IMac is super slow, start up especially. Report attached

This desktop has been slow since I purchased it in 2017, but has gotten worse. There's plenty of storage.

Posted on Apr 13, 2024 12:22 AM

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Posted on Apr 13, 2024 10:42 AM

The three data points that supports the others' spot-on comments about the hard drive is right here:


Performance:

System Load: 1.77 (1 min ago) 1.84 (5 min ago) 1.44 (15 min ago)

Nominal I/O usage: 6.73 MB/s

File system: 73.60 seconds ⚠️

Write speed: 58 MB/s ⚠️

Read speed: 56 MB/s ⚠️


Even when the drive was 100% healthy, its Write/Read values could not exceed about 70-80 MB/sec with newer macOS versions, and that is still dreadfully slow. Adding RAM, even were it easy (it's not), will have zero effect on drive performance.


Your drive may be struggling with general heath because of the 70+ second file system score. I have a collection of EtreCheck drive scores, and only drives that are close to failure post File System scores over about 40-50seconds.


However, the "Pachyderm on the Premises" is right here:


iMac Model: iMac18,1

2.3 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i5 (i5-7360U) CPU: 2-core


You have the crippled educational/institutional iMac, intended for price-sensitive bulk sales where computing power is a second- or third-order factor. It has a slow 2.3 Ghz laptop-class, 2-core processor.


The standard consumer entry-level iMac model that year, the iMac (Retina 4K 21.5-inch, 2017), came with a proper desktop-class 3.0gHz 4-core process as the SLOWEST option. The makes a huge difference on bench scores, as shown in this comparison from the MacTracker database (yours is on top):



That is quite a performance penalty for a US$200 cost savings.


Still, the external SSD option already offered will make a considerable difference in how you experience your computer. The least expensive incarnation will increase drive scores to about 400MB/sec, and requires neither professional installation nor opening a computer case that Apple did not design for consumer opening.

3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Apr 13, 2024 10:42 AM in response to CShepard79

The three data points that supports the others' spot-on comments about the hard drive is right here:


Performance:

System Load: 1.77 (1 min ago) 1.84 (5 min ago) 1.44 (15 min ago)

Nominal I/O usage: 6.73 MB/s

File system: 73.60 seconds ⚠️

Write speed: 58 MB/s ⚠️

Read speed: 56 MB/s ⚠️


Even when the drive was 100% healthy, its Write/Read values could not exceed about 70-80 MB/sec with newer macOS versions, and that is still dreadfully slow. Adding RAM, even were it easy (it's not), will have zero effect on drive performance.


Your drive may be struggling with general heath because of the 70+ second file system score. I have a collection of EtreCheck drive scores, and only drives that are close to failure post File System scores over about 40-50seconds.


However, the "Pachyderm on the Premises" is right here:


iMac Model: iMac18,1

2.3 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i5 (i5-7360U) CPU: 2-core


You have the crippled educational/institutional iMac, intended for price-sensitive bulk sales where computing power is a second- or third-order factor. It has a slow 2.3 Ghz laptop-class, 2-core processor.


The standard consumer entry-level iMac model that year, the iMac (Retina 4K 21.5-inch, 2017), came with a proper desktop-class 3.0gHz 4-core process as the SLOWEST option. The makes a huge difference on bench scores, as shown in this comparison from the MacTracker database (yours is on top):



That is quite a performance penalty for a US$200 cost savings.


Still, the external SSD option already offered will make a considerable difference in how you experience your computer. The least expensive incarnation will increase drive scores to about 400MB/sec, and requires neither professional installation nor opening a computer case that Apple did not design for consumer opening.

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IMac is super slow, start up especially. Report attached

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