By Nadeem Sarwar Published November 23, 2024 10:04 AM
The updated slate of MacBook Pro, powered by the M4 series silicon, has once again established Apple’s performance dominance in the segment. However, a teardown courtesy of the folks over at iFixit has confirmed that not much has changed internally, which means the usual repairability snags are still here.
Starting with the new elements this time around, Apple engineers seem to have redesigned the logic board, increasing the heatsink size and shifting a few component locations. The ports are easy to replace on the new laptop, and the battery is repair-friendly, as well.
However, if you harbor any self-repair ambitions, Apple won’t make it easy. The nasty stretch-release adhesive for accessing the battery pack is here to stay, and the main board is not easy to remove, either.
There are a total of six stretch release tabs close to the trackpad area and eight on the sides. As for the logic board removal process, iFixit’s teardown video doesn’t mince words in referring to it as “incredibly complex and tedious.”
Similar is the situation if you intend to replace the card reader or MagSafe connection kit, as that would require advanced soldering chops and all the expensive tools needed for the undertaking.
Apple is also using foam elements that require isopropyl alcohol to remove. Then there’s a generous network of gaskets and flex cables before the board finally comes off.
Once again, Apple’s part-matching strategy and calibration protocols for repair and replacement services emerge as a key hurdle. “Swapping displays or logic boards is a minefield of software locks,” notes an iFixit blog post.
MacBook Pro M4 Teardown: What’s Inside and What’s Fixable?
That means if you intend to replace a misfiring component with a cheaper, third-party replacement part, there is no guarantee that it will be fully functional. The screen and Touch ID module are two such parts that would have you fork out serious cash for a replacement job.
Interestingly, it seems Apple has quietly made some repairability improvements on its end. According to a Macrumors report that cites an internal memo, Apple will offer speakers as standalone repair parts for the M4-driven 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro laptops.
So far, experts at Apple Stores and Apple Authorized Service Providers have had to replace the entire top case in order to fit a new speaker, which was quite an expensive ordeal. Apple is expected to list these standalone speaker parts soon on its self-repair service dashboard.
The process of replacing a faulty speaker isn’t exactly a cakewalk, but at least DIY enthusiasts won’t have to spend a bomb if they muster the courage to fix a MacBook Pro on their own. Given Apple’s historical repairability stance, I’d call that a win.
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…
Apple defends the M4 Mac mini’s power button
Apple announced a new wave of product refreshes recently, and not only does the charging port for the Magic Mouse remain on the bottom of the device -- the M4 Mac mini's power button has been moved to the bottom, too. These design choices have riled up plenty of people, but it seems Apple stands by its new power button placement for the Mac mini.
In a video posted on Chinese social media platform Bilibili, Apple's Greg Joswiak not only defends the decision but praises it. He calls it a "kind of optimal spot for a power button," claiming that you just need to "kinda tuck your finger in there and hit the button."
Read more
With the M4 here, there are two Macs you now shouldn’t buy
The M4 chip update for the Mac was quite a shakeup. Apple simultaneously introduced the M4 Pro and M4 Max, while also bumping RAM across the starting configurations of the new Mac mini and MacBook Pro. All in all, these are great changes that have sweetened the deal on these new M4 products.
But all the changes in the lineup have left two Macs completely in the cold -- and until they get updated, you shouldn't buy them.
Mac Studio (M2 Ultra)
Read more
Teardown of the M4 Mac mini reveals a huge surprise
Thanks to a video posted on social media showing the inside of the new Mac mini, we now know it has modular storage and the 256GB base model uses two 128GB chips. This is good news for tech enthusiasts who were disappointed with the M2 Mac mini's single 256GB chip since it caused slower SSD speeds.
Two chips allows for parallel reading and writing so jobs can get done faster, but it's important to note that the difference isn't noticeable for most day-to-day tasks. The problem only applied to 256GB models and was primarily a pain point for enthusiasts -- but it's still nice to know that Apple is willing to listen to customers sometimes (not always, though).
Read more