Mechanical unfolding of a single domain of loop-truncated superoxide dismutase protein has been simulated via force spectroscopy techniques with both all-atom (AA) models and several coarse-grained models having different levels of resolution: A Gō model containing all heavy atoms in the protein (HA-Gō), the associative memory, water mediated, structure and energy model (AWSEM) which has 3 interaction sites per amino acid, and a Gō model containing only one interaction site per amino acid at the Cα position (Cα-Gō). To systematically compare results across models, the scales of time, energy, and force were suitably renormalized in each model. TM alignment, native contact, and clustering analysis show that all models consistently predict a similar single pathway unfolding mechanism for early force- induced unfolding events, but these models diverge in their predictions for late stage unfolding events when the protein is more significantly disordered. When the protein is about half-unfolded, the unfolding pathways of the AA, HA-Gō, Cα-Gō models bifurcate repeatedly to multiple branches. The AWSEM model has a single dominant unfolding pathway over the whole range of unfolding, in contrast to all other models. However, the AWSEM pathway has the most structural similarity to the AA model at high nativeness, but the least structural similarity to the AA model at low nativeness. In comparison to the AA model, the sequence of native contact breakage is best predicted by the HA-Gō model.