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Cosa ti serve
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Rimuovi le seguenti viti Pentalobe P5 che fissano il case inferiore del MacBook Pro:
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Otto viti da 3,0 mm
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Due viti da 2,3 mm
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Usa uno spudger o delle pinzette per staccare i tre cavi dell'antenna AirPort dalle loro sedi sulla scheda AirPort.
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Per ricollegarlo, allinea attentamente il connettore con la presa e premilo con decisione con la parte piatta della spudger.
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Usando l'estremità piatta di uno spudger, solleva dal suo zoccolo sulla scheda logica il cavo della scheda I/O.
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Con una procedura simile, rimuovi il connettore della scheda I/O dal suo zoccolo sulla scheda I/O.
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Rimuovi il cavo della scheda I/O dal MacBook Pro.
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Rimuovi la singola vite Torx T5 (T6 in alcune revisioni) da 2,9 mm che fissa la scheda AirPort alla scheda logica.
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Usa l'estremità piatta di uno spudger per alzare la copertura in gomma del dissipatore dalla ventola sinistra.
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Usa la punta di uno spudger per far scattare la linguetta di bloccaggio sullo zoccolo ZIF del cavo piatto della ventola sinistra.
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Iniziando dalla cima del cavo, fai scorrere un attrezzo di apertura in plastica sotto il cavo della ventola destra per liberarlo dalla scheda logica.
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Solleva dal dispositivo la ventola sinistra.
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Usa la punta di uno spudger per alzare il blocco del cavo dati della scheda I/O e ruotalo verso il lato batteria del computer.
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Usa l'estremità piatta di uno spudger per far scorrere il cavo dati della scheda I/O dal suo zoccolo sulla scheda logica.
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Usa l'estremità piatta di uno spudger per disconnettere il connettore del jack cuffie dal suo zoccolo sulla scheda logica.
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Sollevandola dal lato più vicino alla batteria, ruota la scheda logica verso la parte superiore del MacBook Pro.
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Usando l'estremità piatta di uno spudger, spingi delicatamente il connettore MagSafe2 fuori dal suo zoccolo nella parte inferiore della scheda logica.
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In senso orario dall'alto: tastiera, trackpad, batteria, altoparlante destro, retroilluminazione tastiera, display, microfono, jack cuffie, altoparlante sinistro.
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Questo passaggio è privo di traduzione. Aiuta a tradurlo
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Remove the two 2.5 mm T5 Torx screws securing the MagSafe DC-In board to the upper case.
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Slide the MagSafe DC-In board towards the right free it from its recess within the upper case.
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Lift and remove the MagSafe DC-In board out of the upper case assembly.
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7 Commenti
Thank you for this guide, my room flooded and my laptop got wet. the entire display had a water bubble, but i kept it under 2 fans for a month, and the water dried out except for a little spot at the bottom of the screen. But, my computer stopped charging, and i didnt see any lights on the charger turning on. the laptop worked as long as connected to power, but wasn’t charging my battery. When my battery power eventually hit zero, my laptop wouldn’t switch on anymore. Took it to an apple store, they quoted me a price of $1350, when a new laptop starts at $1200. I found out the problem was the magsafe port, ordered the part and the screwdrivers needed, followed this guide, and in about 3 - 3.5 hours and parts cost under $50, my laptop is working properly again with no problems. For a first timer, the whole process looks daunting, but it was kind of fun and not at all as problematic as I thought it would be. Thanks again.
OMG! It is entirely possible to both remove and replace the MagSafe Connector without removing the logic board, making this 5 or 6 steps instead of 33!!
Once you remove the lower case (and disconnect the battery if you feel you must—I’ve been inside my MacBook a dozen times and no longer find that necessary, although it probably is safer to disconnect it), you can skip skip straight to Step 28 and remove the display data cable. Move that out of way and remove the two screws securing the MagSafe Connector.
Now, with a little finesse you can lift the MagSafe board and slide its connector out of the logic board. I nudged it out a bit with a screwdriver from the part that was visible (on the other side of the logic board) and gently pulled the five wires and it slid right out. It didn’t put any stress on the wires at all.
To give myself some wiggle room I also removed:
one screw from step 30 (5.2 mm Raised Head T5 Torx screw)
two screws from step 16 (4.4 mm T5 Torx screw and 5.0 mm T5 Torx screw with 2 mm collar)
Please don't get hung up on undoing all those cable connectors (which way does it pull? Is it snapped properly back? Etc). You need to be able to lift the logic board only a couple of mm to extract/replace the DC-board connector - but to do that you just need to remove the logic board locating screws and the ones holding the left hand fan in place. See steps 16 and 30. Get those out of the way - and each into a labelled compartmented box - and the board lifts that 2mm and the replacement is easy. They are all different and must go back into the right place. I always disconnect the battery connector - and always fail to push it down hard enough on replacement. it needs a GOOD PUSH - then both ends click and we're off.
I’ve read this all through and at first it looked daunting, but the above comment which reduced it to many fewer steps got me interested. What is the most difficult part (I really don’t want to damage anything, rip off delicate connections etc.)
I’m hoping my magsafe connector is fried, as not expensive to replace. What visible evidence is there showing it has failed? Does it have to show signs of burning, or can it fail with no obvious damage?
Charger was getting very hot and no LEDs lighting up.
I replaced the power adapter and cleaned all magsafe contacts, the outer two were black (the ground terminals?) but plastic surround not melted. Laptop works fine with charger connected, but only shows 2% charge which never changes. If I take out connector, laptop closes down quickly. I hope the logic board is OK……