be using it for will be photo editing in Photoshop.

First, if you are looking at reports that say the 256GB SSD is slower than the 512GB SSDm while they may be correct in fact you won't see much practical difference unless you are doing truly disk-intensive work, which photo editing is not. Keep in mind, these are SSDs, not 5400rpm notebook drives.


If Photoshop is your main app and your "most intensive task" is photoediting then by all means lean toward more RAM. 16GB minimum, 24GB better ... especially since you cannot upgrade RAM after purchase.


I have used Photoshop for many years on many different Macs, beginning with CS6 on Intel C2D models and now on CC2024 on an Intel i9. All had internal 7200rpm HDDs except for my newest iMac that has an SSD. Most of my images are 12-24MB and I have often worked on 100MB+ images with multiple base layers & adjustment layers. (I do photo restorations.) I have never felt constrained by the CPU or disk performance. But with Photosop, RAM makes a big difference.


An M2 Mac mini w/16GB RAM & 512GB SSD would be perfectly fine for photo editing. 24GB RAM would be even better in the long term.

Mar 4, 2024 4:25 AM in response to bay243

bay243 wrote:
....
I should also state the most intensive tasks I’ll be using it for will be photo editing in Photoshop.

With Photoshop and most other Adobe apps the word is RAM, RAM, and more RAM. Get as much RAM as you can afford for these apps. Personally, after using Photoshop for many years, I would say 16GB is the minimum one should get with 24 GB or more strongly suggested.


Also, personally, if I were to buy a new Mini for photographic use, I would get the Mini Pro model. With nearly double the GPU cores processing images and double the memory bandwidth, processing images would be much more efficient and faster than a base Mini. Lots of photo filters and renderings heavily leverage the GPU.



Mar 4, 2024 6:34 AM in response to bay243

IMO at the level of performance of M2 Macs, any difference in performance between the the 256gb & 512gb SSDs will hardy be noticeable in real life ... unless you're doing video editing, in which case I'd go for a 1TB drive.


If you are budget constrained then go with more RAM and the smaller drive. If it were me, however, I would go for 24GB RAM & the 512GB drive. Consider it future-proofing a computer you would expect to use for the next 8-10 years.

Mar 4, 2024 7:51 AM in response to bay243

I went for the basic bog-standard model for editing FCP X and DaVinci Resolve.


The speed of the SSD is a red-herring as the only time it is meaningful is when straight copying huge files from one place to another.


For pretty much everything else the speed limiting factor is the CPU and GPU


Regarding wearing out the SSD with memory swapping and general usage I have got round the problem by installing macOS on a cheap 1 TB USB 3.0 SSD and booting the mini from that.


The whole caboodle works perfectly and the internal SSD has got no wear whatsoever.


As for the fact that the external SSD is much slower, it has no effect on the normal speed of the computer for the reason mentioned above.


Geekbench tests and real world rendering and exporting from FCP X or DaVinci Resolve are all the same whether booting from the internal or external SSD.


This is my setup with the M2 being booted from the Crucial SSD (£60).


Mar 4, 2024 5:52 AM in response to woodmeister50

Hi thanks for the reply.

Unfortunately buying the Mini with pro chip isn’t a financial option at the moment.

I get that more ram is desirable but I’m stuck as to which would be better.

More ram combined with a drive with slower read/write speeds, or slightly less ram combined with a drive with faster read/write speeds. Bear in mind these two setups are the same price so it’s not about which is more affordable.

I’ve heard the 256gb drives are half the speed of the 512gb drives due to the single chip vs two chips. So in theory there might not be much difference between the two setups I’ve mentioned.

Slower drive and more ram

or

faster drive and less ram.

I should add I’m not a professional, photography is a hobby.

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Which Mac Mini is faster?

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