Einleitung

Anhand dieser Anleitung kannst du den eingeklebten Akku mithilfe eines iFixit Akku Kits sicher aus deinem MacBook Pro entfernen. Der Klebstoff-Entferner in deinem Kit löst den Kleber, mit dem der Akku befestigt ist, und ermöglicht es dir so, ihn mühelos zu entfernen.

Der iFixit Klebstoffentferner ist leicht entzündlich. Führe diesen Austausch in einem gut belüfteten Bereich durch. Du solltest währenddessen nicht rauchen oder in der Nähe einer offenen Flamme arbeiten.

Zu deiner eigenen Sicherheit solltest du den Akku deines MacBook Pro vollständig entladen, bevor du anfängst. Ein aufgeladener Lithium-Ionen-Akku kann bei einem versehentlichen Perforieren ein gefährliches und unkontrollierbares Feuer verursachen. Wenn dein Akku aufgebläht ist, dann musst du geeignete Vorsichtsmaßnahmen treffen.

Hinweis: Das Lösungsmittel, das zum Lösen des Akkuklebers verwendet wird, kann deine Lautsprecher beschädigen, wenn es mit deren Kunststoffgehäusen in Berührung kommt. In dieser Anleitung werden die Lautsprecher ausgebaut, bevor der Akku entfernt wird.

Wenn du noch den veralteten iFixit Klebstoffentferner verwendest, bei dem die Flasche und die Spritze getrennt sind (wird nicht mehr verkauft), dann

klicke hier für eine leicht geänderte Version dieser Anleitung.

  1. BvXIHrZZfR6MZTgS
    • Entferne die folgenden P5-Pentalobe-Schrauben, mit denen das Gehäuseunterteil am MacBook Pro befestigt ist:

    • Acht 3,0 mm Schrauben

    • Zwei 2,3 mm Schrauben

    To remove the back panel there are two different pentalobe screws 2.3mm and 3mm however on the tools list there is only one screwdriver. Will I be able to remove both screws with the same screwdriver?

    lantzero -

    The 2.0 and 2.3 mm measurements are screw lengths, the screw heads are the same sized P5 pentalobe heads. We include the screw lengths so you don't put the wrong screws in the wrong places and end up with screw heads poking out of your device. Hope that clears up some confusion =)

    Sam Goldheart -

    Yes the same screwdriver will remove both screws, the difference in screws I believe is the length and width but the head is the same.

    Mike -

    Just be careful to store the 2 shorter screws in a seperate space then the other 3mm screws.

    The first time I opened up my Macbook, I put the screws in the wrong order.

    Shahzad Arif -

    Woohoo, much easier than I thought... Just got confused with the bottom case screw driver but after figure out it was P5 then everything went smooth.... One thing I wanted to upgrade was the wifi to ac and got one on ebay!

    didierma -

    If you have 54 Bit Driver kit, please use Star 5 driver to remove screw for rMBP 2012 Late

    iyeori -

    It took about 40 minutes due to an extreme measure of caution but I did it! The only real difficulty was reattaching the screen to the base (yes you have to pry the hinges open) and re-connecting the camera wires. After a few tries the camera wires finally came together. I'm hating Apple for all it's frailty and magical screws but I love ifixit!

    floyd -

    Simple guide, but it solved my problem. Was wondering why the top two screws weren't going all the way down. Hadn't realized they were 0.7mm shorter.

    Emilio Mejia -

    I have BootCamp running Win7 on my MBPwRetina15" 2013'Late. I run Visual Studio to build and run my Company's Application which is very CPU & NVidia (specific) intensive. So much so that during a build & run of app I was averaging about 85~95+Celcius!!! And every so often would reach 100Celcius!!! I could not take it anymore so I decided to delve into and re-apply Thermal Paste on the CPU/GPU. I ended up going with CooLaboratory Liquid Pro instead of the traditonal AS5. The original Thermal Paste was pure garbage,,, part of the CPU seemed like it was missing TP. I was scared to do this but it turned out easier than I had imagined. I am currently building the same application and can already observe that the temps average about 75~85 and once in a while will reach 90Celcius. So I am seeing about a 10~15 degree drop in Temps and that makes me very happy!

    Alvaro Suarez -

    Nice to hear that, i was looking for that kind of information. I have a MBPwRetina 15 Mid 2012 and looking to obtain the best performance!

    Jose David Valle -

    Woa! Thanks dude! And you follow some guides here for the thermal paste? My mac 15’’ early 2013 heats up a lot but I’m a bit worried about touching anything

    Bert0ld0 -

    Much easier than expected. Sounds like several people had trouble with the backlight. It is possible that they damaged something by not first making sure to power down the computer completely with the “Shut Down” command. This should be step 1 before removing the back cover screws. Also as noted all the back cover screws are Apple Pentelope #5 bit, but 2 of the screws are shorter than the others. This bit is is hard to find in most stores. Buy it on line along with the Tork #5 and #8. 11/21/2017

    Walt Goede -

    Not sure if this has been listed.

    PRO TIPS from a non-pro:

    1 - Keep screws separated and labeled by step # and size.

    2 - Be very careful to get screws in properly threaded, its VERY easy to strip the ccrew holes and screws. Especially the case. Not that it happened to me…

    3 - It was impossible for me to get all the adhesive off the case from under battery, it left a lot on w/o issue (yet).

    4 - Make sure you have Aluminium Foil before starting!

    5 - Upgrade the SSD or HDD while your in there!

    erin -

    Do we remove the logic board purely to get the speaker enclosures out and away from the acetone? Or does it physically block getting the batteries out? Ie. if I wanted to risk the damage to the speakers, could I jump straight to step 34?

    Obviously I don’t want to melt the speakers, but I’m kinda weighing that risk against losing a screw or breaking a connector…

    Michael Ferenduros -

    So I did take the risk and swapped out the battery without doing the logic-board + speaker removal.

    Before applying the acetone I put tape on the exposed sides of the speaker-enclosures as best I could - I wrapped the tape, sticky side out, around a card, slid it into the gap, and pressed it onto the speakers. And when applying the acetone, I squirted it as gently as possible onto the side of the battery and let it run down the side, which seemed to help avoid getting too much on the speakers.

    The speaker’s plastic turned white in the spots where the acetone touched it, but it looked like surface damage only. Otherwise it was a nice and smooth procedure.

    Your milage may vary, obviously.

    Michael Ferenduros -

    I changed the battery pack as well without removing the logic board etc. It helped, that the batteries already were swollen, thus access to the glue stripes was easier. It works, if you give a little tension, pulling a pack upwards, and then work with a small blade or knife, and cut the glue stripes. It may take a while, but much less time than dismantling the whole macbook. If you don’t hurry, and don’t apply too much force, you will not damage anything. Beside the 10 cover screws you only have to loose 2 screws for the battery connector. After removing the old pack I used Methanol to remove the glue. I prefer this solvent to Acetone, because it’s less or not harmful to plastic (however, no warranty, just my personal experience). I was able to finish the work in 40 minutes, although it was the first time I opened my Macbook. Well, I am an engineer, that helps, but with dismantling all boards it definitely would have taken double the time. And more risks to break a plug or make a mistake while reassembling.

    Heinrich Jung -

    Success. I needed to replace the right speaker. I thought I was ready at step 22 (you are able to replace the left speaker at this point… but but the right) To replace the right I continued thru step 29 but didn’t completely remove the motherboard. I just lifted it enough to remove and replace the right speaker cable.

    Read all of the comments and solved many problems. Thanks to I-fixit, Walter Galen and all who posted comments.

    Will Brecht - 03/02/2019

    Will Brecht -

    1/2

    If you're taking the shortcut (nylon, wire…and no adhesive for battery removal (you'll def need to remove the adhesive once the battery pack is removed) things to note:

    1 The adhesive may still be pretty strong. Mine was and I broke several wires trying to do the cheese cutter move down the back of the middle two batteries

    2 if you're cheese cutting through the adhesive, when you get to the base, don't go too far. I did and severed the battery cell connector… disconcerting puff of smoke.

    Ruairi Kennedy -

    If you get a puff of smoke removing a bad battery which is going to be replaced it really doesn’t matter, its being replaced.

    robert -

    2/2

    3 the you tube video dude was lucky not to have his two Central batteries adhered . Mine were stuck fast.

    4 don't forget about the two small T 5 screws to the left and right of the battery head board, just below the main battery connector.

    5 the Track Pad sits behind the two central batteries. The batteries are adhered to a flat plate that protects the Track Pad which is pretty resilient. You can do the cheese wire trick without cutting through anything you shouldn't. However be careful if you're using a spudger or other tool between the two centre batteries at the top of the T. This is where the Track Pad connector (its very flat and exposed) to the motherboard.

    6 seems obvious when it's written , but you will need the adhesive remover if you are interested in removing the adhesive. It's a work out.

    Ruairi Kennedy -

    I just completed this successfully. The guide was great, and I recommend reading each of the steps’ comments, too. It is possible to cut out a majority of the steps outlined here if you’d rather not dismantle most of your laptop. As I’m a novice and this was the first difficult fix I’d ever tried, the idea of taking so many things apart — including removing the logic board — was a little scary. Everyone calculates risk and reward differently, but for me, the risk of removing the logic board for the reward of being able to remove the battery packs with adhesive remover was too great, so I opted to only do steps 1–4, 42–53 and removed the battery with one of the cards from iFixit’s kit. If you go this route, expect it to be a little frustrating & slow going — it took me around 20–30 minutes of slowly chipping away at the adhesive with only the card. There are other techniques out there (wire, fishing line, etc.) and I’d advise looking into them. Keep track of screws: tape, draw out diagrams, label them, etc.

    Jake Thornberry -

    I only removed the 10 screws and the back panel, the 5 speaker’s screws (without removing the speakers), and the two battery screws, and managed to remove the battery package without undoing anything else. I used a member card (credit card type) to loosen the adhesives under the batteries.

    To remove the rest of the glue, I soaked it with something called Label Off from Biltema (Nordic). Finally, I used methylated spirit (rødsprit) to clean it all up and let it dry for 5 minutes before assembling the new battery pack.

    Andreas H. Parlow -

    I have now replaced the battery and the dc-in board, and I still can’t get the battery to charge. I also bought a new magsafe power adapter. It appears all cables are connected, and the computer runs fine on the battery (until it runs out of juice, then I will be at a complete loss). No clue what to try next. Any suggestions? Thanks!

    matt rogers -

    Why do you need to remove the entire logic board??? Seems like if you detach the appropriate cables, remove the speakers, that that should be enough. Removing the entire board doesn’t seem necessary - what am I missing?

    Sandwah -

    What on earth are you talking about? This has nothing to do with the logic board.

    Trevor Picard -

    The speaker cables are routed under the logic board, or at least the right-side one is. I found that if you can undo the fastenings on one side of the logic board you MIGHT be able to lever it up and work the speaker wire out without taking the entire thing out.

    bobthrollop.redirect -

    MacBook Pro 15“ 2014:

    if the keyboard is connected nothing works. I disconnected the keyboard and the MacBook was starting automatically. An external usb keyboard is not working either. Is something on the logic board defective or is this failure (usb keyboard not working) because of the disconnected keyboard and the system is confused?

    any idea for this?

    ps: the battery is loading

    Pättes -

    MacBook Pro 15” Mid 2012

    I had the exact same symptom upon initial completion. The keyboard ribbon is actually 2 pieces on mine. There is a plastic cover sheet (that I tried to use as the ribbon the first time) and then there is the actual ribbon sheet. The keyboard works perfectly now that I have the actual ribbon sheet inserted into the the ZIF connector.

    It took entirely too long. I was being very careful. Recovery of the keyboard took me less than an hour. I don’t want to admit how long the original work took me.

    I hope you already have yours working. I was very careful due to not having an alternate device for my son to use if the work had failed. The other likely point of failure for the keyboard is damage to the ribbon as it goes under the battery pack. I caught myself almost poking too hard on that spot.

    EEM -

    You should more clear explain that it is possible to skip the steps 5-35 in the beginning explanation text.

    ( I lost many time to remove parts and there is also more risk to destroy some connectors ?‍♂️)

    Muescha -

    Like many others here, I completed the battery replacement by skipping steps 5-52 and instead removing the battery cells with the “cheese cutter” method. I made my cutter from 20# braided monofilament tied to two 4” wooden dowels (3/8” diameter). I carefully applied 97% isopropyl alcohol to the taut mono with a small artist’s brush. I took my sweet time cutting through the glue, but all in all not too difficult, just tedious. I was super careful and mindful of the fire and explosion hazard, and took necessary precautions. One thing to be careful of using the cheese cutter method is to be sure the mono is is really under the cell package and not just in front of it before sawing away. There are some tight spaces that make this tricky. Once the battery was out I used the iFixit acetone to clean up the glue leftover by carefully applying drops on the strips and letting capillary action take over. After waiting about five minutes, the glue strips could be picked up with the supplied tweezers.

    Acme Nerd Games -

    Hallo Leute, hab das Akku eben erfolgreich bei meinem MacBook getauscht ohne alles vorher auszubauen. WICHTIG: kein ACETON zum Kleber lösen verwenden! Sonst gehen die Lautsprecher kaputt! Auch kein Orangenpower oder ähnliches! Man nehme sich ein dünnes hochzugfestes Nylonband (oder Zahnseide geht auch) und schneide damit die alten Klebepads sägebandmäßig los.

    Also:

    In der Hoffnung mich so klar wie möglich auszudrücken war das Folgende meine Vorgehensweise:

    1. Deckel ab, Achtung die Schrauben mittig unterm Bildschirm sind kürzer!

    2. Akkustecker trennen und vorsichtig umbiegen

    3. die 2 Schrauben, die die Batterie in der Nähe des Steckers halten losschrauben

    4. nun mit zugfestem Band die Akkus rausschneiden

    die im Fix-Kit beigelegten Spatel können dabei unterstützen

    die übrigbleibenden Klebereste können einfach mit einem der Plastikwerkzeuge abgemacht werden: erst ein bisschen mit einem Spatel vorarbeiten, sodass man es mit seinen Fingen greifen kann, dann langsam und Richtung weg vom Logikboard vorsichtig abziehen.

    Jérôme Achilles -

    Was dann noch an Kleberesten übrigbleibt, kann wegen mir auch bleiben. Sonst mit 1-2 Tropfen Lösemittel auf ein Microfasertuch geduldig nach und nach wegwischen. Und Wirklich nur WENIGE TROPFEN verwenden! Sonst gehen die Lautsprecher wohlmöglich kaputt.

    5. Mithilfe von Druckluft (2-3 bar! nur) nun sämtlichen Staub vorsichtig rausblasen. VORSICHT: Die Lüfter dürfen sich dabei nicht drehen! Die erzeugen sonst Spannung und grillen wohlmöglich das Logikboard!

    6. Neues Akku (Folien dabei vom Akku entfernen) reinsetzen und gleich an die Schraubenlöcher ausrichten.

    7. Die 2 Schrauben für die Batterie reinschrauben und mit Gefühl anziehen.

    Die packs einzeln auf ihren richtigen Sitz hin prüfen

    8. Wenn alles sauber ist und alles richtig sitzt, dann den Batteriestecker wieder auf das Logikboard stecken

    9. Deckel drauf. Der Deckel muss von alleine, ohne Schrauben richtig in seiner Ausfräsung liegen. Steht irgendeine Ecke hoch, ist darunter was verkehrt.

    Jérôme Achilles -

    10. Deckel festschrauben. ACHTUNG: 2 Schrauben sind kürzer auf der Seite des Bildschirms!

    Missverständnisse kann ich nicht ausschließen. Darum folgt ihr dieser Anleitung bitte nur auf eigenes Risiko. Ich übernehme keine Haftung für Schäden! Viel Erfolg!

    Jérôme Achilles -

    Hi guys, just successfully replaced the battery on my MacBook without removing everything first. IMPORTANT: do not use ACETON to loosen the glue! Otherwise, the speakers will be broken! Also no orange power or similar! Take a thin high-tensile nylon tape (or dental floss also works) and cut the old adhesive pads loose. Similarly as with a saw tape.

    So:

    Hoping to express myself as clearly as possible, the following was my procedure:

    1. remove the lid, beware that the screws in the center under the screen are shorter!

    2. disconnect the battery connector and carefully bend it over

    3. unscrew the 2 screws that hold the battery near the plug

    4. now cut out the batteries with tension-proof tape

    the spatulas included in the fix-kit can help you to do this

    the remaining glue can be easily removed with one of the plastic tools: first work a little bit with a spatula so that you can grip it with your fingers, then slowly and carefully pull it off in a direction away from the logic board.

    Jérôme Achilles -

    Whatever glue remains can stay because of me. Otherwise, patiently wipe away little by little with 1-2 drops of solvent on a microfiber cloth. And really only use FEW DROPS! Otherwise, the speakers may break.

    Now carefully blow out all dust with compressed air (2-3 bar! only). CAUTION: The fans must not rotate! Otherwise, they will generate voltage and possibly fry the logic board!

    Insert the new battery ( thereby remove the foils from the battery) and align it to the screw holes. 7.

    Screw in the 2 screws for the battery and tighten them with feeling.

    Check the packs individually for proper fit

    8. if everything is clean and everything fits correctly, put the battery connector back on the logic board.

    9. put the lid on. The cover must lie correctly in its groove by itself, without screws. If any corner is sticking up, there is something wrong underneath.

    Jérôme Achilles -

    10. screw the cover. ATTENTION: 2 screws are shorter on the side of the screen!

    I cannot exclude misunderstandings. Therefore, please follow these instructions only at your own risk. I assume no liability for damages! Good luck!

    Jérôme Achilles -

    Another vote for skipping step 34 after step 4. When I tried to reinstall the new battery, I couldn't get the two step 34 screw holes lined up and still be able to connect the battery cable, so I just left them out. Also, one of the bottom cover screws went AWOL.


    I think that anyone with a badly swollen battery can skip to 34 because the battery has already done a lot of the work. I doubt that I used more than a dozen drops of remover, if that. A bit of patience and careful work with dental floss did the trick. Maybe 30-40 minutes to get the old battery out and another 10 to peel off the remaining adhesive.

    schendel -

    Like most have suggested here, definitely read through all of these comments! I learned valuable tips from other commenters above that made this repair easy. Also like many others here, I opted to skips the majority of steps, and instead focused on steps 1-4, 36-53. When removing the small screws from the back plate, make sure to keep them organized and away from the computer. Because they are slightly magnetic, one of the tiny top middle screws magnetized to the MagSafe charger port my my Mac and I spent 20 minutes thinking it fell on the floor.

    I had a nylon thread handy to get some of the packs started. Even with applying the adhesive remover, I found the plastic card iFixit provides was not always strong enough to get the pack started. Cheese cutter method was all it needed to get started!

    Make sure to elevate your Mac when applying the remover in whatever direction you want the remover to run. Make sure to test new battery before committing to the new adhesive in case it is faulty!

    Good luck!

    Patrick King -

    At step 9, when reinstalling the io board cable, make sure it is the correct way round as in the photo, it fits the wrong way round as well, which results in the MacBook not starting at all. It took me hours to find my mistake...

    Pierre Arnaud -

    This is just a suggestion or two to help those that might be doing this for the first time.

    1. Separate your screws by the component they came from, i.e. cover screws altogether, fan screws altogether etc. I used PostIt notes turned upside down and put the screws head down to hold them in place and then marked what they were and where they came from.

    2. If you have enough work space put the component next to the screws that were removed. Then you have everything located for an easy reinstall.

    Steve Rowe -

  2. AvM1YdAxAGdyoKyU
    • Hebe das Gehäuseunterteil von der Kante aus, die der Kupplungsabdeckung am nächsten liegt, vom MacBook Pro ab.

    • Lege das Gehäuseunterteil beiseite.

    Does anyone noticed that the bottom cover and the bottom case is actually linked with the black plastic near the battery?! After the first time you open the cover, it will be impossible to put it back to the original place. Does the critical?! Thanks a lot for informing

    jamiegan835 -

    I was able to simply push and click those clips back into place before I did the screwing.

    Tim Peat -

    I truly believe this is placebo and the 10*C difference is because in the process the dust was removed from the fan/heat sink rather then the thermal "magic" paste.

    This is a "PC" habit.

    On the other hand, all the cases and protections out there have a bad effect on cooling (not sleeves or pouches) because the whole aluminum body helps dissipate heat.

    I've never had any problems with any mac regarding heat (they do get hot, but it is OK).

    Whenever you feel heat from electronic device means the heat radiates away from it.. which means the cooling is doing a good job :).

    crus -

    Hey,

    Writing about dust and dirt, do you know any cleaning products for the interior of the mac. i mean how do you clean your laptop, pc, etc..

    Regards

    Jose David Valle -

    This is untrue. Over time thermal paste will dry up and crack and not provide good coverage between the device and the cooler. The paste massively improves the thermal transfer between the chip and the heatsink. If you do not believe in the magic paste then you should wipe it all off and apply just a little bit or none at all and then compare temperatures. You will see the paste is responsible for a big reduction in temperature.

    Andrew Fox -

    I was able to remove all screws but lower case is not comming off easly. Is it glued to somthing?

    Thanks for help.

    c4rlosv8 -

    There are two clips in the centre which simply unclip with a little force.

    Tim Peat -

    If you are following this how-to because liquid/coffee splashed in through the back vents, WAIT UNTIL THE END to clean any liquid spills on the bottom panel. Use them as your map for cleaning and QA guide for checking until you are finished with your cleanup of logic board and other items.

    auntialias -

    There are a couple of small rectangular magnets (~ 1/2” long) that are sitting in pockets near the battery warning label. (One is visible in the Step 3 pic.) One of these left its pocket and was stuck to the bottom cover when I lifted it.

    Jon Scott -

  3. HXDOXoSRQI2QPYcc
    • Ziehe den Warnaufkleber über dem Akkuanschluss ab.

    For rMBP 2012 Late, you don't need to remove this sticker.

    iyeori -

    Have laptop charging issues after this. When fully charged and i plug in magsafe it starts with green, then turns red and stays red (like if it was charging). Status bar says NOT charging. If i use battery a little bit (down to 69%) magsafe does the same (green then stay red). Status bar says battery 69% NOT charging. and it seems to be true. Any suggestions?

    g000phy -

    Double check the connection from the battery to the logic board and the logic board socket itself... Might have damaged by disconnect/reconnect.

    max damage -

    This step is necessary to prevent any discharging, arcing, friction/static charges from damaging any of the extremely delicate and intricate parts of this (or most any) electrical system. In practice, you should even be wearing an anti-static band or be working on an anti-static bench even with the battery disconnected so your body doesn't create any unintentional charges.

    One of the first things you should learn in electronics repair and and electrical in general is to cut the power source whenever possible before performing any work. Some systems have schedulers/triggers set that will wake the system up (even when closed) to perform updates and other maintenance tasks as to not eat up CPU and RAM during 'peak hours'. The last thing you need is to have your $2,000 laptop turn on while pulling an SSD (which, correct me if wrong, isn't a plug-and-play based device) which could do some serious corruption and/or damage; when all you had to do was peel a sticker and plug.

    Hope that helps!!

    ~the more you know~

    Colin Devenney -

    I did not peel back the sticker. It is probably there to help unplug the battery. You can apply a gentle constant pull while you use spudger to lift the battery connector out of the socket as per the next step. It made this very easy.

    Achilles -

    I've found that it's actually better to NOT remove the sticker. I wish I had skipped that 'peel off the sticker part' ugh

    Miles Raymond -

    There is another connector here on mine, just to the left and up above the text on the battery sticker. It is an empty ZIPF socket on all these photos.

    Richard C -

    Let me stop you guys here. You can skip steps 5-35.

    That’s what I did without a problem.

    Go directly to step 35 after the next step. 5-35 is only so you have more room to pry the old battery off.

    If you are not keeping the old battery, then just pry it off with a flathead screwdriver.

    This is not a difficult fix.

    Chris -

    Chris,

    Thank you for providing the advise to skip several steps. I agree that you will have ample space to remove the old battery without removing everything else. I would like to provide a small correction in your directions. You will need to go to step 34 to remove the two screws holding the battery cable versus directly to step 35. You will not be able to completely remove the battery without this step.

    Laurence Rooks -

    I successfully followed all the instructions and all the steps in this guide. I installed the new battery successfully. However, looking back at the process now, I have no idea why I had to take out the memory, air card, speakers, fans, and motherboard to change the battery. None of that was necessary. I did it, and it worked out for me, but honestly, if you just want the battery out, do what Chris and Laurence said above me. Go straight to step 34.

    matthew.toledo -

  4. BrdLMYTTliYoxVV3
    BrdLMYTTliYoxVV3
    FEKQY2VBq42tJwiG
    • Heble den Akkuanschluss mit dem flachen Ende eines Spudgers vorsichtig aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board heraus.

    • Biege die Akkukabel nach hinten und aus dem Weg, so dass der Akkuanschluss nicht versehentlich mit dem Logic Board in Kontakt kommt.

    I ordered the whole kit, but seeing how much tedious effort it was to take out so many parts so they wouldn't be damaged by the solvent, I skipped from here to step 34 and only used the supplied cards (credit-card sized) with patience and persistence to free the battery sections from the backing. Success! Then I used a q-tip to apply the solvent to remove the remnants of the adhesive from the aluminum case. My battery was very swollen, so it was like removing little pillows. I think the swelling may have helped to give me additional access with the cards to free it. Success! My MBP is back up and running, and now the trackpad clicks again and it sits flat on a table!

    Joel Replogle -

    So no need basically to unscrew all the mac

    Bert0ld0 -

    The best tool for battery removal for any glued in Apple batteries is a 6" PLASTIC puddy knife 1.5" or 1" in width. It is strong. It has a bit of a sharp edge to cut the glue. It is long enough to slide all the way from top to bottom on the middle cells and from the side to get the 2nd from the right and 2nd from the left out. Wear gloves doing this and eye protection. I've use the Nylon twine method also without removing the logic board, but that is a pain to get started. I just take the screws of of the speaker, lift them up, don't remove and go to work with the puddy knife.

    Chapman Gleason -

    Joel - the purpose of all of the trouble in removing the logic board is to make sure that you don’t damage anything when you start pull out the battery. After this step - it’s true, you have about 12 connectors and dozens of screws to unplug, but I didn’t have any major problems.

    REASSEMBLY - I had to use alot of force to get the official IFIXIT battery connect to push into place to actually connect. I was worried that one of the wires would stress and break. It worked, but it was not super easy this part.

    Jer -

    I also skipped down to step 50. I stuck a piece of 1/2 inch weather stripping across the middle of the top cover of the laptop to maintain a pitch on the unit so the adhesive remover stayed away from the other components. I applied the remover and used a piece of string to cut through the adhesive strips. I owed the plastic tool from the kit to position the string behind the top of each cell and cut through one ata a time. The battery came out in about 15 minutes. The directions were very informative and useful but I thought the risks associated with dismantling the laptop and reassembling it again were greater. I could not have done it without the details presented. Thank you.

    Thomas Horan -

    Couldn't agree more: use a wire to cut the glue. No need to remove anything else (I did remove the SSD for peace of mind). I used a thin metal wire, without the help of adhesive remover, wrapping it around two sticks to hold it (as pulling with your fingers is painful!). Took longer to clean the residue than to cut the glue!

    I'm not so mad with Apple's repairability considering that this method is viable.

    Eric Rannaud -

    Having broken a connector on a logic board in the past, I worried about all the steps. But I understand the disaster that can occur if cleaning fluid contacts the logic board. Weighing costs and benefits, I also did not remove the logic board. I loosened up the speakers (since only two screws could be removed) to give me space to slide the cards under the battery cells. Using the two cards, sometimes sliding one over the other, I was able to remove the battery in 15- 20 minutes. Removing the remaining adhesive was VERY tedious. Eventually I settled on CAREFULLY applying small amounts of remover with the syringe and using the spudger (both pointy and broad ends) to scrape the remainders off. I cleaned the residual with Q-tips dipped in remover (buy a big box of Q-tips), refastened the speakers, installed the new battery, closed the case and voila.

    James Suojanen -

    I too found the need to completely teardown the laptop onerous and risky. I’m not certified in anything hardware but I’ve been doing my own repairs for a while. I watched the video referenced above and read the comments there. With some changes, here is what I did, which worked perfectly and minimized the risk, for a whole additional $3 in parts, just myself and in under an hour:

    1. Go to hardware store and get 2 4” bolts ($1 each) and a coil of 20 gauage galvanized wire.

    2. Wrap one end of the wire a few times around one bolt, then tie it off with a knot. Do the same with the other bolt, leaving about 10” of wire between the two.

    3. Follow steps 1-4 in this guide

    4. Slip the wire under one of the outer batteries (use a card or spudger to help get the wire underneath

    5. Grip both bolts with one hand and rock them back and forth, pulling the wire under the battery, using your other hand to hold the case. This should take about 2 seconds (seriously). Repeat for other outer batteries

    (continued)

    steve -

    6. Pull the plastic frames away from the left and right sides of the center batteries.

    7. Repeat steps 4 and 5 for the two center batteries.

    8. Jump to step 55, then reassemble.

    Note: when installing the new battery, ensure the part closest to you is UNDER the two plastic tabs.

    Worked perfectly.

    Link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fupkPz55...

    Note: using the nylon thread with that much effort is crazy. Use the wire or fishing line.

    steve -

    cool.

    removed everything and have now 88% after 2 times calibrating and smc reset

    wouldn’t have liked to do everything again, but this seems like a possible solution :)

    Dennis Britsch -

    i just got my Kit and started the procedure, i decided to try if i can get the bulged batteries out with a fishing line, which worked fine. No need to use any solvent and even not too much force was needed to get the line under the batteries. I was able to remove the batteries in about 5min, used another 10min to clean the case from the residue, and put in the new battery. All togehter about 20min of work. I´m very happy with the result, Macbook stays now back on its feet, closes correctly and trackpad works as expected.

    manu -

    Also departed from procedure immediately after STEP # 4 as per JOEL’s recommendation …used a small chunk of fishing line and it worked sans solvent…easily ! Spudger worked quite well to initially position the string /line & the ifixit ( ‘credit’ ) cards were nice for final dislodging of each battery segment from the last bits of residual gooey adhesive , AFTER working the fishing line back & forth down the length of the battery as much as possible. With the old battery out of the way, I used a razor blade to clean out the remaining bits of adhesive gunk. ( Decided NOT to use solvent here, either.) Took me every bit of 1-hour.

    One thing that helped ,too, was a cheap pair of cotton gloves coated on the palm side w/ latex. This kept my fingers comfortable from the pressure of the fishing line & allowed more of a range of force …since I wasn’t wincing from saw-cutting myself !

    John Joslin -

    I skipped steps 5-33. These steps are completely unnecessary. I used the back of a flat tweezers to separate the battery from the case.

    support64 -

    so the only reason they are taking all the stuff off before the battery is because of the solvent?

    I used cards and dental floss and just took the battery out … It was a pain in the butt but i got it out with out using the solvent remover solution.

    GR Verner -

    I skipped steps from 5 to 33 and directlychanged the battery (before disassembling all). Worked fine.

    derdietrich -

    I also skipped all the additional disassembly. I used cards and wire to cut through the adhesive quite easily. I also did not apply any tape on the new battery. The Mid-2014 laptop seems slim and tight enough to keep the cells from moving and the two screws at the power connector area seem to stabilize the connection and battery as a whole. Such STRONG tape seems unwarranted for the amount of squirm room in such a tight compartment.

    P.S. Remember, while you have it open, clean, clean, clean!!!

    jyee -

    Speaking of the power connector screws, I accidentally screwed down the R speaker flat cable on reassembly, which caused the speaker to malfunction. On finding that, I re-routed slightly and the speaker worked fine, this time, but I recommend being extra careful with that cable when putting things back together. You really do have to remove most everything to replace speakers!

    WillUseSpudger -

    Thanks guys for all the tips. I followed the pragmatic way of cutting short and really taking battery out only. Thanks to the cards it worked well and none of the liquid made it to any other part of the computer. Put some efforts in to properly clean the remaining glue after battery was out - but looked good and this message comes from the old mid 2012 15” Retina modell - but with the new battery in - and all is fine. I am happy - thanks to the short cut encouragement.

    Jochen Färber -

    Also skipped steps from 5 to 32. I used the supplied cards and a piece of string, i.e. braided nylon twine, (thickness 24). and used supplied acetone sparingly, mostly to the middle section. It took one and a half hours and another half hour or so for removing the leftover goo. It was demanding but not challenging, just take it slow and steady.

    jkobli -

    Learnt a lot from former comments. Also skipped steps from 5 to 54. Used fishing line to cut through adjective by myself easily, but needed to put on glove to protect hands. I didnt order full package, so used nail polish remover and eraser to clean the base. Looks good and all is fine! Thanks to the short cut method!

    Gerry GU -

    If you decide to skip to Step 34 or 52 or whatever, at least take note of Step 50. This is the only place I saw reference to the thin metal plate protecting the trackpad. I also skipped to just pulling out the batteries, but this plate came out with the them. I had to carefully pry it off the old batteries, reinstall it, and clean the adhesive residue off it.

    Also, YMMV, but I did not bother with delicately removing the old batteries with fishing line, loosening with solvent, or whatever. They’re going in the trash (ahem, recycling) anyway, so I pried them out with a screwdriver, using the neighboring cell as a fulcrum. 98% of the adhesive remained with the batteries, leaving very little residue in the case.

    Jon Scott -

    I also forwent the many steps to protect components from the isopropyl alcohol. Blocking the back of the computer up an inch or so meant that any spill would run down and away from the logic board, which actually helped loosen the adhesive. I felt that disconnecting so many parts was a greater risk with no real benefit so long as care was employed in the use of the alcohol. Using some twine in a sawing motion behind each battery got through the adhesive without trauma. The entire repair was actually very simple and fast. The toolkit is excellent and well worth buying from iFixit. The machine is now working really well again. Worth fitting a new SSD now.

    Simon Morice -

    Info for assembly: you have place it from top into to connector - watch out for the guidegroove/pimple .

    Not horizontal from battery side (as it seems my first try)

    Muescha -

    Success! I ordered the whole kit and thought I would do all these steps below. But instead I just unplugged the battery and skipped all the steps up to step 36. For getting loose the old glued in battery I used waxed dental floss, it is strong and easily available. I strung it around two wood pieces and wired it around the underside of the batteries, then slowly pulled it downwards till the end. This worked quite well and after 10 minutes all the 6 batteries were free. Now the ‘fun’ part, cleaning up the old adhesive strips. I used the little bottle of alcohol from the kit but found this not the best cleaning solution. Be warned, dont forget that in this position, directly under your downpressing fingers there is the glass trackpad and the display!! I really was scared to break them during this cleaning process. Because of this I switched to LIGHTER FLUID , which is stronger and the process quickly proceeded. Thanks ifixit for your great support.

    Jamba -

    I had to replace my replacement battery ... luckily the ifixit adhesive isnt that overpowered ... ehem ... I just pulled the old one out softly ... used the plastic card, some force ... and build the hopefully-this-time-lasting-longer-than-4-month-new-battery in ... it saved my evening.

    Arne Fischer -

    I just finished doing my second battery replacement on one of these. If you're replacing a battery that came from iFixit you can skip straight to step 34 and use cards/spudgers/guitar picks to remove the batteries. The adhesive on the iFixit batteries isn't nearly as tenacious as the original Apple adhesive (though it's plenty to keep the battery stable) and it was easy to pop the battery segments out with a spudger and peel up most of the excess adhesive strips. What little was left came off easily by putting small amounts of the solvent on paper towel and rubbing - no need to pour any amount of solvent into the case.

    lindensmith -

  5. Z6ealu6R16Ui2yUd
    • Mit einem Spudger oder einer Pinzette kannst du die drei AirPort-Antennenkabel senkrecht aus ihren Buchsen auf dem AirPort-Board herausziehen.

    • Die Anschlussstellen an den Kabeln sind sehr empfindlich. Achte darauf, dass du nur am Stecker hochhebst, nicht am Anschluss oder am Kabel.

    • Richte beim Zusammenbau die Stecker sorgfältig über dem Anschluss aus und drücke sie fest mit dem Daumen oder dem flachen Ende des Spudgers nach unten.

    will this procedure remove my warranty? I have applecare for another 2 years, Laptop was dropped on the side, there is a very small dent on the side of I/O.

    Oleg Babko -

    Yes, this voids your warranty.

    max damage -

    These are notoriously difficult to remove. I actually damaged 2/3 of the connector pins during the process. Thankfully i was still able to fit them in place. This step should not be underestimated.

    Alvin Chua -

    If you are not replacing the display case assembly, you can opt to leave all 3 connectors attached and remove the Airport card with them connected. You will need to carefully manage the card and attached cables so as not to damage them(masking tape) as you proceed with disassembly/reassembly. Step 6 will need to be done carefully (camera cable connector). I did it after step 8. I took a picture of routed cables as well before I removed them from channel.

    Macrepair SF -

    unless you have really tiny fingers, a tweezer helps, just be careful not to damage the wires or the board as your holding each cable in place. Oh and take your time - this is like the most frustrating step in the process, imo.

    Arn Custodio -

    The order of the cables doesn't seem to matter when re-attaching. It also might be helpful to unscrew and eject the airport card. Having it free can give you a better angle.

    joey -

    Definitely the hardest step (when putting it back together). The three pins were on progressively longer plugs, so I put the shortest one on the left and so on. This helps with getting the right angle. I used my fingers and the spudger to guide them back in. It took me easily 10-15 minutes to do this. The pattern that worked eventually was to first adjust the angle of the pin head so that it's x/y/z axes would line up perfectly with the connection if you are able to bring it together just so. If you're off on any of these while you try to bring it together, you won't be able to just click it down at the end. Good luck!

    Thomas Kunjappu -

    Agreed, for some reason, the middle one was stubborn — and I was worried the amount of force I applied to push it back on was going to break something - but it did pop back on.

    Jer -

    I would never remove those tiny plugs unless I absolutely have to. And we do not have to remove them, just the card itself…

    Jurgen -

    I looked at these plugs under a 8X lupe, since my 56-year-old eyes are not what they used to be. They are circular, so it’s more a question of just aligning the bottom with the top of the plug rather than angle. If I can do it, someone with better eyes can definitely do it.

    Sam Bortnick -

    After reading so many reviews on ifixit and other sites regarding the difficulty of replacing my MacBook Pro retina screen assembly, I was a bit nervous. Using this walk through made it super easy. Thank you so much for taking the time to create it!

    cabcpa -

    Removing these 3 tiny cables is completely unnecessary. I removed my fan last week to clean and it slips by these cables. For some dumb reason i wanted to follow this "correct" procedure and now one of the gold connections detached from the wire like it was nothing. Seriously, dont do this. I used a spunger and was very delicate putting it back on... And look what happened. SKIP!

    travismlive -

    Yeah, I agree, just leave the airport card attached to the pins and remove the card itself. Then you won’t have to fuss with these connectors.

    Jer -

    @tmm Your right on! Just finished replacing my right fan and your tip saved me from messing with these tiny cables. I totally understand your frustration as I was too just about to stick to the procedure, but if it’s any comfort your tip helped someone… so don’t be surprised being rewarded by some good karma :)

    IT’S UNNECESSARY TO DETACH THE 3 TINY CABLES FROM THE CARD, JUST DETACH THE AIRPORT CARD WITH IT’S CABLES ATTACHED BY GRABING IT FROM BOTH SIDES USING TWO FINGERS AND GENTLY SHAKE IT UNTIL IT DETACHES. THEN MOVE THE WHOLE THING A BIT ASIDE.

    THIS STEP IS ONLY NECESSARY TO MAKE WAY TO THE FAN CONNECTOR UNDERNEATH.

    There is one thing though I find missing which concerns:

    1)The rubber heat sink cover

    2 The AirPort/Camera cables

    3)The IO board cable

    All these are “glued” to the fan and you need to peel them off gently using the spudger, now while I noticed that some glue remains on each cable so they will kinda stick again, I wonder what kind of glue is this and where one can buy it?

    Itai -

    These individual instructions are re-used across multiple tutorials. If you are replacing the battery, you probably won’t need to remove the three connections from the Airport card; if you are replacing the display, you definitely need to replace them, because they are connected to the display. I just replaced the battery and the display in a single activity, so I pretty much had to remove everything. Also agree with a previous commentor that it’s easier to reconnect the cables before the card is reconnected to the system board.

    ChrisMBP -

    travismlive is right, you do not need to remove these cables or the airport card. Just remove the I/O board cable, undo the screws, and detach the antenna cables from the fan where they are glued with a spudger. Unlock the ZIF-socket and the you can wriggle the fan out. Probably saved my airport card, thanks travismlive!

    Jasper -

    I only successfully reattached 1 of the 3 AirPort cables, I just taped the other two. But the AirPort seems to work fine. Do these also have anything to do with Bluetooth though? I do seem to have trouble with Bluetooth after this operation. In any case, it was worth it... I replaced the screen with a new Apple screen for less than 1/2 the Apple Store wanted! Thanks!

    Douglas Johnston -

    Would soldering them back in place be better than taping? I certainly don't want spare solder on my motherboard, so I figure that'd be a last resort only if I lose AirPort connectivity.

    Douglas Johnston -

    Assembly is a nightmare. If rightmost cable is not connected, BT will not work.

    Radoslaw Przybyl -

    the hardest step is reconnecting the airport antenna cables. just have patience< and use tweezers, spluger and a q-tip.

    Frederick Rae -

    The three cables have different lengths. The longest should to the farthest pin, medium to middle, short to nearest.

    Sam Jomaa -

    Also, having the right tools will make the job really easy. I used a spudger similar to the one recommended on this web site. But i had ordered a complete kit from amazon.com. I did not have any problem removing or re-attaching the pins.

    Sam Jomaa -

    tweezers to hold the cable and the flat part of the spudger to push down on the connectors is the easiest way to re-assemble

    Jon Ocampo -

    Replacing these were the most difficult step I encountered. I finally determined that it took slight back and forth twisting of the cable (from left to right as viewed from above) to cause the connector on the cable to twist into position so it could be pressed down.

    chuck60 -

    I read your step and you are 100% correct. This helped me tremendously. Thanks!

    Achilles -

    Use leverage with tip of a spudger, it’s not that difficult to pry the cables.

    When you reassemble, use a tweezers to put the connector on the right position and push it down with a finger on the other hand.

    Grab the neck of the cable when using a tweezers.

    eskoo -

    Several of the people above mentioned not disconnecting these three wires. You must remove and replace these if you are replacing the entire display which is what these instructions are about. This is the most difficult step as others have noted. Just be careful and make sure you have the cable level before you start pushing down.

    Walt Goede -

    If you are not replacing the display case assembly, you can opt to leave all 3 connectors attached and remove the Airport card with them connected. You will need to carefully manage the card and attached cables so as not to damage them(masking tape) as you proceed with disassembly/reassembly. Step 6 will need to be done carefully (camera cable connector). I did it after step 8. I took a picture of routed cables as well before I removed them from channel.

    Macrepair SF -

    Reassembling: What makes this so hard? From all appearances I’m just pressing a squat sleeve-and-pin connector down onto the female counterpart. It appears to be circular and therefore not needing to be oriented radially in any particular angle. It doesn’t look hard at all! Does anyone understand what the subtlety is that causes everyone so much grief?

    Chapman Harrison -

    Reassembling: as so many as commented, this is incredibly hard - and inexplicably so. From all appearances I’m just pressing a squat sleeve-and-pin connector down onto the female counterpart. It doesn’t look hard at all! But I couldn’t do it.

    Here’s what seems to have worked for me: with my left fingertip on the cable holding the connector directly above the female, I used the spudger to press down the flat back of the connector, initially at the top and then sliding along toward the neck. I used normal pressure, and voila, when I lifted the spudger away the wretched wire didn’t spring up again. It was like it wanted to be rocked, or stroked, once, from top to neck, rather than pressed straight down.

    Chapman Harrison -

    I skipped to step 34. Just pushed up the speakers so that they don’t touch the body.

    Sascha Gl Richy -

    Can anyone help me? I would like to replace my speakers. Which steps can i skip?

    Manzil Monabber -

    I have completed replacing my speakers and this step was not needed at all.

    Manzil Monabber -

    I just completed the full screen assembly replacement with 90% success I guess. Like many others noted, this was the hardest step, and one them (leftmost) was extra hard, but I eventually got them all back in. However, I don’t have 5G wifi anymore. 2.4 g works fine, bluetooth works fine, and the screen, camera, and mic are all perfectly functioning. I just can’t connect to 5G wifi. Is there a fix for this?

    Aaron C -

    Absolutely no need to take apart the whole thing, get some strong fishing line and slowly saw the adhesive away. Once the battery is out, (if you are prone to be clumsy just cover/ shield the rest of the computer, than use GOO GONE or the like waiting a couple minutes to scrape out the old adhesive. The only reason they make your take everything out is that they assume you are lazy and will be using the adhesive remover which could damage the rest of the computer if allowed to splatter etc. Just save your self some time and stress, get strong braided fishing line ( works way better than floss or string as it is of a smaller diameter and isn’t smooth and helps the sawing action), and work your way around each cell. This is still way shorter than removing the entire computer and much less likely hood of damaging sensitive connectors.

    Pia Paeh -

    Agreed! Especially if you replace the batttery a second time with a less Apple-like adhesive.

    To prepare for a third time I actually covered parts of the adhesive pads with plastic film on the new battery. I figured that gluing it to the base where it is actually hooked behind the frame makes little sense.

    Cheers to everyone repairing good old things and keeping them alive!

    Jörg -

    Putting these 3 cables back was a lot of work. I bent the outer side of the middle cable, but was able to fix it with fine tweezers from the repair kit.

    olegpsh -

    I did a screen replacement recently using this guide and the disassembly/assembly was fine - very good instructions. But when I turned on the machine there was a very fine flickering, snow-like interference, especially noticeable on black backgrounds. I assumed it was a faulty replacement screen and continued to use it. Recently, I had to change out the battery so I dissasembled the screen again to see if reconnecting it would fix the problem. Now it is perfect. I think the problem was that the left-most (shortest) airport cable connector was touching the black screw next to it on the board and shorting out. Be careful to position this connector well away from that screw.

    rumblefish -

    I found placing the spunger under the part of the connectors AWAY FROM THE WIRE (top and/or side depending on which of the three you’re finessing), and then rocking them gently from side to side pops them out gently.

    MFMauceri -

    I read the note above and managed to fold the card out of the way. I’d put it in a paper envelope to stop it touching anything as it flaps around. The bag also stops static build up and reminds you it’s there ! The wires on mine were held down with two strips of tape, the pointed spudger? pushed along the length of the wires widened the tape loop when I pushed firmly but carefully. Once widened, tweezers can open it fully .

    Simon Anthony -

    I skipped the step of removing the airport antenna cables and removed the airport card with the cables since so many users said it was extremely hard to get the airport cables back on properly. By skipping the airport cable removal I save a lot of potential headaches and performing this task was not any more difficult to do.

    Timothy McDaniel -

    I skipped steps 5 - 40 and removed the old battery with the plastic card and a palette-knife after heating the adhesive strips cautiously with a hair dryer. After that removing the adhesive strips with the solvent was by far the most time consuming part.

    Martin Zeilinger -

    so what happens if you damage 1 of the 3 connectors because you didn’t read all the comments first? Does it work at all or just diminished wifi reception?

    Can someone at ifixit update the main instruction page to advise removing the airport card instead of the super fragile cables?

    Brandyn McKibben -

    YOU DONT NEED ANY OF THIS!

    it is SO stupidly risky to remove all this. Who the HECK wrote this guide?!? Thank God I checked on youtube and found guys who did NOTHING of these steps and simply removed the battery in under 1 h.

    Silly Billy -

    Steps 5-33 are not really needed if you are careful with the speakers, not to spill the fluid onto them. It saves a lot of time and potential dangerous operations. I did it without any problem.

    Cristian Caprar -

    Please be extremely careful, I just ripped out one of the sockets for the cables. I fixed it with Tesa until I can buy a new Airport-Card.

    Josiah Lauer -

    BE EXTREMELY CAREFUL WITH THIS STEP both when disconnecting the cable connection points and while doing the reconnection. I damaged the J2 connector (Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are working just fine, though) while trying to reconnect it to the AirPort card. I’ll suggest, as others have here as well, to not disconnect the cables and just have them connected to the card the entire time as this is, IMHO, a completely unnecessary step to take while doing this whole procedure.

    Rafael Pérez -

    Well, this is the step that (just through reading these comments) I decided NOT to fix my right speaker. Anytime I have to remove these delicate Airport and Camera wires and connections, I get very nervous. (I've done it before, successfully, on a MacMini [ugh; never again!] - just to replace the two slow HD with SSDs! What a hassle!

    I'll just my headphones or computer speakers through the headphone jack.

    Jonathan Paul Saltzman -

    I'm an amateur, so what do I know - but to replace a battery I skipped this step, and all other steps until step 36, I've no idea why they include all these other steps for battery replacement. Literally all steps from 5 - 35 aren't needed.

    Andy M -

    I broke the J0 connector when this reconnecting step. But Wi-Fi and Bluetooth functionality are still alive I don't know the reason why.

    ppop popy -

    Pretty sure it is fine, but if you want stronger and further WiFi range, that 3rd connector is what gives you that.

    Cary B -

    Why do I have to remove the airport antennas?

    Cary B -

  6. EmBXTpaDFuqH1CDt
    • Schiebe den Stecker des Kamerakabels mit der Spudgerspitze aus seinem Anschluss auf dem Logic Board in Richtung des Lüfters.

    • Im Foto wird ein Stecker mit sechs Kontakten gezeigt, es gibt aber auch Stecker mit zwölf Kontakten. Das Ablösen geht aber bei beiden Versionen gleich.

    • Wenn sich der Kamerastecker nicht leicht aus dem Anschluss auf dem Logic Board lösen lässt, dann klappe die schwarze Gummiabdeckung über den Lüfter, um an das Kabel heranzukommen. Ziehe dann behutsam am Kabel und drücke gleichzeitig mit dem Spudger den Stecker aus dem Anschluss heraus.

    • Achte darauf, dass du den Stecker parallel zum Logic Board schiebst. Am besten schiebst du ihn zuerst auf der einen Seite und dann auf der anderen Seite, so dass er allmählich aus der Buchse herauswandert. Heble nicht nach oben, sonst beschädigst du den Anschluss.

    I've broken camera connection socket, is it repairable?

    Sergey -

    Same for me too just take the socket from your broken screen and cut it off and solder it onto the new screen. It was really hard because it's so small but I did it.

    bhayes9614 -

    This is much easier if you do step 7 first so you can pull lightly on the cable and take the tension off the connection caused by the stiff cable.

    mayer -

    This tip worked for me.

    eskoo -

    If you are removing the right fan it is not necessary to unplug the camera cable. You can slip the fan out underneath the cable.

    noahtfu -

    Hi! Camera flex cable is from MBP Retina Mid 2012 & Early 2013. Not Late 2013 :) Edit it please.

    kramerigor -

    the tip of the middle 3 wire was broken on the replacement screen. I didn't connect it and everything seems to work fine, mac hardware test says everything is fine... Is it possible?

    micheleroger -

    Yes. They are wifi antenna cables. Missing one antenna won't affect much, and won't show up in any hardware test.

    Jason Amri -

    Push on the little wings, from right to left.

    Julian Wood -

    This is the hardest part of disassembly! Arguable hardest part of re-assembly too, other than the airport cables

    Jon Ocampo -

    The instruction is not clear to me at all. Frankly the comments mentioning things make me uneasy about proceeding further.

    Ben Moore -

    This came off for me - now my computer’s fan is running high constantly, and “Kernel_task” is using 500% of the CPU even though nothing else is running - what can I do?

    Ryan Brown -

    Did you ever get the fan to stop? how?

    Cyd Trice -

    It is very important to note here that you are NOT pushing up. You are pulling the cable back toward the fan. Doing step 7 first makes that easier. I misunderstood the instruction here (as others seem to have as well) and broke this part. I’m fine with not having a camera on this computer so I’ll leave it or ask my son to help me solder it later.

    Jen Wells -

    can you give guidance on the soldering? Im new to it and dont want to burn anything / especially the wrong thing!

    Cyd Trice -

    The wing closed to the edge of the chassis is completely stuck. I’ve worked on it for an hour. The other wing moves freely. I’m not sure what to do now.

    Charles Lindauer -

    The connector is very tight - I couldn’t even see the join between cable end and the socket and couldn’t see the “ears” on the end of the socket. And, of course, pulling didn’t help. I eventually used tweezers to start things off, gripping on the metal of the socket right where the invisible join was. What a delight to have the join open enough to see! After that, it was easy.

    jerryl -

    Thank You Jerryl - The tweezers did the trick. They want to pop out so you can use your other hand to apply slight downward pressure to keep them in place. Work both ends of the tweezers gently back and forth and you should start to see the gap get bigger.

    Chuck Barton -

    I used tweezers and the spudger. Take the point of the spudger and push on one side of the “dog ear” while supporting the other side with the closed tweezers on the cable side of the dog ear. (Could use a second spudger) work one side the move to the other repeatedly until the connection disconnects.

    This is allows You to push and support simultaneously and minimize the chance damaging the connector.

    Jonathan Dowling -

    Removed cover (Step 7). Released adhesive. Pulled directly out of socket to the left.

    Pushing out of this connector is ill advised, as no mechanical ledge to push.

    Joseph Gorse -

    The late 2013 Macbook connector is slightly different to the picture, I used tweezers to loosen up first and when the joint appeared used the flat edge of the spludger to push the connector using the gap. Don't rush push this from each side gently till it comes out.

    Lanre O -

    I found this step to be difficult due to the picture and instructions being incorrect for MacBook Late 2013. Unfortunately, I damaged the pins during this step and my camera no longer works. :^( Please update this step.

    Cristina Stoll -

    @xtstoll I looked at two separate Late 2013 units today, and both are indistinguishable from what’s shown in the instructions. Are you sure you’re working on the right model? A photo of what this cable looks like on your laptop would be helpful.

    Jeff Suovanen -

    A MAGNIFYING GLASS really helps on this. The cable’s sheathing may need to be pushed back a tad to find a place to get leverace to work the pin out.

    MFMauceri -

    DO FIRST

    STEP 7 : Untight the rubber heat sink cover on the right fan.

    Lift the cover and flip it back so that you can access the cables underneath.

    STEP 8 : Carefully de-route the cables from the plastic cable guide.

    So you can easily disconnect the connector.

    KRIS -

    Tweezers saved me on this one! Take your time and keep trying (gently) if you're still struggling

    Elizabeth Jolly -

    gently set pointed tweezers at the ears on either side and walk it back toward the fan

    Christa -

    I have jewellers glasses and they were so helpful. Without them I would have broken plenty of bits. I really recommend getting some magnification for this job, some of the bits are sooooo small!

    Gordon Young -

    I have a late 2013, and using the tweezers to gently create a gap worked excellently. I used the tip of the spudger to push it out the rest of the way, alternating right and left on the edge exposed by the gap, pushing gently even when it wasn’t apparent there was any movement.

    Troy Hall -

    The way I did it took less than a minute. Ensure the AirPort card is not in place on the board. Get a pair of tweezers to squeeze the ends of the cables into each holder on the card. Apply pressure on the back of the card and the cable end at the same time. If it works, the cables will swivel easily in their slots. Then put the AirPort cable into the board.

    Michael Stroh -

    I did it in less than a minute. Used a pair of tweezers. First thing is to take out the AirPort card from the slot. Hold it in one hand while using the tweezers to squeeze each of the cable ends into their sockets. Ensure that you are squeezing the back of the card at the same time as you are clipping in the cable ends. You will see that each cable end will swivel around and not come out of their sockets.

    Michael Stroh -

    As per other comments, recommend referring to steps 7 and 10 before attempting step 6.
    I found it helpful to remove the airport card first, then use tweezers to gently pull cable 0.5 m from socket, then use pointy end of "spudger" to push connector out of socket.

    Tim Telcik -

  7. rGjjTOShHlvHMUmF
    rGjjTOShHlvHMUmF
    CmNYKvYMeGV5jTGl
    6GiLNub6CYEmhS1V
    • Stecke das flache Ende eines Spudgers unter die Gummiummantelung des Kühlkörpers des rechten Lüfters.

    • Fahre mit dem Spudger unter der gesamten Länge der Ummantelung entlang, um den Kleber zu lösen.

    • Hebe die Ummantelung an und klappe sie zurück, so dass du an die Kabel darunter herankommst.

    Back (case) side of rubber attachment is flimsy-ish, so need to be delicate when peeling rubber back.

    cahcadden -

    assume everything is delicate and needs to be worked gently.

    Christa -

    True @cahcadden.

    Worst case you could accidentally tear it off

    (thank god, that didn’t happen to me, but belive me —> it was a close call)

    Shahzad Arif -

  8. CTIKLstgHXvLH2hb
    CTIKLstgHXvLH2hb
    1XSnkAhqoRwrpuJH
    TOLRZSyuQLHnHGss
    • Ziehe die AirPort / Kamera Kabel mit den Fingern nach oben vom Lüfter ab.

    • Die Kabel sind mit dem Lüfter verklebt, du musst also vorsichtig ziehen, um Beschädigungen zu vermeiden.

    • Fädle die Kabel vorsichtig aus ihrer Kunststoffführung.

    It's a bit tricky to re-route the cables when you're installing the new display, so pay close attention to how they're originally routed, to make sure you don't pinch them or torque them.

    PriorityMail -

    I used scotch tape to temporarily hold the cables in place until I was ready to reinstall the bottom cover, but I removed the tape at that last step (didn’t want it coming loose later, and possibly obstructing a fan).

    ChrisMBP -

  9. ZPrXaeriaPPCq333
    ZPrXaeriaPPCq333
    6qZbgcvLmtSlA4I6
    5uJffKMYQMyFWQYp
    • Wenn die Stecker am Kabel zum I/O-Board auf der Oberseite Einbuchtungen haben, dann müssen zuerst Verriegelungen unter der Einbuchtung gelöst werden, bevor das Kabel abgetrennt werden kann. In diesem Fall darfst du den Stecker erst dann hochhebeln, wenn der Verriegelungshebel offen ist.

    • Heble den Stecker des I/O-Boards mit dem flachen Ende eines Spudgers aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board heraus.

    • Schließe beim Zusammenbau zuerst dieses Ende an, da es sich nicht biegsam ist.

    • Entferne auf die gleiche Weise den I/O-Board-Kabelstecker aus seinem Anschluss auf dem I/O-Board.

    • Entferne das I/O-Board Kabel vom MacBook Pro.

    Note that the Mac has been rotated 180º between steps 8 & 9

    peteyx -

    When reinstalling the io board cable make sure it is the correct way round as in the photo, it fits the wrong way round as well, which results in the MacBook not starting at all.

    bitmat23 -

    ABSOLUTELY ! I found out the hard way. I took a break, came back to me dead computer and wondered - if - this cable would fit the other way round - and voila ! I wish I had read this note first :-)

    Simon Anthony -

    i did exactly the same mistake! Same procedure as well: keep calm, and start again the tutorial.

    every thing work find now

    Guigui -

    Sockets are ZIF with releasing levers on the top. If you pull up on the top padding, you will reveal silver lever handels facing the rear of the machine. Pry up on the LEVER to release the pressure, then pull the lever straight up to release the connector from the socket. DO NOT pry under the edge of the connector to remove these or you may damage the ZIF socket. They may have changed these connectors between models, otherwise I don’t know how this was overlooked in the guide.

    hybrid -

    Confirming, these are indeed zifs for me too. My padding has notches indicating location of lever needing to be raised. Obviously lever is tiny, look closely. If your padding is a clean rectangle as shown in guide, you may not have zif sockets here

    hamiltont -

    Confirmed; if the foam pieces are not perfectly rectangular, you should be able to pry back the side of the foam with the cut-away. It folds in half. You can see the lever under the foam. Lift the handle with the spudger, then when it’s pointing straight up (it flips up), you can lift up on the lever (straight up). This should be done for both ends.

    Patryk -

    Confirmed. These instructions (and photos) should definitely be added to the guide!

    Nathan Lucy -

    I just did this and there are no silver lever handles. The connectors just pop off when you pry on them.

    edc -

    While putting back the I/O cable, I assumed that it just connects back in place with pressure, kind of like Velcro. I just pushed the one on the left down first as instructed, and, while doing so, folded down the tiny wire lever under the padding (As someone stated earlier, the wire lever isn’t on all models) along with it. It seem to go back in place fairly easily if you’re careful to align the two sides (the part under the cable with the part on the logic board). A a novice, I think this warrants being addressed in more detail. Kinda had to do this intuitively.

    Sam Bortnick -

    There is adhesive under the cable. I twisted the cable parallel to the flat fan surface to break it without bending the cable.

    Nathan Lucy -

    Yeah, and a strong adhesive.

    throughout all the repairs i have on my MacBook, I have put changing the right fam on the side, just because I was thinking there will be no way of removing the cable without damaging it.

    Soufiane Ezzine -

  10. sJTSrxDJModnXRow
    • Entferne die einzelne 2,9 mm T5 Torx (manchmal auch T6) Schraube, mit der die AirPort Karte am Logic Board befestigt ist.

    I don't see why this is necessary just to remove the logic board...

    Miles Raymond -

  11. Dlc6UMnRvDkSLKC4
    Dlc6UMnRvDkSLKC4
    XrnEslGBiksIsMdR
    • Fasse die Airport-Karte an den Seiten an und hebe sie leicht schräg (in einem Winkel von etwa 5 - 10°) hoch. Sie löst sich so aus der schwachen Klebeverbindung zum Logic Board.

    • Ziehe die Airport-Karte parallel aus ihrem Anschluss auf dem Logic Board heraus und entferne sie.

    As others have mentioned, it's not necessary to remove the Airport antenna cables. Leave the cables attached and remove the Airport card.

    Swing the card and the attached cables across the fan.

    stvn chng -

    You may lift a little like few degrees then pull parallel when removing.

    eskoo -

    There might be a touch of adhesive, lift first – a gentle touch with the spudger helps.

    Tristan Harward -

    Yes, lift about 5-10 degrees first, then pull out. If you do not release the adhesive, it may be stuck in place and you could damage the card trying to pull it out.

    hybrid -

    I will add to what others have said about lifting the card lightly using a spudger to get the adhesive to let go of the board. Otherwise the card may get damaged.

    jeiboussa -

    Yes. LIFT up slightly on one end to clear retaining pin before tugging.

    MFMauceri -

    Yes. Slight lift to release adhesive and then pull out.

    David Choy -

    Highly recommend attaching to your new logic board right away.

    bmellman -

    I don't see why this is necessary just to remove the logic board...

    Miles Raymond -

    I found it helpful to use the flat end of a "spudger" to gently lift airport card from the main board prior to unplugging.

    Tim Telcik -

  12. bkEHBThUxblPR6pX
    bkEHBThUxblPR6pX
    HASsw3oUnuTCmLnN
    • Klappe den Sicherungsbügel am rechten ZIF-Anschluss des Ventilator-Flachbandkabels mit der Spitze eines Spudgers nach oben.

    • Vergewissere dich, dass du den Hebel nicht am Anschluss selbst, sondern wirklich nur am scharnierartigen Sicherungsbügel ansetzt.

    • Platziere ein Plastiköffnungswerkzeug ganz oben unter das rechte Lüfterkabel und schiebe es dann nach unten, um das Kabel vom Logic Board zu lösen.

    • Sei vorsichtig beim Lösen des Kabels, denn es ist sehr fest mit dem Logic Board verklebt.

    I was able to flip the retaining flap while removing the damaged fan but accidentally dislodged after installing the replacement fan. Again, be very careful at this stage. Thankfully my new fan appears to function normally.

    Alvin Chua -

    My retaining flap just came off. Can you confirm your fan doesn't need it to function??

    Peter Ungacta, Jr. -

    Easier to do while removing fan.

    mayer -

    ZIF = Ziero Insertion Force. Once the tiny retaining flap is up, it should slide out easily toward the back. There was no adhesive on my machine, so the cable slid out easily. But be careful if yours is glued down.

    Don Steele -

    I don’t know why, but I could pull the connector out & in without flipping up the flap. And fans are working flawlessly.

    eskoo -

    The pictures were confusing to me so let me add some more context. There is a ZIF socket (Zero insertion force) being addressed in the first picture. This socket has a black top that is currently closed down on the socket. Using your tool you need to lift this flap up to release the wire underneath (This release happens in the second step). Hence only pull up on the black flap enough to make it go from horizontal to vertical (Swing flap). Neither picture shows it in the up position. Step 2, Picture 2, Then gliding your flat spudger, you goal is to lift the wire that was in the ZIF socket out by lightly lifting up on both the wire and the rubber cushion on top of it. Make sure you lift both. You are successful when both are lifted up and out and facing vertical instead of horizontal.

    Frank D -

    Great clarification, thank you.

    Hunter Gallagher -

    Can anyone advise what to do if the ZIF socket pulls up from the logic board? I was gentle with it, but it pulled up anyway. The fan and ribbon are fine, but I’m worried this will require an expensive logic board repair.

    Jaysmi -

    To really see which part of the ZIF socket has to be lifted up you should compare the pictures of step 10 and of step 12, preferably in its original size.

    Then you can see that the inner part of the ZIF has to be moved up, away from the batteries.

    Stephan Yaraghchi -

    I managed to broke the side, thought this was pulling on sides mechanism to release, not just upwards. Luckily I managed to attach it and the fan is working.

    Josip Ricov -

    Here is video how to open the ZIF socket. https://youtu.be/MQbqpWkCz94?t=360

    Ketut Sandiarsa -

    Many thanks Ketut, that vid clip really helped!

    Paul Clarke -

    very appreciated!

    Alexis Quintana -

    Thank you… that vid is crisp!

    Erich Hentschel -

    Incredibly poor instructions!!! Thanks to the incorrect wording, I have just ruined the fan connector. There is NO lever. The cable gently slid out, after I borked it. I’m done with IFIXIT and the $@$*!& information. How about a little video clip inserted here. You guys can do better!

    Lorne Shantz -

    Can anyone share how to put the retaining flap back onto the connector? Has anyone’s fan worked without it? My hinged retaining flap just slid off and it's extremely difficult to place it back on.

    Peter Ungacta, Jr. -

    I found it easier to slide the flat end of the spudger tool in from the left side of the cable, near the 90 degree bend.

    Aimee Ness -

    There’s no need to take off all this stuff. I’ve just disconnected the battery, used the glue remover and a dental floss to pull off the battery ✌?

    matteo lepore -

    These instructions are pretty lacking for this step. In my case, for both the left and right fans, I did not need to flip up a retaining flap. I did not need to remove the airport card as I could sneak the ribbon cable out from underneath the airport card. There was a tiny bit of adhesive on the ribbon cable. Once that was worked free, I could slide the ribbon cable out of the connector (toward the screen hinge).

    Louis Kreusel -

    To all those who complain about the quality of instructions given here, I find them so simple and clear, if you have problems following them you should be letting a repair shop or Apple do the repairs.

    robert -

    I can recommend, after lifting ZIF clip, gently slide cable out of socket using "spudger" and/or need nose pliers.

    Tim Telcik -

    I destroyed it. Now when the ZIP socket is off the board. Will I have chance to repair with a new or go on only with one fan function. It is so tiny to soldering that I guess the contact legs will connect together and cause a short circuit

    WeDoIt -

  13. bitNDVdSGQUpFjyx
    • Entferne die folgenden drei Schrauben, mit denen der rechte Lüfter am Logic Board befestigt ist:

    • Eine 4,4 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Eine 3,9 mm T5 Torx Breitkopfschraube

    • Eine 5,0 mm T5 Torx Schraube mit 2 mm Zapfen

    With most parts, its easier to leave the screws in the holes parts they come off with, and have small containers or a layout to do this with so each major part does not get mixed up - too many similar but different screws!

    AES -

    What I did to separate the different screws, is to take the top of the ifixit essentials-kit (which has lots of small spaces to hold screws) and picked a row of these spaces, which I marked for the cooling-fan screws. So basically I just sort them by lenth: The 5 mm on the top space, underneath it the 4,4mm, and at last the 3,9mm. That way I didn’t loose track, because I was working in tandem with this instruction.

    Shahzad Arif -

    In my case, the 3.9mm screw was connected to a spacer that sat flush to the motherboard. I misplaced this spacer and had to take the computer apart twice to find it… Make sure not to lose it if you have one!

    Daniel Kirk -

    I was able to stop at this step and jump ahead to removing the battery. I did this based on the fact that the batteries were extremely swollen and I could see that the adhesive strips below were already separated from the bottom quite a bit. In retrospect my wife had complained that the computer ran very hot in the vicinity of the batteries (not sure why) but that heat apparently diminished the adhesive properties and allowed me to slowly pry the cells up while using a spudger to push between the case and batteries. Saved twenty some odd steps by doing it that way. If the batteries weren’t swollen I could not have done it this way. NOTE: When ordering just the battery adhesive remover is NOT included. I did not order it because I have acetone here and felt I did not need the iFixit remover.

    Terry Angelli -

    The inner spacers on both fans that appear to have been SMT'd to the logic board fell off. I used a light adhesive to put them back but be cautious not to drop them if yours detach also.

    L. Hille -

  14. EkKPfsJgOLBOlrS1
    • Hebe den rechten Lüfter aus dem MacBook Pro heraus.

    • Der Einbau des Lüfters geht am Besten, wenn du beim Einsetzen des Lüfters die Flachbandkabel verbindest, bevor du die drei Befestigungsschrauben des Lüfters eindrehst.

  15. G65TnrbUf1N2buIT
    • Stecke das flache Ende eines Spudgers unter die Gummiummantelung des Kühlkörpers des linken Lüfters, damit du sie herunternehmen kannst.

    This came of super easy as the glue seemed to have dried up or something of that nature; anyone know if this is an issue?

    Also it seemed like there are clips on sides of the rubber heat sink which I couldn't work out how to clip it back on, so I placed it back where it was after and it seems to be ok; maybe it isn't meant to clip on hard and rather just to be a security measure. Anyone else had this?

    RT0 -

    I had the same experience as you this was super easy to remove as well.

    spearson -

    Glue was long gone. It just flops over by itself.

    Jer -

    I have this feeling that my “noisi fan” was actually the loose end of this rubber cover. So verify that you insert rubber clips back to its slots on under the edge of the sink.

    Albert Stein -

  16. lxeZOcw2BVkMPqJT
    • Entferne die folgenden drei Schrauben, mit denen der linke Lüfter am Logic Board befestigt ist:

    • Eine 4,4 mm T5 Torx-Schraube mit 2 mm Bund

    • Eine 5 mm T5 Torx Schraube mit 2 mm Bund

    • Eine 3,9 mm T5 Torx Breitkopfschraube

    • Drehe die Schrauben beim Einbau des Lüfters zunächst nur lose ein. Der Lüfter kann sich dann noch ein wenig bewegen und findet von selbst seine Position, wenn du die Schrauben anziehst.

    check if screw marking here is right

    Oleg -

    One 3.9 mm T5 Wide Head Torx screw

    what exactly do you mean by wide head torx screw? Is that another torx screw i should buy?

    best regards,

    Seth

    sethroot -

    “Wide Head” just refers to the head of the screw being a bit wider than the others. It shouldn’t affect the size of the tool needed. That said, I also was unable to remove this screw with a T5. The screw on mine looked corroded. I ended up using Vampliers (great tool).

    maccentric -

    seems like T5 is the wrong screwdriver for the "3.9 mm T5 Wide Head Torx screw"

    ryanbraganza -

    T4 seems to have worked for me

    jonathaniscarroll -

    i tried unscrewing the screw with a yellow circle around it but it is not unscrewing i think it is stripped

    Habib Sy -

    The nut of the 3.9 mm T5 screw (marked with red circle) seams to be glued or soldered onto the pcb. On my laptop, the connection broke so the nut is rattling on the pcb making a sick noise.

    Does anybody have an idea, how to best fix the nut on the pcb again?

    Marcel Reschke -

    Marcel: The 3.9mm screw threads into a metal standoff (not a nut) that's glued to the logic board. If this standoff comes off of the board, a drop of superglue may allow it to stay in place, but to position the standoff properly while re-gluing it, first reattach it to the fan with its screw, then place a drop of superglue on the bottom end of the standoff, then drop the fan back into place and apply a little pressure to the top of the screw to help the superglue stick to the logic board.

    johnsawyercjs -

    "One 4.4 mm T5 Torx screw with 2 mm collar" (red) .. mine had no collar; I noticed on closing up.

    Gavin Eadie -

  17. 2VVHFJIbOMQsGCwt
    2VVHFJIbOMQsGCwt
    SYnVwQfRGn6fI4kx
    xeV4b6riMMuAOLlj
    • Klappe den Sicherungsbügel am ZIF-Anschluss des linken Ventilator-Flachbandkabels mit der Spitze eines Spudgers nach oben.

    • Achte darauf, dass du den Hebel nicht an der Buchse, sondern am scharnierartigen Sicherungsbügel ansetzt.

    • Schiebe ein Plastiköffnungswerkzeug von oben unter das linke Lüfterkabel, um das Kabel vom Logic Board zu lösen.

    • Sei vorsichtig beim Lösen des Kabels, denn es ist sehr fest mit dem Logic Board verklebt. Falls nötig kannst du auch einen iOpener oder einen Fön benutzen, um den Kleber aufzuweichen, damit er sich leichter entfernen lässt.

    • Hebe den linken Lüfter aus dem Gerät.

    • Der Einbau des Lüfters geht leichter, wenn du beim Einsetzen des Lüfters die Flachbandkabel verbindest, bevor du die drei Befestigungsschrauben des Lüfters eindrehst.

    a question out of curiosity is it possible to remove that left fan completely and use and external fan instead of it?

    and what is that fan for? is it for CPU or VGA? i noticed someone was referring to that fan as vga's fan.

    Albert Einstein -

    I can't imagine any scenario why one might want to do that Einstein. An external fan on a laptop? Seriously?

    maccentric -

    be nice, silly

    Richard RUNGE -

    I would say that my cable was permanently adhered, or at least requires chemistry to remove the adhesive. Definitely check if fan parts are in stock before attempting to remove the cable that doesn't seem to be coming loose from the motherboard.

    orders -

    Couldn’t manage to “flip up the retaining flap on the left fan ribbon cable ZIF socket.”, in fact think I may may broken a piece off. In the end just pulled out the cable by sliding it down and out (maybe I did manage to loosen it after all). Cable didn’t appear to be glued down thankfully.

    Chris McKay -

    That happened to me too! Little pieces of copper came off but I couldn’t see where from . I hope it’ll work after I reassemble.

    Sam Bortnick -

    Holes on the new fan did not exactly match up and ribbon cable has more tension as a result -

    I had to cut the loop on the mount for the 4.4 mm T5 Torx screw. Not ideal.

    Scott Evans -

    So, what do I do if I break the connector on the board? Serious question, yes I did it. Now, how do I get the replacement part?

    Amin Shah Gilani -

    The retaining flat is super fragile. And I doubt there’s any practical way to replace it. Don’t know if the connector still works ok without the flap.

    Steven DeRose -

    After I exchanged the fan it‘s super noisy. I ordered at the ifixit shop and it seems it works but it‘s just super noisy. Does anyone know why?

    Thanks

    Karsten Hullebeck -

    I have the same issue with my newly replaced fan…sounds worse than the broken one - will need to check with the ifixit team…

    Markus Meßerschmidt -

    reported this to the support team and got a replacement within one day. The new part works fine - no noise at all, old one is on the way back. Thank you iFixit!

    Markus Meßerschmidt -

    Left fan was 400% harder to remove due to adhesive. Use the opening tool to gently pry the cable little by little and eventually it will come up. The adhesive pad is the same size and position as the foam pad so concentrate your efforts there

    Aleksis G Williams -

    Heads up that the ribbon cable slides into the connector on the board like a little tiny SD card.

    Louis Kreusel -

  18. XZqe6DcFUDPkuMAS
    • Entferne die einzelne 3,1 mm T5 Torx-Schraube, mit der die SSD am Logic Board befestigt ist.

    When I got to this step I realized the screw was stripped. I'm unsure if it was stripped by my efforts -- I used the prescribed P5 screwdriver that was also used for the other screws, and the screwdriver still works when putting the lid back on.

    So to extract the stripped screw in Step 5 I've ordered iFixit's Precision Screw Extractor Set.

    Now I'm wondering if I also need to find a replacement screw since I probably won't be able to use the stripped one again after it's been extracted? The screw is called: 3.1 mm T5 Torx screw as per this guide .. the best I can find on eBay are screws called: 1,4 X 3,1 mm Torx T5 or 1,5 X 3,1 mm Torx T5 ... will one of these work? Would I be able to just go to a hardware store and find the proper screw or is it a specialty item?

    Lorte Messenger -

    I'm sure you've long since figured it out, but for the benefit of anyone else reading this, a P5 is not a T5. It's a different screwdriver. The driver for the screws on the outside of the case will not work on the screw holding the SSD. I'm not sure why they left it off in the list of tools at the top.

    Dave Miller -

    The screws on the outside of the case are Pentalobe.

    The screw for the SSD is Torx.

    Both drivers are (now) on the list of required tools.

    (However, my devices both have a T6 head, not T5. May have been after-market.)

    jkgarrett17 -

    For the Macbook Pro Retina 15" Late 2013 models, I've heard the SSD is soldered to the logic board. This guide is for that model, but it doesn't address the soldering issue. Have I just been misinformed on this issue? Has anyone tried it with the late 2013 model yet?

    Elaine -

    The SSD is not soldered to the board. You maybe thinking of the RAM which is soldered. (thank you apple) *dripping sarcasm*

    Ryan Tucker -

    I was needing to send my mid 2014 15" MacBook Pro in for a keyboard repair, and my company IT department shipped me a loaner of the same model except that it had a smaller SSD in it than mine, and said I should swap the SSDs between the two and then send mine back with the smaller drive in it to get fixed. I've been unable to swap the drives because neither mine nor the loaner (which are both the same model) appear to have a T5 screw holding the SSD in place. Both of them appear to have a T4, not a T5 (whatever it is is smaller than a T5 anyway, so I'm guessing it's a T4). So now I'm on hold until I can find a T4 screwdriver.

    Dave Miller -

    OK, got the new tool set, and yes, it really is actually a T5 screw, you just need a really sharp driver. My existing T5 driver was getting a little dull on the tip. So make sure you have a really new/precision T5 driver/bit to use (and again I'll point out that ifixit failed to list this tool in the list of needed tools at the top).

    Dave Miller -

    It's definitely a T5, just takes more control vs only strength. I went left and right in small increments while pushing down to let the screwdriver dig in before slowly being able to loosen it up.

    Toan Tran -

    Both of my A1398 computers (Mid-2012 Retina 15” and Late 2013 Retina 15”) have a screw that my T6 bit fits perfectly. If using a T5 screwdriver/bit makes your screw seem stripped, try the T6.

    (The 2012 was purchased second-hand, and the 2013 was purchased from a dealer known for unauthorized upgrades; it is possible my screws were swapped.)

    jkgarrett17 -

    I’m pretty certain this screw is a tiny bit larger diameter than the others — I mixed it up and tried to use it elsewhere, and it wouldn’t fit, so IO swapped in another and set this one aside. Later when I got to this point, other screws were too small and wouldn’t grab. So I tried the one I had set aside earlier, and it fit perfectly. That might explain why this one seemed “stripped” to another commentator.

    Steven DeRose -

  19. NKxDEbrVaoWATqOF
    NKxDEbrVaoWATqOF
    4xJxOJj35MF3HT4y
    • Hebe die rechte Seite der SSD leicht an und schiebe sie aus ihrer Buchse auf dem Logic Board heraus.

    where can I buy a 1 or 2 TB SSD? I think it isn’t possible using a SSD like I build in my MacBook Pro mid 2012?

    Chris -

    You can get 1TB or 2TB SSD from OWC macsales.com

    https://eshop.macsales.com/shop/ssd/owc/...

    Macrepair SF -

    Hi,

    I intent to purchase a 2 TB ssd for my late 2013 MBP. I read some comments, that the mac reaacted weirdly and was not 100 % compatible with the ssd (not waiking up properly, macstart sound sounded twice, sometimes freezing…). Can you confirm these issues, and are there any workaroundas for them?

    Secondly I plan to restore the time machine from my broken late 2011 MBP. Since you recommended late os for the ssd upgrade I was wondering whether If I restore a time machine backup with an older os if my ssd will cause problems then because the drivers are suddenly missing?

    Thanks and best regards

    ramón

    ramón -

    I did this first thing after disconnecting the battery and I'd suggest everyone to do the same! Save your data!

    My battery was bulging and it is obviously quite dangerous. But anyways, any battery in seemingly good conditions can be dangerous as well.

    So in order to prevent a massive data loss along a very long crying session, I opened the back, disconnected the batt as per the guide instructions and then took the SSD off.

    So in case something had gone wrong and the battery started smoking forcing me to throw my laptop off the window, burying it in sand or the whole thing starting to burn, I would've already had a way to access my data by setting the SSD aside first thing.

    It is actually no joke when working with batteries, specially when they're bulging like mine was. Check videos on youtube and see how volatile these things can be!

    Kudos to the iFixit team, this is a great guide!

    Ismael Abufon -

    Ismael: That's a good idea, but it's also a good idea to back up the SSD before beginning the Macbook disassembly procedure. This way you'll have two copies of your data, and you can plug the backup into another Mac if you need access to it before you've got your Macbook reassembled, especially if something goes wrong during reassembly that prevents you from using your Macbook for a while.

    johnsawyercjs -

  20. yTthpU4d1GgVeS1y
    yTthpU4d1GgVeS1y
    UmdAWDmcCTI6iXVL
    • Verwende die Spitze eines Spudgers, um den Verschluss des I/O-Board Datenkabels nach oben zu klappen und es Richtung Akku zu drehen.

    • Verwende das flache Ende eines Spudgers, um das Datenkabel des I/O-Boards aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board herauszuziehen.

    • Hebe das Datenkabel dabei nicht an, da dessen Buchse sehr empfindlich ist. Ziehe das Kabel parallel zur Stirnseite des Logic Boards ab.

    This is a difficult step. A few images for the removal of the cable would be good/better

    Robert Jan Lebbink -

    Yes, a few more detailed pics here would help. Indeed, general pics explaining HOW ALL the plugs and sockets fit would be VERY handy :-)

    Simon Anthony -

    Here is that guide!

    Carsten Frauenheim -

    I helped me to use the pliers both to get underneath the canble lock and then push on the wings of the cable.

    Calvin Truong -

    Used fingers on the cable lock.

    Joseph Gorse -

    gently use tips of tweezers at either side to walk it out

    Christa -

    It is much more easy to do step 21 before step 20 - this cable is more easy to remove

    Also if you assemble then do step 20 before step 21 - it is more easy to place the cable into the connector

    Muescha -

  21. cgvuUMLKkgWNtMHU
    cgvuUMLKkgWNtMHU
    GIRGCoErFvRNapLt
    i4rL5UwTJdxdKLAD
    • Entferne die beiden 3,1 mm T5 Torx-Schrauben, mit denen das I/O Board am Logic Board befestigt ist.

    • Bei manchen Modellen hilft es beim Ausbau des I/O Boards zusätzlich, wenn du auch die silberne 3,5 mm Torx T5 Schraube vom Kühlkörper entfernst.

    • Hebe das I/O Board vorsichtig an und entferne es aus dem unteren Gehäuse.

    This did not want to come out. The bottom was really wedged in there good. I had to pry up the bottom part with a screw driver. The funny thing was it was really easy to put back in. *shrug*

    Jer -

    it actually has an extra screw that needs to be removed.

    Reid Rankin -

    Thank you. Removing the screw by the heat sink really helped get this board removed.

    Christopher Hofmann -

    It helped me to push the IO board further into the casing and then lifting.

    Calvin Truong -

    i/o cable was much easier to remove after freeing the i/o board & slightly lifting it. SK

    Stefan Kirchanski -

    I believe, the IO Board can stay where it is, for logic board replacement..?

    smirgle -

    Yes, I replace motherboard without touch IO Board

    Александр Гращенков -

    On a 2014.5 design, these instructions should be revised on this process. The heat pipe needs to be removed first if one were to remove the I/O CCA, Reason being, the CCA is installed first into the case and then the heat pipe contact tab lays atop the CCA under the plastic injection molded part. This injection molded piece part secures the tab to the CCA to ensure optimal contact thus, ensuring heat is wicked away from the CCA.

    So when I see comments regarding how it is easier to install than remove, that is an indicator that the user was unaware of how to correctly assemble this component thus, the CCA top side substrate is sitting below the heat pipe tab vs. the other way around.

    This will induce a thermal issue on the I/O CCA and also, possibly short out the board when the conformal coating and painted surface of the heat pipe wears off due to vibration when cables are connected.

    While I like these instructions, I would overhaul them and revise them.

    Christopher McKenna -

    Yes, removing the screw near the heat sink really did make it come out easily!

    David Choy -

    Notice that the silver 3.5 mm T5 Torx screw is the same one you’re going the be asked to remove on step 29.

    Rafael Pérez -

    As per comments above, I found it mandatory to remove the extra silver screw near the heat sink, which locked the logic board.

    Hence, the instructions for this step were very relevant:

    "On some models, also removing the silver 3.5 mm T5 Torx screw from the heatsink can aid in I/O board removal."

    Tim Telcik -

  22. kwyXuMVnFWtCSZKu
    • Verwende das flache Ende eines Spudgers, um die Kopfhörerbuchse von ihrem Anschluss auf dem Logic Board nach oben abzuziehen.

    After connect the cable aux is not working

    deepak selvanathan -

    Mine is not working as well after reconnecting, what to do now?

    Guillermo Pichardo -

    Strange, I'm working on the same model, and it doesn't have a flex here. It's soldered.

    Ross Karnes -

    Same as Ross. No cable to pry. It’s soldered. But looks like I can continue on anyway

    Cameron Melvin -

    Mine not soldered.

    Paul Clarke -

  23. 3NcryXfiewPjLtdx
    3NcryXfiewPjLtdx
    FrAmU6eUJuptE4yD
    • Verwende das flache Ende eines Spudgers, um den linken Lautsprecheranschluss aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board herauszuziehen.

    • Benutze die Spitze eines Spudgers, um den rechten Lautsprecheranschluss aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board herauszuziehen.

    • Achte darauf, dass du auch wirklich am Ende des Kabels ziehst, und nicht an der Buchse selbst. Wenn du den Hebel an der Buchse ansetzt, kann diese sich vom Logic Board lösen.

    This step could use an image showing the cable lock in the "up" position, releasing the connector. It is hard to see how it works in the "down" position. I think this is the actual connector - there are images in the PDF linked here:

    http://www.ddknet.co.jp/English/products...

    My MBP has an intermittent connection in this keyboard cable. It would be good to know where to buy a replacement!

    Rich -

    Pry the speaker connectors *up and out*. Doing it from the cable's sides, next to connectors, is easier.

    Kitipong Mork -

    Not sure what happened, but when I put it back together, i barely had enough room to plug this back in. It’s like the cable shrunk. I had to really yank on it to get it to fit.

    Jer -

    Adhesive under the left cable made it hard for me to remove it. The right one came out very easy.

    Calvin Truong -

    i broke off all the connectors to the logic board any fix for this ?

    Steven Rai -

    be gentle - lever under each edge of the connector - you may have to do one side then the other , but the connectors come out easily enough

    AES -

    Key here is to go EXTREMELY slow and gentle. The speaker connector in left photo has no release lever(in case you were wondering) I used a tweezer to hold very outside edge down while massaging cable side from underneath with spooner. Gentle rocking and it finally came out properly!

    Edward Bannan -

    These instructions are completely inadequate. For anyone who hasn’t done this before, there has to be some image of whatever it is that releases the cables. “Pry the left speaker connector up” without showing the release is just telling me how to turn my computer into junk. . . Which I just did. It’s twelve years old and fully backed up, so I was prepared for this, but I am very disappointed in these instructions. They’ve been bad from the start.

    David Ericksen -

    Es wäre besser, wenn man den Ausbau des rechten Lautsprecherkabels besser heraushebt! Ich habe das leider überlesen und den Connector zerstört. Aber ich habe es doch irgendwie geschafft, das der Lautsprecher funktioniert!

    markus.scheiner -

    Pay attention that there are 2 connectors of speakers! Otherwise, you will realise in step 32 (like I did) that you forgot one of them ;).

    Francisco Daza -

    Despite being extremely careful, both of these connectors broke off from their position on the logic board. It seems like they were soldered on rather than being just a push fit.

    Dave Harper -

    following these instructions exactly removed the entire socket from the board. This needs much more detailed instructions and pictures on how to accomplish this and how the connector is put together. the wide view here is grossly inadequate. This needs a much bigger warning to slide the cable away from the connector as any prying will destroy it. The socket came up and took the pads with it, so there's no soldering it back on. guess I'll just have to go without one audio channel in the onboard speakers

    Manuka -

    On minute 15:04, in this video, this step is better explained: https://youtu.be/ykqJenHhZJs

    amanda -

    well, i managed to do it without screwing the cable, you've actually got to hold the cables at the very base of their connection to the board and gently pull the all together up, not to the side.

    amanda -

  24. iGImQq1nGe5YUKis
    • Wenn sich Klebeband auf dem Stecker des Tastatur-Flachbandkabels befindet, dann ziehe es davon ab.

    On Re-assembly, I found this to be the hardest part. I resorted to using the provided tweezers and taking turns left and right, working it back into its ZIF socket. If someone knows a better way, please share.

    Fred Anderson -

    I just got done with this and my plus/equal, tilde/apostraphe, brackets/braces and volume up keys are not working. Wondering is this isn't seated correctly or if i damaged something. :-(

    sturmjonny -

    This is one of the fussier flex cables to reconnect. I'd say it's worth opening it back up and reseating it. Only takes a few minutes—just disconnect the battery and then come straight to this step. Make sure the cable contacts are clean (wipe them with a little isopropyl alcohol and a lint-free cloth), and that the connector is clear of any dirt/debris (give it a good blast or two with some compressed air). Make sure the cable is inserted perfectly flat and straight into the connector (this is the hardest part, just takes patience and a little dexterity). Good luck!

    Jeff Suovanen -

    After replacing the battery I also ended up with keys that don't work (ESC, 0, -, p, ;, ', ENTER). Tried reseating the connector, but without any luck. What is weird is that the keys sometimes work, sometimes they don't. Usually they don't in the first 10 minutes or so after I turn on the mac. If the room temperature is lower (if it's cold), the keys are not functional for a longer period of time...

    Advice for other people who are changing their macbook battery: take extra care with this connector!

    alin.catana -

    This is really a pain to pull out. You sorta have to lift it up and out - I was worried I was going to flex the cable and break it too much.

    Jer -

    Use the retaining flap to pull the ribbon cable back into the socket.

    Andrew Dunning -

    This keyboard ribbon is so thin. It is like thinner than X-ray film. I was afraid to remove the ribbon from the socket. So, I skipped this step and follow other steps till ‘Step 30’. I didn't remove the logic board as shown in Step 31 and 32. Instead, I removed DC board screws and then DC board from the hole. The cable from the DC board connected at bottom corner of the logic board. I hold the MacBook Pro vertically and lift the logic board slightly and removed the DC board ‘plug’ from the socket. Next, I plugged in the new DC board and followed this procedure in reverse order ( from Step 30 to Step 1). Everything went fine. Important Note: When lifting logic board, please do it carefully and very slowly. Don’t be hurry and don’t break anything. Use magnifying glass and Magnifier in your iPhone to see the tiny parts big and clearly, before removing them.

    Jay Rajamanickam -

  25. igNuw2smaQPfTiHI
    igNuw2smaQPfTiHI
    N2XJmrDfDjQS4OJT
    wCbinbOGYupmVNWu
    • Klappe den Sicherungsbügel am ZIF-Anschluss des Flachbandkabels der Tastatur mit dem flachen Ende des Spudgers hoch.

    • Vergewissere dich, dass du den Spudger nicht am Anschluss, sondern nur am Sicherungsbügel ansetzt.

    • Ziehe das Tastatur-Flachbandkabel mit dem flachen Ende des Spudgers aus dem Anschluss heraus. Drücke erst auf einer, dann auf der anderen Seite.

    What is the connector to the right of the keyboard (shown in the above diagram i.e with battery at the bottom)?

    There doesn’t seem to be anything attached to this connector on my system.

    The trackpad connector looks quite similar to the leftof thekeyboard connector.

    Darrell Haslam -

    It connects to the EFI Chip.. You can read / write bios information here with dedicatet tools..

    smirgle -

    I was having trouble seating the keyboard connection back in. In actuality the issue was the real electronic connector was hidden under logic board after reinstalling the PCB! i was trying to insert the Tape cover instead! Had to re-loosen Logic board and retrieve connector (should see metal traces on the connection strip (that is an easy way to confirm! I had used some scotch tape to hold the cover tape back and this caused me to miss the actual wire harness! I advise anyone doing this process to have a magnifyer with a light so it is easier to see the small parts.

    Edward Bannan -

    Rather than pushing with the Spudger, I found it much easier to use the tape to pull directly back on the connector.

    Michael Bryenton -

  26. mhkqUcNS4FXD4ofs
    • Verwende das flache Ende eines Spudgers, um den Anschluss des Trackpad-Flachbandkabels von seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board zu hebeln.

  27. YQo2PkxbsY3DEXQI
    • Verwende das flache Ende eines Spudgers, um den Anschluss für die Hintergrundbeleuchtung der Tastatur von seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board nach oben abzuziehen.

    As with all the cables you must be careful here. This one felt even more fragile than the others to me.

    zacz0007 -

  28. GeUBqZobymBF5UUB
    • Klappe mit der Spitze eines Spudgers oder mit deinem Fingernagel die Halteklappe an der ZIF-Buchse des Mikrofon-Flachbandkabels nach oben.

    • Vergewissere dich, dass du den Hebel auch wirklich an der Halteklappe ansetzt und nicht etwa an der Buchse selbst.

    • Ziehe das Mikrofon-Flachbandkabel aus seiner Buchse.

    A small elastic popped out when removing the cable. Glad I wore the protective glasses.

    Louie -

    Meaning, pull the ribbon cable out horizontally. And be aware that the copper wiring is on the underside of the cable and the topside is just black plastic, so don’t freak out and think you ripped something pulling it out.

    Chapman Harrison -

    This cable is quite stiff and felt very resistant to being pulled out - I gently shaped a small bread tag piece of plastic in to a hook that would gently and evenly pull the cable back without tilting it to one side or the other. It is also a pain getting it back in when replacing the logic board - very stiff. Be patient.

    AES -

    I just used tweezers.

    curtis phan -

    Looks like it had a sticky patch fixing it near the edge of the board - this would make it unwilling to come out of the socket. The patch looks to be the width of the cable and square, so probably pushing a thin something (plastic) under the cable up to the edge of the board would unstick it.

    Christopher -

  29. TwIELCp3mYRYmnyZ
    TwIELCp3mYRYmnyZ
    dh15WV5WJdVcDo6J
    • Benutze die Spitze eines Spudgers, um den Verschluss des Display Datenkabels zu lösen und drehe es in Richtung des DC-In.

    • Ziehe das Display Datenkabel aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board heraus.

    • Hebe das Display Datenkabel nicht an, da dessen Buchse sehr empfindlich ist. Ziehe das Kabel parallel zur Stirnseite des Logic Boards ab.

    I'd recommend using the pliers.

    Calvin Truong -

  30. 2RRpi2HU4TB5b6LI
    • Verwende das flache Ende eines Spudgers, um vorsichtig die Gummikappe der Linsenschraube in der Nähe des MagSafe 2-Steckers abzuhebeln.

  31. LRIouFU1vREQrLFg
    • Entferne die folgenden sechs Schrauben, mit denen das Logic Board am oberen Gehäuse befestigt ist:

    • Eine 2,6 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Zwei 5,8 mm T5 Torx Schrauben

    • Eine 3,8 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Eine 5,2 mm T5 Torx Linsenschraube

    • Eine silberne 3,5 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    While you're doing this, unplug the right speaker before you lift the logic board. That is the only step missing in the guide.

    anthony -

    anthony: Unplugging the right speaker connector was done in step 23.

    Kitipong Mork -

    No, you are mistaken . Step 23 was for the LEFT speaker. Anthony is correct stating that right speaker disconnect is missing from this guide. NOW is the time to disconnect the right speaker from the LB!

    Macrepair SF -

    when following on the contrary, its good to check all the ribbons and cables to make sure some are not stuck under board prior to screwing down.

    Robert Gregory -

    green indicator: raised head screw is the one you removed the rubber cap from in prior step. (I removed – and then replaced — a different screw in this step. Revisited it with more daylight and saw my error.)

    auntialias -

  32. QePfIJK3Wy5riktK
    QePfIJK3Wy5riktK
    SMXPFwDsZrd5tgGu
    NsYeubnNVdlbDFfR
    • Hebe das Logic Board an der Seite an, die dem Akku am nächsten liegt und drehe es nach oben.

    • Drücke den MagSafe 2-Stecker vorsichtig mit dem flachen Ende eines Spudgers aus seiner Buchse auf der Unterseite des Logic Boards.

    • Überprüfe bei der Neuinstallation des Logic Boards die Kabel an den gekennzeichneten Stellen, um sicherzustellen, dass sie nicht unter das Logic Board gesteckt werden.

    • Im Uhrzeigersinn von oben: Tastatur, Trackpad, Akku, rechter Lautsprecher, Hintergrundbeleuchtung der Tastatur, Display, Mikrofon, Kopfhörerbuchse, linker Lautsprecher.

    In bullet #1 I lifted logic board from left side (nearest battery), tilted toward right side (port side) and pulled to to the left a bit to get ports out of chassis cutouts.

    Then I followed bullet #2.

    Kitipong Mork -

    Going revese order, remember about mic connector and backlit connector. Those nasty small tails are easy to omit. Then you will have to repeat disassembly to get them from under mainboard.

    Radoslaw Przybyl -

    Agreed with Radoslaw's comment. It might even be nice to have a list of small cables to watch for during logic board reassembly.

    talarohk -

    @radioerewan @talarohk - I think that's a good idea. I went ahead and added a photo showing all the cable locations to check—hopefully it will save someone some trouble! Thanks for your comments.

    Jeff Suovanen -

    This was the single most important pic of the reassembly.

    Mike Jeffries -

    Yes heed everyone’s warning. I had to remove the entire logic board TWICE because i forgot to pull out the antennae and the backlit keyboard plug.

    Jer -

    Yes, be very careful before screwing things down. I also forgot the backlight and the display cables. Had the cover for the display cable out, but not the actual cable. I was able to use tweezers to fish the cables out after removing the screws but without removing the whole board.

    E Carlton Hays Jr -

    My logic board was stuck under the battery PCB, on the top right side of the battery PCB, when viewed like in the first picture.

    I suggest removing the two screws from step 35 holding the PCB down for a little more wiggle room before attempting to remove the logic board.

    Tom -

    I had to go back cause I couldn’t figure out where the logic board connector into (under the board). Funny enough i assembled it and it worked though the night and didn’t come on again. Had to go through the whole process b4 i figured it out. Definitely a good idea to at least breeze through all the images

    Yemi Dalley -

    In link MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Mitte 2015 Logic Board austauschen step 34 the second picture exit the procedure install ZIP

    raul -

    reassembly: so far the hardest step. After getting all the connectors above board, I still couldn’t quite line up the screw holes. It finally turned out that the board was being prevented from being in its full leftward position because the edge of a flange at the top of the USB port was directly positioned against the edge of a flange on the case. I used my thumbnail to press down on the port’s flange so that it slid under the case flange, allowing the board to shift left another half-millimeter and make everything finally line up.

    Chapman Harrison -

    I Just removed the whole power connector with the main board, seemed a little easier. But that’s just me. Good manual thou.

    Timothy de Wal -

    Had a lot of trouble getting the power cable out. Would definitly recomend this.

    Calvin Truong -

    100% take the power connector out. This guide is amazing but that is something I would change in it. Also I would do step 35 before attempting to remove the logic board. Unsure if there are other implications of this approach.

    kevinhayes656 -

    Am I completely stupid? ...! When I wanted to remove the mainboard, it was still connected to a plug. I searched, but found no indication about this plug. So I had to try to figure out how this plug works. I started trying, which finally tore the console off the board: -o ...: .- ( It is a small plug to the right of the power supply - Pic. #3 top right!!. Comes below the battery. Note, this must be pushed backwards, but may have a lock. What can I do now? If someone has a tip that I do not have to change my motherboard, I am very, very grateful!

    privat -

    I had the same issue where that cable was still connected. I noticed that it was the same type as another one where it needed to be lifted vertically so I did that using the tweesers.

    Jonathan McCaffrey -

    Same problem here, so concerned I might break it I've been working on it for more than an hour! Frustrating to be stuck this late in the process. Anyone know how we missed it in the guide and what it's called?

    Pamela Wilson -

    Definitely unscrew and remove the two screws that hold the MagSafe 2 connector then remove the connector with the board.

    The connector that’s not mentioned in the dissasembly manual is the right hand loudspeaker connector. It pulls up, just the same way as the left hand loudspeaker connector does. No locking tab.

    Other than that it’s a brilliant dissasembly instruction manual, well done.

    I took the logic board out, re-soldered U8900 (well known issue with these boards) and put it back together following the manual in reveres. All works fine now.

    One thing that I did which helped. I printed the manual off, then stuck the screws in every case to the page next to where each screw was described using cellotape. So every screw went back exactly where it came from.

    Steve Hills -

    It is mentioned in step 23, but I agree it was not very clear (I also realised in this step).

    Francisco Daza -

    For me, this step was the most hard part when reassemble. Because it is easy to forget or hard to reconnect MagSafe 2 connector properly. I had to give in to professionals just to find out i couldn’t plug this MagSafe 2 connector properly. because of it’s limited angle and i only have 2 hands to do the job while board is lifted.

    kmg125 -

    Instead of disconnecting the magsafe socket, I unscrewed the two screws holding it to the case. Then, when the logic board is removed, the connector will slide out with the logic board. Also useful to if theres a bunch of magnetic junk stuck to the adapter as it becomes easy to clean.

    max -

    Unscrewing the 2 magsafe screws should be put as a step in the manual. I had a hard time disconnecting the cable and a hard time trying to connect it back when reassembling because there is not enough room to do it and i couldn’t figure out that there is a small clip that holds the connector back in place safely. I had to repeat the role proccess of assemble/disassemble twice in order to fix the magsafe not charging issue. I thought i had lost the connector or damaged the board.

    Jean masaoka -

    Agreed. I found it necessary to unscrew the magsafe power socket from the main board during disassembly to help unplug the ribbon cable from the main board, then screw in the magsafe power socket before the main board during reassembly. The magsafe power socket plug is too short to try and reattach when the magsafe power socket remain attached to the chasis.

    Tim Telcik -

    unscrewing the mag safe as max suggests is a great suggestion. Easier and you can clean the connector.

    klloyd -

    It is not necessary to remove the logic board for this. I did this process without removing the logic board and the 30 steps required to disconnect, remove and reconnect it. It was much easier. Not sure why iFixit insists on removing the logic board: its presence does not block removal of the battery.

    Ben Doherty -

    Why do you need to remove the entire logic board??? Seems like if you detach the appropriate cables, remove the speakers, that that should be enough. Removing the entire board doesn’t seem necessary - what am I missing?

    Sandwah -

    Same question here. What’s the reason behind removing entire logic board?

    Art Skupienski -

    From what i gather, logic board removal facilitates de-adhering the ex-battery units, as the solvent can damage the speakers.

    AKin Adams -

  33. mT3pqV1EMgN3H5cm
    • Entferne die Logic Board Einheit vom MacBook Pro.

  34. GPTLjiuRMbjmL24f
    GPTLjiuRMbjmL24f
    cnXgqCCRigKBIx31
    • Entferne die folgenden drei Schrauben, mit denen der linke Lautsprecher am oberen Gehäuse befestigt ist:

    • Eine 5,6 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Eine 6,9 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Eine 2,6 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Hebe den linken Lautsprecher aus dem oberen Gehäuse heraus und lege ihn beiseite.

    • Der Lautsprecher ist leicht am Gehäuse festgeklebt.

    On my MBP there was an adhesive holding the speakers down. So, "lifting" was not exactly accurate.

    Fred Anderson -

    Yeah there’s a tiny smidgen of glue around the speaker itself. I just slowly put force on it and it ripped off quite easily.

    Jer -

    I have A1398 15 inch , need to replace or fixed left speaker but i can’t find One 2.6 mm T5 Torx screw(yellow one), any idea what to do here?

    Biswajit Patra -

    Same question as Biswajit, I can’t find the 2.6 mm T5 Torx screw (yellow one) on my mid 2012 MBP...

    Daniel Gandolfo -

    can you get too the speaker without taking the logic board first

    gianguyen1991 -

    How it possible to get speaker out if system without taking the logic board first?

    Biswajit Patra -

    I only removed the 10 screws and the back panel, the 5 speaker’s screws (without removing the speakers), and the two battery screws, and managed to remove the battery package without undoing anything else. I used a member card (credit card type) to loosen the adhesives under the batteries.

    To remove the rest of the glue, I soaked it with something called Label Off from Biltema (Nordic). Finally, I used methylated spirit (rødsprit) to clean it all up and let it dry for 5 minutes before assembling the new battery pack.

    Andreas H. Parlow -

    Yeah, it seems that all this complexity is just about protecting the speakers from the acetone… a different solvent might have saved me a LOT of work, and damage to my speaker connection.

    Peter Kaczkowski -

    The speakers may stick so be prepared to gently force any adhesive free.

    Eddie Reyes -

  35. PMKjS6igTlLAIXHu
    PMKjS6igTlLAIXHu
    KVePvJ4cIR2ukjNq
    • Entferne die folgenden drei Schrauben mit denen der rechte Lautsprecher am oberen Gehäuse befestigt ist:

    • Eine 5,6 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Eine 6,9 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Eine 2,6 mm T5 Torx Schraube

    • Entferne den rechten Lautsprecher aus dem MacBook Pro.

    • Der Lautsprecher ist leicht mit dem Gehäuse verklebt.

    My speaker wire was wedged under the edge of the battery. I proceeded to step 35 and removed the two battery screws. This freed up the cable.

    Fred Anderson -

    Mine was stuck too, and I did what Fred did and waited to step 35 to try and remove the cable. It turned out not to be wedged under anything, but just glued in place.

    Chapman Harrison -

    I used the flat spudger to loosing the glue underneath the speaker to remove it.

    KC89 -

    My left Speaker makes ugly noise. do I really have to do all the steps or is it possible to just remove the speaker… I guess, it’s necessary.

    Gerd Herzog -

    The speaker has quite a lot of plastic that goes under the board at the top end. There is no option but to remove the covering parts. The notes show which steps can be skipped.

    Simon Anthony -

  36. yZTCai4fqNDlDHit
    • Entferne die zwei 3,9 mm T5 Torx Schrauben, mit denen das Akku Board befestigt ist.

    When rebuilding, be sure not to pin the square trackpad ribbon cable connector under the wide keyboard ribbon cable. It should be over the keyboard ribbon.

    Chapman Harrison -

    I did this step before step 32. Loosening these screws helped me remove the logic board, which was trapped under this thing.

    max -

    can i start at step 36 for the battery or do i have to do everything before it?

    HENRY HALL -

  37. wvhwVpssmCHimbW4
    • Der in deinem Kit enthaltene flüssige Klebstoffentferner kann die Antireflexbeschichtung auf dem Display deines MacBook Pro beschädigen.

    • Lege eine Aluminiumfolie zwischen Display und Tastatur, um dein Display zu schützen. Die Folie sollte während des gesamten Arbeitsprozesses dort bleiben.

    I was wondering how it could leak. I suppose you could spill it, or flood the battery space with it and it leaks through the trackpad.

    Jer -

    You’re correct. On most models, it’s unlikely to leak unless you use way too much. The foil is a “better-safe-than-sorry” precaution.

    Jeff Suovanen -

    At this point removing the screen is a matter of minutes so to be safe I just removed the display assembly all together.

    Tom -

    Agreed, might as well just remove it to be safe, you’ve removed everything else and it’s just 6 more screws and 5 minutes time.

    maccentric -

    In my case it leaked through the trackpad…. I had a transparent film (instead of aluminium) and it did not damage the screen.

    derdietrich -

  38. tyXL3Pqbf3CBDuZp
    tyXL3Pqbf3CBDuZp
    WaMwYMER6MTZvmML
    • Die Vorderkante des MacBook Pro sollte zu dir zeigen. Hebe die rechte Seite an und schiebe einen stabilen Schaumstoffblock oder ein Buch unter, so dass das MacBook Pro leicht schräg steht.

    • In den folgenden Schritten wirst du den flüssigen Klebstoff-Entferner auf die rechte (äußere) Kante des Akkus auftragen. Wenn also diese Seite des MacBook Pro erhöht ist, wird der Klebstoffentferner unter den Akku fließen können.

  39. RNabiDaSfuvoZfZm
    RNabiDaSfuvoZfZm
    a2Z26tQsw1Td2t2w
    • Dein MacBook Pro ist jetzt gut vorbereitet, nun wird es Zeit, auch dich selbst vorzubereiten.

    • Der iFixit Klebstoffentferner enthält Aceton, welches Haut und Augen reizen kann.

    • Wenn du mit dem Klebstoffentferner arbeitest und ihn aufbringst, solltest du immer deine Augen schützen. (Eine Schutzbrille ist in deinem Kit enthalten).

    • Insbesondere auch wenn du Kontaktlinsen trägst, musst du zusätzlich die Schutzbrille aufsetzen.

    • In deinem Kit sind auch Schutzhandschuhe enthalten. Wenn deine Haut empfindlich ist, solltest du die Handschuhe jetzt anziehen.

    Acetone is not the greatest thing but it’s in common solvents. For example, it’s in nail polish remover. It’s a good idea to do this in a well ventilated area.

    I like how iFixit decides to dye the acetone blue….. it's normally clear.

    Jer -

  40. KqMW4Wj2FjP1Ybnd
    KqMW4Wj2FjP1Ybnd
    4iivMWhZCDrLFwYl
    uf2DmYAYSFONGdOY
    • Ziehe den schwarzen Gummistopfen von dem Fläschchen mit Klebstoffentferner ab.

    • Drehe die Kappe der Flasche, um sie lösen oder zu entfernen, bevor du die Spitze des Applikators abschneidest.

    • Die Versiegelung der Flasche wird dadurch geöffnet und der Druck kann sich ausgleichen, bevor du die Applikatorspitze abschneidest. Wenn du diesen Schritt übergehst, dann kann die Flüssigkeit beim Abschneiden der Spitze unkontrolliert herausspritzen.

    • Schneide die verschlossene Applikatorspitze mit einer Schere ab.

    • Schneide die Spitze an der engen Stelle ab. Dadurch kannst du den Klebstoffentferner beim Ausfließen besser kontrollieren.

    • Drehe die Abdeckkappe wieder auf und verschließe sie gut, bevor du fortfährst.

    For all those who acquired the battery from another vendor who did not supply you with above mentionned glue-remover or similar: Acetone or Silicone Remover work well too, as many other also commented through various steps of this turorial. I tried using petrol (or gasonline for our american readers - not to mix up with petroleum, which is something completely different), which worked well for me for iPad repairs before but I cannot recommend it in this special case. Thinner might work as well, but be very careful, for it dissolves plastic and might damage the battery covering in which the lithium is shrink-wrapped in. Also take good care not to damage any cables with thinner if you decide to use it. A well ventilated room goes without saying for all mentionned dissolvents.

    Tristan Falkner -

    The bottle included with the current kit (Sep 2022) does not require you to cut off the end. It's just a screw-off top.

    Matt -

  41. VbbVfOTBmL6iEKRK
    VbbVfOTBmL6iEKRK
    khbksQThWfJSZHXQ
    • Gib einige Tropfen des Klebstoffentferners gleichmäßig am erhöhten Rand entlang auf die am weitesten rechts liegenden Akkuzelle.

    • Du musst nicht sehr viel vom Klebstoffentferner verwenden. Das Fläschchen enthält mindestens die doppelte Menge, die du brauchst, um alle Akkuzellen zu entfernen.

    • Warte 2-3 Minuten, bis der flüssige Klebstoffentferner unter die Aktuelle eingedrungen ist, bevor du mit dem nächsten Schritt fortfährst.

    You don’t need more than 1mil. It will use capillary action and go along the entire side.

    IMHO, you can start wedging about 20 seconds. The acetone dissolves the adhesive almost immediately, and acetone dries up really fast.

    Jer -

    I found I needed to use a lot of the adhesive remover to assist with a stubborn battery pack that had been in place for 10 years.

    Tim Telcik -

  42. thWTXuELqHCX2WPR
    thWTXuELqHCX2WPR
    pbZpmMxCFuRZAByK
    VgmTOrTUgTN13J1o
    • Setze die Ecke einer Plastikkarte unter dem äußeren Rand der Akkuzelle an.

    • Es könnte hilfreich sein, die Karte ein bisschen zu drehen, so dass zwischen der Akkuzelle und dem Gehäuse des MacBook Pro ein Spalt entsteht.

    • Führe die Karte weiter unter die Akkuzelle, um sie von dem Kleber zu lösen, mit dem sie in das obere Gehäuse des MacBook Pro eingeklebt ist.

  43. aiIWZYtqRtdSTfV4
    aiIWZYtqRtdSTfV4
    a5e1kjjGZ43GDE4g
    • Hebe die Akkuzelle an, um sie vom oberen Gehäuse des MacBook Pro zu lösen, aber versuche noch nicht, sie ganz zu entfernen.

    • Lasse die Plastikkarte unter der Akkuzelle, damit sie nicht wieder festklebt, während du weitermachst.

  44. OEsA5ARHXdETjxBR
    OEsA5ARHXdETjxBR
    jS4TmVyfSZsmjLdH
    • Gib einige Tropfen des Klebstoffentferners gleichmäßig am erhöhten Rand entlang auf die nächste Akkuzelle.

    • Warte 2-3 Minuten, bis der flüssige Klebstoffentferner unter die Aktuelle eingedrungen ist, bevor du mit dem nächsten Schritt fortfährst.

    You don’t really need to wait 2 to 3 minutes. It starts dissolving right away. In fact if you wait too long, it will dry up again.

    Jer -

  45. HBVVYruT2yPu5LgD
    HBVVYruT2yPu5LgD
    5lmnVLBFMdRi6PyQ
    KxK4I65BaNXdfaL4
    • Schiebe eine Ecke deiner Plastikkarte unter die zweite Akkuzelle.

    • Drücke die Karte weiter unter die zweite Akkuzelle und schiebe sie hin und her, damit sich der darunterliegende Kleber löst.

    • Lasse die Plastikkarte unter beiden Akkuzellen (oder klappe sie um), damit sie nicht wieder ankleben, wenn du weitermachst.

  46. 1ePEx6juXeDDVxOU
    1ePEx6juXeDDVxOU
    QiSHpE2OtDALNquJ
    5EXLOgILFfej31Rc
    • Es ist Zeit, die Seiten zu wechseln. Entferne dein Buch oder deinen Schaumstoffblock und lege ihn unter die gegenüberliegende Seite deines MacBook Pro.

    • Wiederhole den Vorgang aus den vorherigen Schritten, um die beiden Akkuzellen auf dieser Seite abzulösen:

    • Trage den Klebstoff-Entferner auf die erhöhte Kante der äußeren Akkuzelle auf und warte 2-3 Minuten, bis er einwirkt.

    • Drücke eine Ecke einer Plastikkarte unter die Akkuzelle und schiebe die Karte vollständig unter die Akkuzelle, um diese vom Kleber zu lösen.

    • Mache dasselbe bei der benachbarten Zelle.

    • Lasse deine Plastikkarte an Ort und Stelle oder klappe die Akkuzellen um, damit sie bei den folgenden Schritten nicht wieder anhaften.

  47. INOfQTZQlqUM6PVR
    INOfQTZQlqUM6PVR
    V3RNulgqAMgUNrlS
    • Entferne dein Buch oder deinen Schaumstoffblock und lege ihn unter die hintere Kante deines MacBook Pro in der Nähe der Displayscharniere.

  48. YTH1LWNv5DP36dvK
    YTH1LWNv5DP36dvK
    xBbbE4jvuUhEiaob
    • Nimm den Akkustecker oder die obere Kante des Kunststoffrahmens des Akkus und hebe ihn leicht an, so dass die obere Kante der beiden mittleren Akkuzellen freigelegt wird.

  49. mUDbebAjPdinxPso
    mUDbebAjPdinxPso
    rtMyqYBTFYqShRqw
    • Hebe den Kunststoffrahmen des Akkus aus dem Weg und lasse ein paar Tropfen des Klebstoffentferners unter die Oberkante von jeder der beiden verbleibenden Akkuzellen laufen.

    • Warte 2-3 Minuten, damit der flüssige Klebstoffentferner einwirken kann, bevor du mit dem nächsten Schritt fortfährst.

    Instead of this, I just went and got safety wire I have, cut about 2ft, and then tucked it under a batter cell and went back and forth, about 5 times, and it cut through the adhesive. Did that for each cell and battery came right out. I didn’t bother removing the old adhesive, no point imo and saved from any liquids in the computer.

    Rick Hulun -

    I put the laptop at about 45º on its edge so the solvent could flow down, and then when doing the separation it was much easier to get the card between the metal plate and the batteries with the laptop case completely vertical. The double sided mounting tape on the battery is really aggressive and the rubberised compound quite annoying to remove the last traces off the metal plate. You will need a generous amount of solvent on a cleaning cloth or paper to remove the last of the adhesive.

    AES -

    One thng that I have never seen mentioned is that when you remove the two cenre cells it is quite easy to lift the metal plate that sits between the trackpad and the battery. My plate ame right off and was attached to the battery. Luckily I didn’t bend it very much but it would have been nice to know that this was a distinct possibility. The adhesive between this trackpad cover plate (thin stainless steeland the battery is a !&&* of a lot stronger that the adhesive between the plate and the body of the Macbook. It amazes me that I have never seen this mentioned in any written or video guide so be careful

    Peter Newman -

    Well, it actually is mentioned in the next step…

    William Ghelfi -

    this won’t damage the trackpad right? i’m worried about that….

    AppleTopic -

  50. RDeUUVIMJmwtZFUn
    RDeUUVIMJmwtZFUn
    Z1OUcuraS1KlQc4b
    2kMZekUZwkkElbJv
    • Hebe den Kunststoffrahmen wieder aus dem Weg und drücke eine Ecke deiner Plastikkarte unter den äußeren Rand der ersten mittleren Akkuzelle.

    • Heble nicht entlang der Kante mit dem Akkuanschluss, sonst besteht die Gefahr, dass das Flachbandkabel der Tastatur beschädigt wird.

    • Unterhalb der mittleren Akkuzellen schützt eine dünne Metallplatte das Trackpad. Achte darauf, nur die Akkuzellen abzuhebln, die Metallplatte sollte an Ort und Stelle bleiben!

    • Schiebe die Karte ganz unter der Akkuzelle und lasse sie dort, damit die Akkuzelle nicht wieder anhaftet.

    Pulled off the thin metal plate. Should I try to put it back in (bent up a bit) or leave it out upon replacing the battery?

    cameronjpu -

  51. LBhccXRfqnT6ZGrD
    LBhccXRfqnT6ZGrD
    OeWXInT25tLZtNlx
    2ouoPqlwuOearPeB
    • Wiederhole den oben beschriebenen Vorgang, um die letzte verbleibende Akkuzelle vom oberen Gehäuse des MacBook Pro zu trennen.

    I did it in reverse order for the last two cells, as it was easier to see the metal plate and get the card in between without going near the keyboard cable, then i had easier access for the last cell without any risk to the keyboard cable.

    AES -

  52. ODIOFfdFGOC4HOGs
    ODIOFfdFGOC4HOGs
    oeKvHAACRGaMHGPt
    • Hebe den Akku mit dem Kunststoffrahmen an und ziehe ihn nach hinten in Richtung Scharnier aus den Schraubstiften heraus, mit denen er am oberen Gehäuse befestigt ist.

    Ich habe am Sonntag den Akku gewechselt . Alles nach der Anleitung .

    Ich habe mich an die Anleitung gehalten , beim aus sowie beim Einbau. es verlief alles tadellos auch für mich als Einsteiger . es war zwar vieles etwas kniffelig mit der Elektronik und den keinen Schrauben . 1 bis 2 Stunden , nun ja , das hat leider nicht gereicht . 2 Einhalb bis 3 Stunden , den die meiste Zeit habe ich damit verbracht den Kleber des Akkus zu entfernen , der beigelegte kleberentferner nun ja , war nicht besonders oder ich hatte zu wenig Geduld . Alles in allem bin ich aber trotz allem sehr zufrieden .

    juerfri -

  53. ea1HuNaukoeG1LMm
    ea1HuNaukoeG1LMm
    JHvLKXx655h2OMuS
    • Hebe den Akku nun als Ganzes aus dem oberen Gehäuse heraus und entferne ihn.

    • Entferne alle alten Klebereste aus dem Gehäuse des MacBook Pro, bevor du einen neuen Akku einsetzt.

    • Mit etwas Glück kannst du jeden einzelnen Klebestreifen langsam mit den Fingern abziehen.

    • Falls das nicht klappt, träufle etwas Klebstoffentferner auf jeden Klebestreifen und lasse ihn 2-3 Minuten einwirken. Dann kannst du die Klebestreifen mit einem Plektron oder einem anderen geeigneten Werkzeug aus deinem Kit abkratzen. Das ist etwas langwierig, hier hilft dir nur Geduld!

    • Wische den restlichen Klebstoffentferner ab und lass dein MacBook Pro ein paar Minuten an der Luft trocknen.

    • Beim Ersatzakku sind die Klebestreifen bereits angebracht. Probiere zunächst aus, wie der Akku hineinpasst und achte darauf, ihn genau auszurichten, bevor du die Schutzstreifen vom Kleber abziehst. Anschliessend musst du jede Zelle gut festdrücken. Zusätzliche Folien, die sich nicht auf dem Originalakku befanden, solltest du jetzt entfernen.

    • Kalibriere den neu eingebauten Akku: Lade ihn auf 100% auf und lasse ihn mindestens 2 weitere Stunden eingesteckt. Benutze dein MacBook Pro wie gewohnt, um den Akku zu entleeren. Wenn das MacBook wegen geringem Akkustand von selbst in den Standby-Modus geht, lasse es noch mindestens 5 Stunden liegen, bevor du es wieder auf 100% lädst.

    • Wenn dir nach der Installation deines neuen Akkus etwas Ungewöhnliches auffällt oder Probleme auftreten, kann es sein, dass du den SMC deines MacBook Pros zurücksetzen musst.

    Tip: when testing the battery's fit, once you have it in place and the screw holes are lined up, I made two little marks with a pen right where it tucks under the screw posts. Then once you have the adhesive backs removed, just hold the battery upright and line up with your markings, then tilt it down and tuck it under.

    Fred Anderson -

    I ran out of the acetone liquid--why not include a full bottle of the stuff, guys?

    info -

    I'll arrange to send another bottle of the Adhesive Remover Solution your way. :)

    Kadan Sharpe -

    For anyone who's wondering, you can use the solvent quite sparingly—there's more than enough for one, possibly two battery jobs in there. But it can be tough to tell how much is enough if you're doing it for the first time. Stick with about 1 ml per cell, and add a second ml if needed.

    Jeff Suovanen -

    I just replaced the battery in a 2011 15 inch MacBook pro last week. It took maybe 5 minutes and cost around $100. Now the life is over 100% because the new battery I got was actually a higher capacity than the stock battery.

    I find it actually almost criminal that Apple has progressively tried to make it harder and harder to do DIY maintenance and improvements. At this point I refuse to buy a new Mac. I have 15 apple products in my house….but they are not going to get any newer. I prefer to buy a good used mac and put new RAM or an SSD drive in it. Maybe the graphics is not quite up to par but they are good solid machines. People (maybe a smaller subset) want choice and options and preventing any DIY work is a bad move in my mind! Typing on a 2012 MacBook pro 13 inch…which is a great size. I was able to add a 1 TB SSD to it, but it has 8 GB or RAM and that is not enough….Chrome freezes constantly and you can only have a few apps open. Come on Apple! listen to your customers, not your shareholders.

    Kris Cone -

    Hi - I was told that you need to replace trackpad and a keyboard when replacing battery for this mac. Is it true? Thank you

    Dany -

    No, that is not required!

    JAY NAV -

    hi, after replacing the battery, all seems to work properly except the headphones jack. I can hear the sound from the internal speakers but when I plug the headphones jack sound is not output and it stills come from internal speakers. I checked again the headphone jack cable and it is properly fit on the board. I also tried resetting the SMC but problem persists. Could you please advise ? Sherif.

    Sherif Fayek -

    I want to remove the 2 center cells to get at the track pad, but it seems that plastic frame forces you to remove all the cells. Am I right? That makes the job much harder.

    joigaloid9 -

    After replacing the battery I can’t charge the battery to 100%. Maximum charging is 91%, the led at the power cable does not get green even after hours of charging.

    Even a SMC reset did not help….. Any ideas?

    hefe_killer -

    Got the same problem as hefe_killer. I reset the SMC, yet sometimes my MacBook just shuts off and when I charge it it says 1% even though it had maybe 50% or so left when it shut off. Also when it runs out of battery it immediately shuts off instead of falling asleep.

    Kevin -

    Me too :( Kevin

    robin delrez -

    Have you tried re-calibrating it?

    Derek -

    I think that in “Mop up any remaining adhesive remover and give your MacBook Pro a few minutes to air dry.” - the “mop up part is a major understatament.

    This is by FAR the most laborious, messy, and time consuming step in the whole affair.. Of course it does not have to be done perfect but..

    Alex Miro -

    I recently replaced the battery on my MBP mid 2012 and it was working fine. I did the calibration and it seemed the battery was doing great. I was using my laptop until it hit 10% and the laptop suddenly shut down. I have tried to turn it back on using the power button but it is unresponsive. I have performed an SMC reset but it still will not turn on. How would I know if the battery is defective?

    Justin Hong -

    @justinhong93 Easiest way to check is to plug the old battery back into the board and see if that makes any difference. It’s a little tricky because obviously you don’t want to pry the old battery out until you’re sure whether it’s bad. But IIRC you can carefully set the old battery on top of the new one and plug it in. Secure it with some masking tape and carefully flip it over and turn it on. If that resolves the problem, it was probably a defective battery. Good luck!

    Jeff Suovanen -

    Is it really necessary to remove everything or does it just give you more room to remove the battery and the adhesive?? This seems like such a daunting task when removing the battery seems so simple.

    Cheyanne Witcher -

    No, you are absolutely right !

    Daniel Gandolfo -

    I just installed the battery, it wasn’t as bad as i thought. Im anxious to make sure everything is working, can I use the laptop while its charging in its calibration state? The instructions say to charge fully and then an additional 2 hours, so does this mean (A) we can have it charging while we use it or (B) leave it powered off and charging until full, then an additional 2 hours, then we use? im confused

    Joshua Rivera -

    @joshrivera Answer (A). It’s okay to use while it’s charging.

    Jeff Suovanen -

    So after double checking everything, and resetting the smc, I notice my battery status was not showing up on the menu bar. I check system preferences and the batter is at 0%. Seems like it’s not being recognized at all.

    Joshua Rivera -

    did you ever resolve this?

    ammovirk -

    Since replacing the battery, bluetooth connection is intermittent. Any ideas as to what to recheck?

    jon -

    hi there. I replaced the battery and it did charge, but the LED on the plug did not durn orange. but now it dose not charge at all anymore. after i did the reset of the SMC but now nothing happens anymore. can anyone help?

    Roman Frauchiger -

    I too am having the same problem.

    htbottoms -

    Roman, I was able to get my mine to boot. I pressed the left Shift-Control-Option and Power buttons for the 10+ seconds then released only the Shift-Control-Option buttons, continuing to hold the power button. Fans came on then the start-up tone. I can use it this way, but the mag-Safe does not show the LED and there is no battery monitor in the header.

    I tried the SMC reset many times but it does nothing.

    hopefully I’ll hear something back here or on Apple’s site.

    htbottoms -

    Hi guys, I have just replaced the battery on macbook pro retina A1398 with a 1417 battery, I have orange light on magsafe however the battery information shows not charging and to replace battery now. Can anyone one enlighten some information on to what to do next?

    I have also tried reset SMC several times I have noticed the right side IO board is not working properly.

    Thanks

    zemlo -

    Perfekt gute Anleitung! Ist wirklich einfach zum Nachmachen!!

    Many Thanks!

    MrHelipix -

    TIP: bevore putting in the new batterie, check that the batterie connector is centered, and alingned with the main board. Else you cannot nicley plug in the connector and the battery cannot be screwed in any more.

    Thank you for putting this together. I’m back again with my notebook. It took me 4 hours, and I skipped steps 5 to 34.

    derdietrich -

    ARE YOU SURE YOUR SMC RESET ACTUALLY HAPPENED?? HOW TO KNOW: I installed iFixit kit new battery 3mo ago into my mid-2012 MBP Retina with success except for a very abnormal battery discharge pattern (dropped to 77% in 1h, then to 28% in next 15min, then to auto-shutdown in next 45m). After multiple recalibrations, and after multiple attempts to reset SMC using the iFixit link to Apple instructions, nothing changed.

    This week I discovered that the Apple instructions are correct but incomplete. Here’s what finally worked for me and gives confirmation that SMC reset occurred and for me restored normal battery discharge behavior: With battery down to about 10%, shut down Mac with lid still open; connect the charging cord; do the Apple-prescribed left-side SHIFT-CONTROL-OPTION , plus POWER key; hold for ≥10 sec; release all 4 together AND WATCH THE MAG-SAFE LED CONFIRM SMC RESET BY BRIEFLY TURNING GREEN AND THEN BACK TO RED. (Not sure if 10% state of charge is needed — might just need the red charging LED.)

    Robert -

    Make sure you leave ok space for the speakers when you align the side elements of the battery!

    Cosmin Cimpoi -

    Is it really necessary to remove everything or does it just give you more room to remove the battery and the adhesive?? This seems like such a daunting task when removing the battery seems so simple.

    Jorge Borges -

    Para limpiar los adhesivos laterales que deja la batería en el unibody es mucho mas efectivo usar alcohol etílico 70 % para ablandar y raspar con un Black Stick las tipas de pega y el residuo final limpiarlo con un paño de microfibra con alcohol, así quedara impecable, no es tan efectivo en la plancha protectora del trackpad.

    Walther Cardenas -

    Thank you for the great tutorial, the iFixit battery and tools worked wonderfully.

    I risked it and removed the battery without removing any of the components. I did remove the SSD, just in case. I can report great success although you have to be careful and not poor the glue remover like a maniac, I'm not liable if you fubar your MBP.

    I ended up using about 20% of the remover liquid, 85% of which was used after the battery was removed, to remove the $&#@ glue… I used a sharp and flexible knife for the leftover glue.

    I recommend pouring a few drops on the plastic card while you have it tucked under the battery, it will slowly melt the glue by capillarity. A few extra drops (3-5) and continue to push the plastic card slowly in a right to left motion.

    Since I didn't remove any components, the whole job took about 30 minutes. The battery has to be calibrated, I recommend changing the power settings so it won't go to sleep during the calibration and use all the power it can use until dying…

    Good luck

    Pierre Christen -

    I did the same. I was worried about removing SO MANY components. When I read through it looked like you could just remove the battery, so I just went for that. I imagine the battery removal is easier with the rest out of the way, but this wasn’t too bad at all, and I didn’t have to re-install everything; and I had the peace of mind knowing I wasn’t messing up the rest of my machine.

    Tyrone Vaughan -

    It appears my new battery needs more adhesive as the battery is a little loose in the case (I can hear it moving when I carry the laptop). What adhesive can I add to the battery to secure it down better?

    Jorge Borges -

    Hi Jorge

    I recommend using a double sided adhesive acrylic foam tape. When you removed the original battery, you might have noticed it was taped with a thin acrylic foam tape, so I’d suggest something similar. They come in all widths and various thickness, though I’d recommend somthing with very little thickness due to small factory tolerances in Apple products.

    Best of luck

    Tristan Falkner -

    pleas help….

    I’m very worried, will I need to replace the trackpad after this? will the trackpad get broken after all the adhesive remover and the prying?

    AppleTopic -

    After the battery fully drained I was unable to start up the machine again. Pressing the power button or simply plugging in the charger would result in the fans quickly cycling between on and off but nothing else happening. Luckily this was resolved by unplugging the battery connector from the logic board for a few seconds. Hope this helps someone.

    Dan Baumann -

    Is it really necessary to remove everything or does it just give you more room to remove the battery and the adhesive?? This seems like such a daunting task when removing the battery seems so simple.

    JAY NAV -

    Hi! I need some help with a problem.

    I replaced the battery and turned the MacBook back ON plugged to the power chord and everything worked fine. “About this Mac / System Report” shows “Normal Status”, “1 cycle” and “Installed Battery”.

    The problem is that the moment I unplug the Macbook, it turns off automatically.

    I tried resetting the SMC but it doesn’t work

    Any ideas?

    Agustin Macaya -

    I am also disappointed that i read to late that I can skip steps 5-35 ? I wod expect an info in the text (not in the comments) that is possible to skip the steps and why I should go on to do all the steps. If I read this info at beginning I would also opt in to skip this steps because the risk to destroy some connectors is very high

    :/

    I hope I can resemble now all parts without demage

    Muescha -

    This whole experience was nightmarish, the sent me the wrong part for the audio jack. After I installed the battery I booted up. The left speaker sounded like it was blown out and the right speaker was barely audible. I decided to shut it down and reset the SMC. Now it won’t boot up at all. The mag safe is orange so I know it’s charging. Anybody have any advice?

    mikeywelch -

    I have one of these macs with a dying battery. Two years ago I removed the glued in battery of a 13” macbook pro 2013/2014? without using solvent at all but instead using one of ifixit’s microwave heated heat bags applied to the keyboard side of the bottom case. Worked absolutely fine. I am also wondering if the motherboard removal is really necessary except as a precaution against solvent damage? So no solvent no need to remove? It would be useful to have ifixit’s ‘official’ view on this, there may be other reasons I am not aware of. The other concern is that in the case of the 13” the new battery began to fail after about 18 months so the repair was of rather marginal quality.

    IsidoreM

    I. Margaronis -

    Removing the adhesive residue is a bigger job than getting to it. the acetone doesn't help. requires a razor blade.

    Manuka -

    Hallo

    Ich habe die Akkus ohne den Klebstoffentferner mit einem scharfen dünnen Spachtel abgelöst. Es erfordert entsprechendes Fingerspitzengefühl. Nach 5 Min waren alle Akkus aus dem Gehäuse entfernt. Kein Klebstoffentferner und keine langen Wartezeiten. Die Entfernung vom Restklebstoff auf dem Gehäuse habe ich mit Fingernagellack durchgeführt.

    Poletti -

    You don't really need all the steps and remove all the parts. I found youtube videos with instructions how to just unplug the battery and remove 2 screws and then use a dental floss to carefully remove the batteries without the liquid solution. I tested the new battery before I glued it in and it worked. After I screwed back everything and put the macbook to charge I noticed after few hours that the light indicator is still orange. Checking the battery status I noticed it is at 0% and unplugging the charger resulted in laptop turning off immediately. It looks like that charging the battery actually emptied it completely or something. Any ideas from anyone?

    Jure -

    This glue cleanup process requires a ridiculous amount of time. I made better progress with scraping away the old glue tape using the ifixix "opener tool" which has essentially a "finger nail" on the end, which can be used to scrape with vigour without damaging the aluminium chasis. A lot of glue remover was also required, plus isopropyl acohol. This is the least fun part of the battery replacement process, but necessary to ensure the new battery can be secured using the new glue tape on the battery pack.

    Tim Telcik -

    Hello,

    I managed to go through all the steps and install the new battery. It seems to work perfectly but my computer got extremely slow and seems to have loads of issues such as trackpad failure, extremely long keyboard response, and overall abnormally slow functioning… a bit as if there were no RAM anymore. I tried to open it again and checked all the connectors but nothing seems to be unplugged. I also tried the SMC resetting and all sorts of shortcuts but I can’t even access to either disk utility or Apple diagnosis as the whole system is too slow. Does anyone have any idea of what could be the cause of all of this and how could I fix it ? Thanks very much for help !

    Euvrard -

Abschluss

Arbeite die Schritte in umgekehrter Reihenfolge ab, um dein Gerät wieder zusammenzubauen.

Jeff Suovanen

Mitglied seit: 06/08/13

407156 Reputation

167 Kommentare

finally something more complicated than replacing the fan in a ps4. Great guide but I'm not going to attempt this even with lots of experience taking MacBook pro's apart to replace the disc drives with second hard drives.

nicholaskessler -

I went ahead and did changed the battery to only find out the battery I bought was defected : (

Edward -

Hi there, Edward. Sorry to hear about the battery trouble. I've reached out to you via email to see how I can help!

Kadan Sharpe -

Thanks for the guide! I used a light duty heat gun to soften the battery adhesive. Use great caution if you try this method, you can easily damage anything plastic so I used the MBP bottom to shield the keyboard bits. I heated one cell at a time until it was slightly uncomfortable to the touch, then waited a few moments until the heat softened the adhesive underneath, then carefully use a plastic card to slide under and pry free. It took about an hour to remove the battery and all remaining adhesive. For the remaining adhesive I used "GooGone", being very careful.

Brian R. -

You can also set your battery on fire, which can have pretty catastrophic consequences. I'm glad it worked out for you, but I would urge everyone to avoid using a heat gun on or near any lithium-ion battery.

Jeff Suovanen -

Brian, kudos to you for bravery. But I think I would agree with Jeff: for most of us, normal people, who don’t enjoy climbing on building walls,, walking tight rope between skyscrapers or jumping in wing suit from the top of the mountain - keep that heat gun holstered!!! :)

Dimitry Kireyenkoff -

I've replaced a few of these without removing anything except the battery itself.. Just be cautious and patient!!

duston -

Hi, do you happen to have instructions on how to replace the battery without removing the rest?

Thanks!

Rosa Luxemburg -

After going through this process and seeing how messy the adhesive got for me (was unable to purchase the ifixit adhesive remove because it cant be shipped to Canada so I had to use Isopropyl Alcohol). I would recommend taking everything out. That in addition to if there are any sort of accidents at least you logic board etc are protected.

kevinhayes656 -

Same as duston, I changed the battery without removing the logic board. Why do you advise to remove everything ?

Guillaume Rizk -

You can go straight for the battery—but as stated in the introduction, some of the more effective solvents (including the one we currently use) react badly with certain plastics. I've seen MacBook Pro speakers come out looking like something from a Salvador Dali painting after this procedure. Because of the tight clearances it's very tough to control where every drop of solvent goes, so the approach shown here is to remove the speakers before applying the solvent. (And unfortunately the speakers themselves are trapped under the logic board, so removing them means removing just about everything else first.) Removing the speakers is the cautious approach, but if you know the risks and prefer to do it another way, go for it ;)

Jeff Suovanen -

Wow, this totally took the fear out of replacing my battery. I bought the iFixit kit with the tools and solution and replaced the battery in less than 1 hour. If you're comfortable with computers, you don't actually have to tear down the whole thing before replacing the battery as long as you are VERY careful about the angle when using the solution and are careful not to touch the logic board. The iFixit replacement battery dropped right into place. I'm actually writing this on the Mac that I fixed.

Nigel Smith -

I used isopropyl alcohol and it drained back my display - now I have a lot of wet spots. Protect your display if you doing this job !!!

Tips how to solve this new problem ?

Mario -

I took a serious shortcut and saved a ton of time and effort on this repair. Found some heavy duty mono-filament in the studio, tied the ends to some 1/2" square dowel rod sections, and taped the handles for comfort with some gaffers. I didn't remove the fans, motherboard, or anything other than unplugging the old battery and taking off the two battery terminal screws.

I just tucked used the mono-filament behind the top corners of each battery cell, then held down the computer and slowly cut through the adhesive like a mafia hitman. I found pulling one side while holding tension on the other was more effective than trying to pull both at once. About half a dozen strokes and the cell popped up, and I used a card to snap the last bit of adhesive at the bottom. Repeated for all 6 cells, being especially careful around the one with the track-pad cable. It took about 10 minutes to remove the old battery.

Removing glue residue took a good portion of an hour, a little at a time, using the spudger worked best.

Stan -

I did pretty much all of what you did after reading your reply. I used an old E-string from my guitar. I tried taping batteries to it to use as handles, but they kept slipping so I found using heavy duty work gloves and wrapping the string around my hands worked best.

I found placing the string underneath the top part of each cell and then pulling down with force worked best, cut through the glue like butter after a bit of pressure. Be very careful not to go too fast; I got a bit ahead of myself on the last cell (too confident I guess) and cut into the cell, causing a short and a mini-flame. Thankfully it died down immediately. I placed the leaked battery inside a box with sand and placed it outdoors until I can dispose of it in the proper way.

Other than that, it was a matter of applying a lot of alcohol on the residue and then scraping it off using a metal spatula with rounded corners to avoid scratches. While process took about 1hour (including the incident). So, doable but be very careful!

Markus -

Bought all the stuff, took about 2 hours. I removed the fans, motherboard, etc per instructions. It did make battery easier to take off. If you got stuff on your display, it's because you didn't tilt your laptop and it probably leaked out through the trackpad.

I didn't have to use a heat gun or anything. The adhesive remover (blue stuff) they give you is extremely powerful and after about 1-2 minutes, glue starts falling apart and you can gently pry out the battery cells.

One thing to note, WRITE DOWN WHERE THE SCREWS GO. There is about 8 different types.

All in all, cycle count 0, so far so good!

aloshka -

I got stuck at Step 12, so I reverted to Step 4 and replaced the battery without removing the logic board, fans, etc. It is doable with care, be sure you do not leak solvent towards the speakers or logic board.

Laurian -

Please update the batteries products descriptions in the EU store if applicable.

They are currently stating "Please note: this battery is difficult to replace and there is currently no guide. " :)

Veaceslav Cotruta -

Just noticed that the "Adhesive Remover Solution" is not available :/

Veaceslav Cotruta -

Did it without removing the logic board myself too.. It was no big deal, as long as you keep the case tilted AWAY from everything else, especially the speakers.

ajanjigian -

I was able to replace the battery in my 2012 mbp retina. The guide worked perfectly the whole way through. I agree with other comments about the screws - I ended up with 1 screw left-over and I have no idea where it went. Thankfully, everything is held in place with multiple screws and the screws have locktight or some other kind of thread locking glue.

This guide should be read by every apple hardware engineer to make them think twice about designing their laptops like this. I won't be buying another apple laptop due to the extreme steps to repair something so simple as a battery. Breaking the down almost the entire laptop for a stupid battery swap is not worth the reduction in thickness of the laptop.

bilsch -

I did it! I just replaced the battery pack on my MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012) 15" and I looked at Youtube for help... One guy was using canned air (Dust-Off) with the can upside down so the cold liquid would get underneath the battery -- making the adhesive brittle, and then snap! The battery releases. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPqrmt-Ic... Also another trick is instead of using the iFixit adhesive remover which I believe is acetone I used tried and true "Carpel-O-Peel" adhesive remover -- far less noxious. and worked even better at removing the residue AFTER I had removed the battery pack with a small narrow spatula/cake knife/putty knife. I also used the string method on a couple of batteries -- that works too especially with the cold dust-off liquid. Instead of string I found that edge trimmer cord (RYOBI 0.80" twisted bulk line from Home Depot AC04138 and AC04139) was even stronger but I had to get the battery started with a spatula to fit the monofilament underneath and around the battery.

William Tzouris -

To be clear about my comments above I went STRAIGHT FOR THE BATTERY. Just removed the bottom plate on the laptop and that's it. The only screws removed inside the laptop were the two battery screws and the only thing I unplugged was the battery connection in the center

More links: "Carpel-O-Peel" adhesive remover -- http://www.carpelvideoonline.com/carpel-...

I bought a gallon jug about 25 years ago -- still using it. Also saw it on Amazon

I used Carpel O Peel with the spudger to remove the old adhesive after battery removal.

Tilt the laptop so any adhesive remover flows to the bottom metal lip.

Using cold liquid from Dust-Off to make the battery adhesive brittle: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPqrmt-Ic...

Using "String" or "Thread" to cut under the adhesive: (Two Parts)

I used monofilament -- very strong edge trimmer (Weed Wacker) cord. And wear gloves to make it easier on your hands.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fupkPz55t...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DrCX8o_HD...

William Tzouris -

If I were to do it again I would make a wire tool with piano wire/guitar string/picture hanging wire and I like the idea of cutting down two dowels to make comfortable handles for pulling.. Or wear gloves. If you can get your hands comfortable it's not that hard. The only advantage of the plastic edge trimmer cord is that it is slippery nylon and non-conductive like wire. The glue is not nearly as bad as everyone said -- it is double-sided sticky tape on the Later 2012 model. - Also my laptop battery has 750 cycles and was 77-83% health. It was unpredictable when it got low on charge and I wanted a replaced battery for when I decide to sell my computer on eBay.. Now I have cycle count 0 and Battery Health 2 app version 1.4 shows 101% health and 8536 mAh maximum charge capable. This is a great replacement battery! The iFixIt battery was 59% charged after sitting in the box for 5 weeks after being delivered. I'm 99% sure these are unused OEM Apple batts removed from the top case part. Great deal!!!

William Tzouris -

I did it without disassembling any other components besides battery and without using adhesive remover. I just used several spudgers and a pieve of aluminum to pry and work through the adhesive. Slow and required some strong forces but it worked without bending, scratching or starting a fire. Admittedly risky though.

Phillip Apley -

Both speaker connectors snapped off the motherboard under almost no resistance. Camera mount on motherboard also instant snapped off.

If I had to do it again I would not disassemble the whole computer because of fear of solvent destroying the speakers, the connectors on the motherboard are too fragile.

jimjwalker -

My left fan is not working as well and my track pad is barely working. I made my MBP worse than it was. Cannot recommend even for seasoned computer builders.

jimjwalker -

Thank you Jeff Suovanen for the instructions and I successfully replaced my battery without any trouble. The only thing is I noticed I'm getting 7510 mAh now at full charge capacity. The ifixit.com Europe Store said I would get "Capacity: 7610-8460 mAh."

https://eustore.ifixit.com/en/Parts/MacB...

Daniel Brown -

Got a battery from iFixit and used the aerosol trick mentioned by @wtzouris. Watched the YouTube video, and used plenty of aerosol to freeze the adhesive, worked a treat. I even bought a flat cake icing spatula (similar to the video) which I used to pry off the battery cells. Had some leftover foamy sticker stuff from the adhesive which I scraped off with a sharp knife. Any minor actual adhesive residue I removed with nail polish and cotton wool pads. Very easy, no need to remove all the parts, only the actual battery.

Installation of new battery took about 1 minute. Battery Health 2 says ‘0 Cycles’, ‘Current Max 8658 mAh’ and ‘Original Max 8460mAh’. Very pleased with the outcome!

PJ Palomaki -

so instead of using the provided adhesive removal solution you you use aerosol to freeze and then remove safely everything?

Bert0ld0 -

Just successfully changed my battery with your help. Didn’t have the adhesive remover though so I just warmed up the adhesive (cloth full of rice heated in the microwave, seems to cause some moisture though so maybe be careful).

Ólafur Jón Thoroddsen -

I followed the advice from Stan regarding the use of monofilament wire (fishing line). I used 14 lb test (0.3 mm). Even though I got the kit, I didn’t use the solvent, and instead extracted the battery directly without dissembling the main board. I used the kit’s tweezers to place the wire under each corner of a battery module, and pulled in a sawing motion towards the bottom. Mechanic’s gloves are really handy here. I broke a few lengths of wire, but in the end it worked pretty well. Got all 6 battery modules off in about 20 minutes. I went with Goo Gone Gel to remove the remaining adhesive. It’s not as potent as the kit’s solvent, so I had to let it sit for 10-15 minutes. However, the kit’s blue spludger tool made short work of it after that. Wiped it up with a paper towel, and cleaned up with isopropyl alcohol. Even though the gel does a good job of staying put, I’d still recommend putting a barrier between the display and the touch pad (e.g. aluminum foil).

bobmhac -

Just want to emphasize I also went STRAIGHT FOR THE BATTERY. :-)

bobmhac -

I also didn’t remove the logic board and speakers—just be very VERY careful with the injection of acetone under the battery. The syringe, when placed up against the metal back, will accelerate the squirt and catch the tip of the speakers. Just be really careful, and you don’t have to worry about removing the whole assembly. Also be careful to not puncture the battery :)

holachek -

All done. Especially the removal of the old battery and cleaning of the glue residue makes it well worth taking all these sensitive bits out.

Works a dream again. Thanks to Jeff and team iFixit.

Jozef Wiewel -

Hi y’all!

Thank you iFixit for the great battery and instructions! This was by far the most complicated fix I ever did, but it was well worth it!

Just like some people in the comments above, I did not remove the motherboard and all the other parts. After I tried a few (very unsuccessful) other methods, the best working method I found was to use a regular hair blower to warm up the battery for about 20 seconds, after the battery was just a bit warm I used dental floss to cut/saw through the adhesive. When I got stuck again I warmed the battery up again. (I live in the Netherlands and its winter, in warmer areas you might not even need to warm the battery up!) This worked like a charm and after 30-40 minutes all the cells were loose.

The installation of the new battery was a breeze and was done in just a few minutes!

Kind regards, and good luck to those who’re replacing the battery now! :)

Ruben

the Netherlands

Ruben -

Ps. to the iFixit team: If you have another MacBook Pro that needs a new battery, I would strongly recommend to try this technique out and document it if it’s successful. It is a lot easier and less risky compared to removing all the sensitive guts of the MacBook and using a strong adhesive, especially for newbies like me. :D

Ruben -

@carbonvane Thanks for your comments. Applying heat to the battery can definitely work, but heat and lithium-ion batteries are a potentially explosive combination, especially if they aren’t discharged properly before you start. Overheating due to lack of care or experience could destroy your laptop at best, and cause serious fire or injury at worst. So, we try to avoid instructing people to do it that way when possible. Congrats on a successful repair!

Jeff Suovanen -

@jeffsu I understand that totally, I was pretty worried when I first tried this method as well. But the batteries don’t have to be hot, a temperature increase of just a few degrees (my room was about 17C) was already enough. The batteries will get hotter under normal use, so I don’t think it will be very dangerous.

But, yeah, you need to make sure you don’t apply the heat for too long a period, otherwise will indeed get pretty risky! ;)

Ruben -

Hello! Who tested the ifixit battery? is it good ? does it not cut before 0%? I bought an another one and it’s cut the power a 80% (less than 1hour)

Facon -

This was my first battery replacement and everything went well. Thank you.

Elvis Zunde -

Does anyone know if replacing the battery improves the MacBook’s performance? I don’t mean battery performance. I’m curious if there’s any noticeable difference in the MacBook handling computational/graphically intensive tasks like video editing, rendering, gaming, etc. As I’m sure we’re all aware from the recent publicity in the news, iOS throttles power usage and reduces speed on system wide functions as a device’s battery ages. I’m thinking macOS may do something similar? Has anyone done a performance test before and after replacing a battery in a MacBook? Short of that, does anyone have any anecdotal evidence of their machine performing better after replacing the battery? Again, I’m interested in processing performance, not battery performance.

Jeff Rizza -

They’ve throttled Macs for similar reasons in the past, so I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the answer is yes. But, it shouldn’t really matter—if your battery is degraded to below 80% capacity, it’s time to swap it out regardless.

Jeff Suovanen -

Jeff, thanks for the response and the info. That’s an interesting article. I agree it’s definitely possible they’re still doing this. I’m down to about 71% capacity, so yes, definitely time to swap. A little frustrating since I only have 668 cycles on the current battery. I thought they were suppose to be rated for about 1,000 before dropping to about 80% capacity. Anyway, thanks again. I’ll be ordering a battery replacement kit from you guys soon.

Jeff Rizza -

I’m at 1,003 cycles and my battery health is at 61%. I’m gonna change it asap.

In Denmark, the cheapest Apple authorized repair shop charge you almost $600 to change the battery - definitely NOT paying them $500 for an hours’ work :-P

Joakim Borregaard -

My first battery replacement. Everything went well. I used the thin plates that came with the battery fix kit on the outer batteries. Pushed it in from the side, then from the corner. I also used some plastic tool like this, see picture: (http://images.biltema.com/PAXToImageServ...). These helped me a lot. Specially on the middle and center batteries. Mostly used the tool to the left, and just used raw force and pushed it all the way under the battery until it came lose. The old battery not get damaged, except a little bit bend.

Arvid Larsen -

I have MBR Mid 2012. I followed all the instructions and was able to successfully remove the battery and replace with iFixIt’s OEM battery, took me about 2 hours. A couple of issues I ran into that I think might help few people here.

1. Fan Cables - at the other end of the fan cable, there is a small latch you have to lift from the board for safe release. Same goes for most of the flat styled cables on this entire motherboard. Also make sure to re-seat it with precision. My computer once booted reported at Hardware Check that one of my fan was at faulty and indeed noticed my right side of fan wasn’t running. I had to reinstall the cable a few times to just get it right so it would start spinning.

2. Battery Calibration - If your Macbook is shutting down below 20% or so and SMC/NVRAM reset didn’t do the trick, try this old method designed for older generation of Macbooks. Unplug the Battery cable, hold down the power button for 10 seconds, re-seat the cable and boot. Charge too 100% and let it drain.

Josh Park -

I did it without removing the Logic Board :), Battery out and Battery in :D … Thanks for the guide.

John Grace -

As others have mentioned, I did this repair without removing the logic board, fans, and speakers. Keep in mind that iFixit isn’t condoning this and if you damage some part of your MacBook by going this route it’s because you took a shortcut. That said, I decided the risk of damaging the connectors or other fragile components involved in the full disassembly described above was higher than the risk of damaging my speakers with the adhesive remover. Here are some things I did to (successfully) minimize the chance of destroying the speakers:

1) Fold small pieces of paper towel and jam them into the spaces between the battery cells and the speakers. This created a barrier in case some of the adhesive remover got near the speakers.

2) Use a hairdryer/heat gun to loosen the adhesive on the two outermost cells (the two smallest cells). Be VERY careful doing this. You want to use a relatively low temp if you’re using a heat gun and don’t stick the gun too close.

Jeff Rizza -

As iFixit has mentioned above, you’re running a risk using a heat gun near lithium batteries. If you’re going to go this route it’s essential that you fully drain your battery first.

3) Use the supplied plastic cards as ramps to direct adhesive remover towards the edges of the cells. This helps to block the adhesive remover liquid from splashing or running over towards the speakers. By doing this in combination with using the paper towel barriers I didn’t have any issues with adhesive remover getting on my speakers.

4) Cover the logic board, speakers, and fans with a few layers of paper towel or some other covering (just not anything metal) before you begin working on the battery cells. This helps prevent any drips/splashes of adhesive remover from getting on critical components. It also helps to keep them protected from other types of damage, such as the plastic shard that went flying when I broke a plastic card prying out one of the battery cells :)

Good luck with your repair!

Jeff Rizza -

Why is so much adhesive tape on the replacement battery? Wouldn’t this make it as hard to replace as the original battery? I mean we are “boo-ing” apple for this, just to make the same mistake ifixit? I would put less adhesive (like 60% less) and in thinner bands to make it service friendly. After all the battery don’t need THAT much tape, since the bottom cover will hold it there anyway. (I plan to actually remove much of the tape from the replacement before puting it in).

crus -

This is a great question, and I think the answer is that it’s part of the design. Because of the dangers they present, lithium-ion batteries need to be firmly secured. In the absence of any screws or brackets to mount the battery, you need to use enough glue to make sure the battery’s not going to come loose across a broad range of user behaviors and environmental conditions over a long period of time, plus a margin for safety. Bottom line, if it’s designed to use glue, then that’s what we’re stuck with.

Jeff Suovanen -

Fantastic guide. Did it in a couple more hours than the guide said. Im a newbie though and used extreme caution. Works very well. A good advice is to also read the comments before completing/starting the steps.

Ruben Espelid -

I didn’t have any trouble installing my new battery and my computer worked well immediately following — all battery specs seemed as good as new. I recently ran the battery all the way down and am currently trying to recharge it. The charger has a red light indicating that it’s charging, hooked up porperly, etc. but the computer has been non-responsive for over two hours now. The fans are pulsing lightly on and off but that’s the only activity that I’ve gotten. I’m relatively experienced with this kind of thing and I went slowly and didn’t feel like I made any mistakes. Let me know if any of you have an idea of what’s going on here.

Larry Chüper -

Did you reset SMC as instructed in the final step?

Jeff Suovanen -

I'm very happy with the fix kit, it is of very good quality for the price, but the thread method (you can search on YouTube) is SO much easier, faster and safer, you only need to remove the battery and no glue remover is needed.

Javier Montes -

Score another successful replacement using monofilament to remove the outer 4 battery cells without dismantling the Mac making this a fairly easy fix.

The warning about needing to be careful about the keyboard ribbon cable on the center two cells led me to be more cautious when removing them as there are no pictures showing the Mac without the batteries to more clearly identify the risk. As they are far from the speakers I used the acetone+cards inserted from the sides to weaken the adhesive & remove them. Now that I’ve performed the replacement I see that there was no danger in using the monofilament to remove the middle two cells either.

It took me longer to clean up the remaining adhesive strips and then the remaining glue than every other step. I found that for the glue traces, rubbing alcohol worked better on the aluminum & acetone was better on the bottom of the trackpad.

pmhparis -

Hat super funktioniert! Hatte bei der ersten Bestellung des Akkus Mängel geltend gemacht, da dieser beschädigt war. Der iFixit Deutschland Support hat mir sofort geholfen - zweiter Akku her, dieser einwandfrei. Danke an die Gummibärchen im Retourenpaket, grüße an dieser Stelle an Christoph der sehr kompetent mit meiner Reklamation umgegangen ist :P

Der neue Akku war nach ca. 2 Stunden verbaut. Am schwersten ist tatsächlich die Entfernung der Klebereste, aber auch das geht. (Tipp an alle: Ich habe die Reste sehr gut mit dem Metallspatel aus dem Pro Tec Toolkit entfernen können).

Tim -

I successfully changed out the battery without removing the logic board .. I figured the danger of damaging some of the very breakable connectors was one I didn’t want to risk. I search YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fupkPz55... .. great tutorial to allow removal of battery in a few minutes. I used shoe laces .. it worked really well.

Thank you ifixit - the battery is 100% of design capacity, and although I didn’t use the guide above - the comments gave me what i needed. And the OEM battery is gold.

This was actually remarkably straightforward using shoe laces.

Ant Carter -

(the ‘round’ type of shoe laces .. )

Ant Carter -

I took the back cover off, then skipped down to step #50. I used the provided plastic card, sliding/wiggling it though the adhesive that attached the battery to the case. It took about 10 minutes to remove the old battery in this manner.You do have to be very careful not to pry too much on the two center cells, as they attach to the back of the trackpad cover, which is bendy.

Before installing the new battery, I removed the old adhesive, trial fitted the new battery, lining up the holes of the connector bracket, then marking the case where the battery aligned correctly, using a sharpie to do this.

After reassembling, I hit the power button—nothing. Worried, I figured that the battery was not charged, so I connected the power adapter, and after a few minutes started up normally. Battery showed a charge of 96%. so I’m guessing the startup procedure saw there was a new battery and wouldn’t go. All seems normal now, took a few minutes to charge to 100%, and now will drain it a few times.

Thanks, iFixit!

Dexter Jones -

I skipped steps 5-34. and removed the battery without problems. Be careful with the liquid. It really needs very little as described.

Thomas Jäggi -

I replaced the battery by only unscrewing the lower case assembly back cover and detaching the battery cable. I did not disassemble anything else. I then unscrewed all four speaker cover screws—two on each side— and propped up the speaker cover plastic “wings” using two iFixit cards wedged between them and the bottom case, to bend them up off the case slightly. Open the computer and turn it around so the clamshell is face down. Carefully squeeze solvent at the top and sides of each battery section and slowly work the plastic card, then plastic spudger, underneath each. Be especially careful not to get any solvent on the trackpad cable at the top of the battery, which snakes underneath the metal trackpad plate. Also be careful not to bend the trackpad plate when you unstick the two big middle battery sections—the battery is glued to it, and using too much force will bend it. If you are patient and gentle, you can unstick the battery without taking anything else apart.

Jaime Hovey -

I got the kit to change the battery of my Macbook Pro Retina 2012. I should have done this 2 years ago !! I did follow the guide to make sure I don’t break anything using the adhesive remover. I also took the time to remove dust from all the parts since everything was out of the computer. It took me a bit over 3h to do everything, I guess it can go much faster if you are familiar with Mac repairs.

The only negative point is that I got 2x P5 bit instead of 1x P5 and 1x T5… must have been a packaging error.

Philippe Miron -

Got the old kit (?) with solvent and syringe, which worked very well. I jumped straight to removing the batteries. The mentioned risk of destroying the speakers may be avoided with careful application of the solvent in tenths of milliliters, instead of milliliters as described. A light lift with the spudger made access for the solvent much easier. No I have a well functioning mbp with a well performing battery. Big thanks to ifixit-team for providing this kit!

Eivinn Å. Skjærseth -

I just replace my battery (mid 2012 retina A1398) and like many readers I decidedinstead of disassembling pretty much the entire computer went straight of the battery. I used a 20g solid copper wire to pull under the battery elements with minimum application of the solvent, the computer slightly titled away from the logic board. 10 minutes to remove the old battery complete;y and than another two hours to clean out the adhesive residue ! (the latter part would have been the same even if I did a complete disassembly as suggested by the guide). I think that disassembling a MacbookPro as suggested by this guide has a high potential of damaging gentle connectors and in general getting things wrong, loosing screws etc.. - and some of the comments confirm it. So my advice - don’t follow the guide beyond the opening the bottom cover and disconnecting the battery. Just go directly for the battery removal - it is faster, easier, and has less potential for damaging your computer.

Alex Miro -

..continued from the previous comment:

Of course you have take to the common sense precautions when dealing with a high capacity Li-Ion, if you don’t know what these are than you should not be repairing MacBooks in any event.

Alex Miro -

Well, I did it! gave myself about a 70% chance of everything coming out alright in the end and so far so good! Kept most of the screws in place with painters tape to hold them on or near their respective spots. Definitely that and making sure all the connectors are free as you replace the board(I did have to wiggle the backlight cable free after a preliminary attempt to secure the logic board.)

I think I’d rather attempt just the battery replacement as others have mentioned without pulling the logic board up next time though. It’s all quite doable with the guide and taking time to work through things.

One note was really being careful about the connectors that have to be “flipped” up on their hinge - e.g. the keyboard connecter which I just yanked out….

Makes me feel much better about the possibility of doing some other repair although I can imagine this is getting harder and harder with newer models.

Brian Lamb -

picture hanging wire with crc / wd40 on the wire for lube, works a treat- make sure you disconnect the battery first. Then gentle hair dryer easy. No need for chemicals just the wire and plastic scraper to clean up. Thanks for the comments saving me from possible disaster and hours. Done in 1.5 hrs (extra 30 mins to pull out the fans and clean them).

gleembru -

Great step by step!!! I just changed my battery and everything is working like a charm. Just a little advice: Be patience with the adhesive scrapping process; it’s by far the most annoying and time consuming part of the process.

nicolasgonzalezduarte -

Changed the battery without taking out the logic board- was just VERY careful about where the adhesive remover went. For getting rid of the adhesive residue on the case, I used ronsonoil instead of the adhesive remover- MUCH quicker and more effective. Wiped it all down with alcohol afterwards, everything back together and working great.

Bradley Westerford -

Used the string method under batteries instead of solvent and that worked awesome. Heated batteries with a microwave heated rice pouch before hand and adhesive came of very easy. Left residues in place and just placed new battery on top of that - I don't get why anyone would waste time on removing all of the old adhesive first. Layer was 1 or 2mm at max. Anyway, new battery works so far and I have to say the level of iFixits professionality (kit quality, website quality etc) leaves me in awe. And also this community in the comments sections is mpressive and very helpful. Thanks everone.

Malte Malm -

I replaced the battery in my mbp mid 2012 laptop as per your instructions and it seemed to go just fine except that the new battery does not charge. I have tried numerous online “fixes” but nothing works. A screenshot from coconut battery seems to be saying that my battery condition is poor. Is it possible that you sent me a bad battery?

Brian Martinson -

Any luck finding a solution?

David Baier -

Hi I am having the same trouble as Brian Martinson, I just installed my new battery in a mid 2012 MacBook pro Retina. As soon as i plugged the power cable, the laptop turned on. I notice it is at 0% and when checking it says Replace Now. Battery Is Not Charging. I then followed the instructions for SMC reset by shutting down the computer, pressing Shift + Control + Option + Power buttons or 10 seconds. releasing and pressing power again to turn the laptop on again. Is there anything else i can do for this? Thank you

David Baier -

Plug the old battery in and see if it behaves the same or if it works normally. If normal, there may be a defect in the new battery and you should get it exchanged. If they’re both behaving badly, check to make sure nothing was damaged during the repair.

Jeff Suovanen -

Hey Jeff, I have tried the old battery and it functions normally. I ran th coconut battery app and it says battery condition poor and battery failure. 0 charge cycles. Soo it was dead on arrival. Waiting to hear from customer support for 2 days so far. Thanks for the suggestion

David Baier -

Successfully replaced the battery! This was my first iFixit repair and first MacBook repair. I purchased the full fix kit. After reading the comments here and watching several videos, I skipped straight to the battery after removing the case (step 35). I used twine to saw away the original adhesive as well as the provided plastic card. After I completely removed the original battery, I used the adhesive remover and plastic scraper to remove the remaining original adhesive. Installing the new battery with adhesive can be somewhat tricky as the battery needs to slide horizontally underneath the bottom screw mounts before being fully pressed down. I recommend testing the fit and alignment with the battery screw holes and the battery cable before removing the adhesive pads and securing the new battery. After fully discharging, charging, discharging, and then resetting the SMC, the new battery is showing 8614 mAh max capacity in Apple’s system report.

Thank you to iFixit, Jeff Suovanen, and all other contributors!

Chase Durand -

Ich hab den Akku ausgetauscht, aber er wird nicht erkannt. Kann es sein, dass der gelieferte Akku defekt ist? Alles andere Funktioniert nämlich.

Jan Sprenger -

I did this step by step with no problem. I turned on my MacBook and everything was working like new. Then once the battery got to 30% it turned off and isn’t turning back on again. The only time I get any response is when I plug in the charger. Nothing happens on the screen but I can hear the fans running softly. What do I do to get my Mac working like it just was?

Cade warner -

If you haven’t yet, reset the SMC as instructed. You can find some additional troubleshooting steps in this thread.

Jeff Suovanen -

Por fin, batería nueva! La he cambiado con el kit de ifixit pero solo removiendo la batería con mucho cuidado y todo funciona a la perfección. Gracias!

Javier Leyenda -

I followed all the steps and replaced the battery without too much trouble, but now , from the very first time running down the battery to about 3 charge cycles in, my macbook dies at 25% with the new battery every time. Is this a faulty battery? Or is there a setting I can change to allow the battery to drain down to 0%. I don’t want to accidentally condition the battery to only work from 100% to 25%.

Nicholas Varanelli -

Reset SMC and calibrate the battery as described in the last step. If you’ve done that and you still have problems, it’s most likely a faulty battery.

Jeff Suovanen -

Excellent guide, thanks! Extra pro tip: don’t place the screws back in the holes when you’re removing the given part, rather put them aside. Picked up the I/O board, but forgot about the screws and almost lost them as they fell on the floor.

Rudolf Csiba -

I don’t understand why one should dismantle almost all the parts since the battery is right there, not underneath the motherboard.

I did replace my wifi card in my MBPr 2012 (to have the unlock by apple watch, IT WORKS!) and also just half of the steps were necessary to get the wifi board out and the new in.

Same when I upgraded my hdd in my Mini.

So it is not an isolated case.

It may be that ifixit just reuses the same web page and pictures but still is not OK to put anyone thru this hassle .

Ifixit, thank you for teaching us repairs, but don’t add extra steps, because increases of chances to brake stuff, so it defeats the purpose.

crus -

There’s a fair bit of discussion about this in the comments above if you’re curious. Bottom line, there’s a good reason for removing everything, but a shorter procedure can also work well if you’re mindful of the risk. We’ve also reformulated our solvent so it’s safer (though still not 100% safe) for the speaker plastics.

Jeff Suovanen -

TIP:

On the new battery don’t use the whole area of the adhesive strip, instead just put some thin pvc foil or other thin plastic film on most tof the adhesive and leave just some small area exposed here and there (ex. at the corners like 5x5mm squares) to grip the chassis. This way you can remove again the new battery much easily in the future.

Or better leave most of the original protective film on and remove it just here and there at the corners (peal up the corners and cut it like a triangle) so the battery is still glued (to prevent rattle) but not to the point it is yet again a nightmare to remove it. I believe the battery will stay in place anyway because everything is really cramped inside, no place to rattle :).

crus -

I broke the flat cable keyboard connector that is mounted on the board. The guide was not clear enough on how to remove that cable out of the connector and I had a lot of trouble with that and it is so fragile!!! And then I read in the comments that IT NOT WAS necessary to remove the board!!! Now that is not good! Is it possible to buy that connector it seems that it is just pushed in to the boardmounted metalconnectors.

Claes Lundqvist -

I DID IT ! ! !

From step 35 down, taking everything out is just unnecessary. I use a thin string of nylon to cut thru the adhesive, totally safe since there is absolutely 0 force on the battery (Youtube : How to replace 15" MacBook Pro Retina Glued Battery with a Thread - Part 1).

TIP:

I put my new battery with the protective film still on the adhesive, so not glued back to my mac to trial the new battery in case the new one is defective (call me paranoid, but I heard stories). It rattles a bit but once I give it some more cycles to make sure it is OK, I will reopen and glued the new battery for good.

My old battery was at 62% (5212 mAh) capacity, 806 cycles (a decrease in capacity of ~10%/year from 2014).

The new battery is made by Simplo (known manufacturer I guess since is a common name in Mac batteries), too bad I didn’t look at my old one :).

It was made in 04.2018.

crus -

I followed the advice of the commenters that stated to just pry out the batteries with a string and it worked perfectly. Takes effort but is really easy this way.

Scott Rowe -

I just finished replacing my Mac Book Pro Retina Mid 2012 battery after reading through these instructions and comments. I ended up using the string technique described and shown in a YouTube Video. I was able to removed the batteries in about 30 minutes taking my time and being super careful not to damage anything else. I then used a roll on Tea Tree oil to dissolve the remaining adhesive and clean up the battery container area. It worked well but took me another 45 minutes. New battery installed in less than 5 minutes once all that was clean and dry.

kirkfuller -

They have great repair vids, but their products are not up to par.

I bought this battery back in in 2017, it came defected. So they sent be a replacement that worked for 4 months, until they had to send me another replacement. Everything was good until last month (8 months later) where the 3rd replacement I got died.

Note: Keep in mind they do not renew the one year warranty with a replacement. Your warranty is based on the original purchased date.

So I went else where (Amazon) to get ANOTHER battery replacement. But again, great repair vids!

Edward -

Very disappointed. The replacement went well (I ordered and used the whole kit). But now after calibrating twice and checking with coconut mattery, the new battery does not reach the guaranteed 8200 mAh, but not more then ca. 90% of its designed capacity…far from the guaranteed 8200 mAh.

Jonas -

Geschafft!

Zunächst wurde der Akku nicht erkannt. Ich musste den Akkustecker dreimal neu aufsetzen.

Aber jetzt funktioniert alles perfekt!

Zur Anleitung:

Ich würde es vorziehen, wenn es eine Anleitung gäbe, die ohne den Ausbau der Ventilatoren und des Motherboards auskäme.

Generell hätte ich mir gewünscht, das die Verbindungen in den Fotos größer dargestellt werden und die Zugrichtung präzisier angegeben wird. Eventuell auch durch einen roten Pfeil im Foto direkt.

Die für mich schwierigsten Punkte waren im Einzelnen:

5. Schritt: Airport-/Camerakabel (Sehr tricky. Man weiß nicht recht, wo ansetzen und was die Verbindung aushält).

24. Schritt: Displayfolien"stecker" (Sowohl das Herausziehen und besonders das wieder einstecken ist sehr schwierig. Ich habe die Folie mit der beigelegten Pinzette gepackt und letztlich hineingestossen. Immer mit der Angst, die feinen Kontakte zu beschädigen. Ist zum Glück gut gegangen).

Danke, trotzdem, für die Anleitung. Ohne hätte ich das gar nicht bewältigt.

Robert Kaiser -

Hi guys.

I did this without removing anything besides the rear cover

No heat gun too. All is needed is fishing line(i used 40lb braided line) and two screwdrivers to use as a handle. Use it in a saw movement. Then use something to pry the remaining glue off in each battery cell. About 15-20min and you're done

Khoa Tran -

Thank you very much for the how-to! The difficulty mostly comes from the time required to change the battery. The actual steps are all easy except for the glue-related parts. Softening the glue took some time and I had to trust myself to use a bit of force when removing the battery. The most annoying part was removing the residual glue from the aluminium case. Otherwise a very simple process, just be sure to take breaks just before starting the degluing process!

Sampsa Kuronen -

I bought the battery and tools got it in 5 days. I used to work in PC service so I thought I’d try fixing this my self instead. I was rushing a bit as I was filming the whole process.

I am not sure if the whole board and parts were necessary to remove, but I guess it gives you more space to work with removing the battery.

Took me 45 min to remove the battery 15 min to clean the adhesive. I putted new battery, decided not to stick it to the case, in case of future replacement. I assembled everything and it works fine. Now waiting for battery calibration.

My recommendation, clear the space before you start working. Make sure to run through all steps before proceeding.

As someone with experience in laptop repair, I think Apple has pretty bad connectors. They are easy to break, some at least. I managed to broke one of fan connectors peaces in board, but it still works. Battery part was frustrating even for me. I don't understand why to glue the battery to case. Instead of putting it in one piece, easy to remove.

Josip Ricov -

Can skip from step 3 to step 36. This is what I did and it worked fine. The additional steps feel like a precaution, so that when acetone is used to free the battery adhesive, it doesn’t go everywhere. But if you’re careful, it’s possible to apply acetone and remove the battery without taking everything out of the machine, which has risks of its own, like the machine may not boot properly later.

Note that acetone will turn the black speaker housing white. Don’t ask how I know this.

Chris -

I did skip all them steps… No problem…. well so far…

and i didnt use solvent..

tex-fx -

“like the machine may not boot properly later.

-having this very problem… any adive? The booting loads 3/4 of the bar, then the display shuts off… pc still kinda boots sometimes, since ì can play music sometimes, but black (also no backlight) display…

Simone -

really nice howto. Thanks to the ifixit team! only the power supply on the logic board was a bit tricky. At the first try the battery was not charged.

die1sklation -

I skipped steps 5 to 35, and no problem,

Why all them extra steps in the middle??

tex-fx -

Hello everyone,

Just to say that I successfully replaced my battery but unfortunately I end up broking one of my speakers and I don’t know if the other is fully working or without the bass.

Does anyone know a sound test that I can do to detect how good/bad my speakers are?

Ricardo -

Thanks for this excellent guide, Jeff! I was a little nervous due to the difficulty rating, as, besides swapping out the battery on my iPhone 6 (also used iFixit’s guide as well as YouTube), this was the first electronics repair I’d ever done. But it came off without a hitch! For anyone considering this procedure, my recommendation would be to:

1. Read the entire guide.

2. Read all of these comments.

3. Read all of the comments under each step.

4. Take your time, stay organized, and consult YouTube if needed.

The guide itself is great and thorough, but there are a few different ways to remove the battery, so read them all and do what makes sense to you. I ended up skipping steps 5–41 and removed it with only one of the plastic cards supplied in iFixit’s repair kit. Slow going and if I were to do it again, I’d look into the other methods others have supplied here. Good luck!

Jake Thornberry -

Count me as another person who decided that I didn’t want to have to take the entire guts of the machine out to replace the battery, not to mention that I had no interest in using solvents to dissolve the glue holding the battery in. (I didn’t buy it either). I was able to use a stiff plastic card to cut through the adhesive, and replace the battery with no issues. In fact, I’m going to buy a thin piece of stainless steel, attach a wood ‘handle’ to it, and use that in the future.

I can totally understand why some folks would want to go this route, but it seemed way more complicated to me. And as I said, I hadn’t bought the iFixit solvent, so there was that issue too…

I’m so glad we have iFixit! Kudos all ‘round, and let us know what we can do to help keep this site going!

jiclark -

@macdoktor Just think of us when you need to buy a part or a toolkit, that’s what keeps the lights on around here and makes the free guides possible. ;) Glad your repair worked out!

Jeff Suovanen -

… mir war diese Anleitung viel zu kompliziert und eigentlich will ich nur den Akku tauschen. Hier meine Schritte:

1. Den Akku komplett leer machen (bis der Mac ausschaltet), dann ist zwar noch immer genug Leistung drinnen um die Akkus bei einem Kurzschluss zur Explosion zu bringen.

2. Schritt 1

3. Schritt 2

4. Schritt 3

5. Schritt 4

6. Schritt 35

7. Am Akku Anschluss 2 Klemmen suchen die eine 12V Halogenlampe zum leuchten bringt und warten bis die Lampe ausgeht

8. Bei jedem Akku Element die 2 Anschlüsse suchen und die 12V Halogenlampe Lampe wieder anschliessen und den Strom messen bis dieser unter 100mA sinkt Das ist für jedes Element zu machen!

9. Die Elemente kurzschliessen … wenn nur noch so wenig Energie drinnen ist geht das.

10. nun können die Akkus aufgeschnitten werden und ganz einfach herausgelöst werden. Bitte Handschuhe verwenden.

11. neuer Akku einsetzen

Habe so erfolgreich meinen MachBook Retina mit einem iFixIT Akku ausgerüstet, Da der alte Akku eh kaputt war, eine perfekte Lösung ohne den MacBook zerlegen.

Martin Lob -

@jeffsu I appreciate the nudge about buying your products; I am, in fact, the proud owner of one of your toolkits, among other things. I can’t tell you all how much I appreciate the work you do here!!

jiclark -

Very thorough guide. Appreciate the comments below specific steps. Also the multiple pictures for some steps was nice as well. Getting the old battery glue out took way longer than I thought, but the clean space for the new battery was nice. If you were careful with the glue remover, I don’t see the point in removing everything else. Although it does give you a chance to check all connections, and make sure everything is good and clean.

Mike Nass -

I just finished changing the battery on my mid 2012 MacBook Pro retina with the latest I fix it kit. Followed the instructions and the computer turns on , but it takes forever to load up and the fans run always at full speed. The trackpad doesn’t work. I tired the SMC reset a few times but nothing changed. Help!!!

Terence Scarnicchia -

Terence, did you get your issue resolved? I had a very similar issue with mine. Turned out the Magsafe2 DC-in board wasn’t fully seated in the logic board. Once I seated it fully, everything worked as it was supposed to. the new battery was charging and all other issues disappeared.

htbottoms -

Great tutorial! Thanks! My first time doing something like this. I advise to have patience and care and to read the comments, they really help and give valuable advice and insights. My first time fixing a Mac and worked just fine. I used the ‘Dust-Off’ technique and worked well. Feels great when it's done and the Mac turns on. Hahaha

Ramon -

Hello, I completed the guide, step by step.

The computer is dead, won’t boot up. The orange charging lamp have been charging for an hour but stil no sign of booting up.

Any thoughts what the problem can be? I have tried the RESET instructions. Is there any known and specific cable that can cause the computer to be dead like a brick?

Any guidance would be helpful.

Thank you — Daniel

Kvist Daniel -

Great guide!

Took me 5 hrs but I took it very slow. Also on my 2012 MBP retina the battery extraction and cleanup took almost 2 hrs.

Please add the bit about unscrewing the magsafe part. Way easier to take the board out and put it back together w/ the magsafe!

Worth the time just to see that “Cycle count: 1” at the battery details screen!

Cosmin Cimpoi -

Nice guide and also very helpful comments! I took the route via steps 1-4, 35, and 42-53 which involved fully draining the battery first, then unscrewing the back cover, lifting the battery connector, and removing the two screws holding the battery pack. I was then able to loosen the battery compartments one after the other, starting from one of the outer cells, by shoving an old transparent geometry triangle under the cells and moving it (more or less) gently back and forth. A little extra care is needed with the two cells in the middle; don’t pull too heavily on these because they aren’t glued to the body but to some kind of trackpad cover instead which might come off together with the middle cells. Mine is a tiny little bit dented now… ;-) (but the trackpad still works like a charm). I then used cleaning petrol to remove the remains of the adhesive; that worked quite well! coconutBattery showed > 9000 mAh after fully charging for the first time, and now after calibration it says 8842 mAh . Great!

Thomas Grischott -

Hello, i replaced the battery recently, calibrated it, everything seemed to work fine, then sometimes i would start charging the computer, and even plugged in i would have to wait until it would charge a bit before using it otherise it would shut down. Then today all of a sudden, there’s no light at all on the mag safe plug… try to change plugs, mag safe cable, nothing… could it be the battery or the magsafe board?

Mel -

Thank you for the helpful guide. I read about options like heat gun, using a string to floss the battery out, etc. In the end, a few drops of acetone and the credit card style plastic glides allow removal of the cells in about a minute or so per cell. Not bad at all.

I chose to get the magnetic mat which was great for organizing screws as I disassembled. A very do-able repair for the do-it-yourselfer. It took about 90 minutes all in. I am pretty sure I could do a second one in 45 minutes or less not that I’ve done one.

drbpconn -

Worked flawlessly ! Thank you very much for the guide and the repair set. This saved a lot of money and prolongs the lifetime of my still capable 2012 MacBook Pro. Excellent

Michael Horn -

Hi all,

I replaced the battery in my Mid 2012 MB Pro retina (model A1398). The process was without incident.

I started the computer back up, plugged in the power cord and proceeded with the battery calibration. Once charged, I let it run until it shut down yesterday afternoon. I let it sit overnight and plugged it back in this morning.

When I pressed the Power button, I would get the battery image with the small red area and the lighting bolt indicating it was charging but it wouldn’t power on.

I tried the SMC reset and that did not work, actually have tried it now several times.

The way I got the machine to boot up was accidental. I was attempting the SMC reset and released the Shift, Control and Option buttons but held the power button. the fans kicked on and then I heard the boot tone. It will boot up and works fine, however, fans are running. Also the LED indicator on the magsafe adapter is not lit.

Any thoughts?

htbottoms -

I solved the problem. I thought maybe the Magsafe2 DC-In board was bad and ordered a new one. when I disassembled the computer to install the new board, it appeared the original board wasn’t fully seated in the socket. I seated it fully and the LED lit up. I put everything back together and it all works as it should. Now to return the replacement DC-in board.

htbottoms -

Hi Guys,

I changed the battery and assembled the Macbook. After 1 week, the adhesive has detached from the new battery and no longer holds the battery in position.

What can I do?

Thanks

IvanDS -

Have you tried just using double sided tape? It’s not too hard to get back in there and you don’t have to disassemble the speakers to get to the battery.

Stephen -

Thanks for the guide! 2020 and the 8 yo machine seems to be working after replacing the battery with a “Simple” manufactured battery (iFixit did not have one in stock at the time). I was able to pry the old battery with a plastic pry tool and about an hour to clean off all the old adhesive with acetone. Took a while but the adhesive gives way with gentle but firm pressure.

Stephen -

Why all those initial steps to disconnect/remove all those other things? Why now disconnect the battery, use the solvent, then remove and replace?

Robert Doris -

I don’t own a single bit of Apple product but the photos make me wonder whether you couldn’t remove the battery separately, and leave everything else in place? Besides the speaker housings that cover a small part of the outermost batteries, is there anything else on top of them?

Or is this gutting the entire base just a matter of caution to ensure the adhesive remover does not damage anything on its way?

JoeMuc2014 -

OOPS, sorry, just found that this question was asked quite a few times before (missed to expand the comments), and the way Kay-Kay does it in the YouTube video is just that. So case closed ;o)

JoeMuc2014 -

Thanks for the useful guide! The hardest part was disassembling, putting it together was much easier and faster. With enough patience and a clear head this was less hard then I expected.

Wouter Slob -

Para limpiar los adhesivos laterales que deja la batería en el unibody es mucho mas efectivo usar alcohol etílico 70 % para ablandar y raspar con un Black Stick las tipas de pega y el residuo final limpiarlo con un paño de microfibra con alcohol, así quedara impecable, no es tan efectivo en la plancha protectora del trackpad.

Walther Cardenas -

Revived my almost 8 year old Macbook with it. I thought it would end up in the trash because of the high repair costs. With a little experience and caution, it works without disassembling the logic board. But if you have no experience, you should do it strictly according to the instructions.

Thank god, it can run now for some more years. Thanks iFixit!

Glatron Jajadogz -

Done! Did SSD at same time. Awesome.

gregorywelch -

First and foremost changing the battery is pretty easy. Having stated that its not because of the guide, although it is complete most is unnecessary. After pulling everything apart and wasting 1.5 hours I realized that all you really had to do is steps: 36-52. There is no need to take all the fans out, logic board disconnects and so on. Also if you want to be a caveman you can actually pry the battery off . It worked for me but I was slow and have some automotive tools to make it easier but a flat head screwdriver would work. Granted mine was about to blow so maybe the sticky tape was compromised but worked nonetheless. The only bummer thing after I put it together I forgot to connect the laptop light and I cant get to it now without taking it apart. Lucky I use it connected to a keyboard and external monitors. Please understand just because I could have done it without taking it apart doesn’t mean you should circumvent the guide but it’s just what from what I experienced. thanks

Andrew Dishong -

Merci pour le tuto, mais à mon avis il y a plus simple

1) enlever le socle du mac book pro

2) déconnecter la batterie, démonter les hauts parleurs en les repliant vers le haut

3) décoller les modules batteries 1 à 1, en glissant une ficelle dessous et une carte fourni avec le kit batterie

c’est un peu long, mais cela évite de démonter moulte connecteurs difficile à replacer

4) nettoyer les reste de bandes collantes avec l’acétone (attention à ne pas toucher l’électronique)

5) remonter à 4 mains la nouvelle batterie

6) présenter et plier les câbles du connecteur batterie avec la connexion.

7) remonter le capot

8) suivre les consignes pour charger la batterie

gege06 -

Solid guide. Followed all the steps and worked perfectly. By far the longest procedure was removing the old battery adhesive.

George -

Super tuto !

J’ai réussi à changer ma batterie, c’était la première fois que je le faisais.

Tout est très bien expliqué. J’ai pris le la batterie avec le kit d’outils, ils sont carrément indispensables.

ameliepereira -

How long will this product be available for? I’ve just sucessfully replaced my battery with this kit (thanks!). I wonder if it’s worth buying a second for a few years time.

Simon -

Fini ! Merci beaucoup pour ce tutoriel !! J’ai suivi les instructions à la lettre et mon MacBookPro 15 mi-2012 refonctionne comme au premier jour (il y a presque 10 ans maintenant). La batterie ne tenait plus la charge, obligé de le brancher en permanence. Maintenant tout refonctionne c’est top ! Pour le tutoriel il faut vraiment être patient et méthodique. J’ai mis les vis dans une petite boite séparée pour chaque étape en les positionnant visuellement de manière à les remettre à la bonne place. Pour la colle j’ai utilisé la moitié de la bouteille de disolvant pour enlever la batterie et l’autre moitié pour bien enlever les résidus de colle en grattant puis avec un chiffon. C’est la partie la plus longue. Le remontage est hyper rapide puisqu’on a déjà bien ses marques si on a été patient et méticuleux au démontage.

Malyga -

It took a lot of time but went fine with that guide.

However, what a nightmare to remove all the stickers under the old battery. Just to clean every thing, more that 1 hour after having removed the battery

alexandre Bossot -

Thanks a lot for this guide! I used it yesterday to replace the battery i bought here last week. And with succes. Keep up the good work! :)

jurian de groot -

Just a thank you. Especially to people posting their own variations on this theme.

In my case I stayed away from the aceton and went straight for the battery using dental floss to fairly easily

cut behind the batteries and then prying them loose from behind using a plastic spatula.

Very happy with getting this done as I finally dared to take this leap;)

Many thanks again!

houser -

Bought the kit from iFixit and just completed this! Keeping track of all the screws was tough (I used an old ice tray to keep track).

But other than that the process of removing the old battery was the most difficult. The instructions call out the plate behind the battery protecting the mousepad, but a picture or some sort of diagram would have been helpful. Bent him slightly, but nothing majorly damaged.

The only other super difficult part was cleaning/scrapping off the old adhesive. I literally got a razor blade to help me scrape off the old adhesive, finger nails still sore from this part!

Aaron A. -

definetly not

Josiah Lauer -

My case is warped! No easy fix for that eh?

Tom Austin -

Fantastic guide and so specific that I managed to do it first time without issues. The tough points were the Logic Board removal and replacement due to getting all the cables in the correct place. Battery adhesive removal was the bit that took the longest and you need to spend the time trying to remove the previous battery’s sticker to get a good seal on the new battery.

First time attempt doing a repair and it took me 5 hours but so pleased to have the return of my Mac.

Anthony Samuel -

agh it attempting this in about 3 days when the battery arrives I’m very nervous altho this guide looks awsome I also think I find it useful to each a video on how to do it since I can see exactly the movements and stuff on how to do this, I’m more of a visual person so yeah. but the guide is amazing!

AppleTopic -

Great guide! I’ve only added RAM before, but by following this guide I could save my old mid-2012 Retina 15” MacBook Pro with completely dead battery. Thank you, Jeff! The replaced battery is charging as is and everything seems to be working. I hope after calibration the battery works. Anyway, beats the dead battery.

Only thing I was puzzled about was the amount of different T5 screws. Since never done anything like this before I wasn’t prepared to distinguish all of them as carefully as I should have. Lucky the guide was very thorough on this as well. I think the trickiest part was trying to take out the old battery… why is it designed that way that it almost feels it cannot be replaced?

Maija Hynninen -

Thank you so much iFixit for your guide, your new battery & the tools.

I could give a brand new life to my 9 years old MacBook Pro!

Pierre Lesmarie -

Danke für diesen schönen Guide…Habe die Teile bei IFixIt bestellt und waren innerhalb von 3 Tagen da.

Habe den Batteriewechsel zusammen mit einem Freund durchgeführt und nach reichlich Aufwand es geschafft den Akku auszuwechseln. Ich hatte davor absolut keine Erfahrung und der Helfer hat das Innere eines PCs auch erst zum zweiten Mal gesehen, also grundsätzlich waren wir absolute Anfänger. Insgesamt haben wir deswegen auch ca. 4 Stunden statt den 1-2 Stunden gebraucht, wir haben aber auch einige Fehler gemacht und teilweise Anschlüsse nicht richtig wieder angeschlossen und mussten dann teilweise relativ viele Schritte wieder zurück gehen. In Nachhinein, stellt sich für mich allerdings die Frage, ob der Akkuaustausch nicht deutlich schneller möglich gewesen wäre, heißt ohne herausnehmen des Mainboards und den gesamten Schritten davor. Außerdem wäre bei manchen Anschlüssen eine genauere Beschreibung, wie man den Anschluss ab- und wieder dran macht hilfreich gewesen. Alles in allem hat aber alles gut geklappt.

Henner Borgmann -

Seems like a lot of work to replace a battery. No wonder Apple charges $199 to do it.

Any way battery can be removed without the need to remove all the internal (motherboard, speakers, fans)?

It’s 2021 year now. Not sure if Apple officially still replaces/manufactures batteries for such an old (2012 year model), but very capable computers.

Thank you.

Alex -

Thank you for the easy-to-follow guide. No issues at all - just one spare screw …

Monika Mansell -

The instructions need to be more detailed - i’m not stupid, but I do hate when the photos and the instructions are dealing with re-orientating the laptop but haven’t mentioned that fact … makes it very difficult to identify what is what and where it is. Other than that the instructions make the process possible.

Alan Gunton-Bunn -

This guide is incorrect and almost all of the steps are unnecessary all you need to do is start at step 36 once the case is open. The guide should be as per MacBook Air mid 2012. I have just replaced a battery on my Mid 2012 MacBook Pro 15” Retina starting at step 36 (all previous steps I did not do)

Ronald Kirk -

Okay it took me about 3 hours plus (first time taking a computer apart) But it seems to have worked…. Thank you for the instructions and comments !

Gordon Young -

I just replaced the battery in one of these……….. disconnect battery, remove 2 screws. Carefully remove battery.

No need to remove or disconnect anything else………. Total time approx 30 min

Alan Sears -

The guide was easy to follow and everything worked perfectly and the MacBook started up first time with no issues. Thank you for a very clear guide and great fitting kit.

brian.alner -

I just removed the old battery parts by gently leveraging them with a wide wood chisel (like a very wide screwdriver). The glue stripes were not that tight and everything worked well. There’s no need to disassemble the Mac in lots of steps and risk to damage something by mistake.

Skyynet -

Wow, long comment thread!

In response to the last comment, I think it’s important to summarize:

1) The reason iFixIt recommends the elaborate tear-down and solvent technique is that Lithium Ion batteries are highly flammable if punctured/damaged, pure and simple.

2) Many of us, including myself, choose to use one of the techniques that doesn’t involve removing so many components and using solvent, and instead use one of the many tools mentioned above to separate the battery from its adhesive. In doing so, we recognize the risk, and are extremely careful to minimize that risk. And if it’s not obvious, it’s *much* safer to use a plastic tool for this approach than a metal one!

3) Whichever method you choose when tackling this job, you need to make sure you’re completely familiar with the *entire* process before you begin, and use abundant precautions with either method, as they both carry risks.

I hope this helps newcomers assess the two methods, and approach the job adequately prepared.

jiclark -

Calibrating battery now.

9.5 year old macbook pro.

Hopefully I get another 10 years and the software doesn't become redundant.

norman h -

I have that same hope. Battery is doing great... at 100% for over 15 minutes compared to my 10 year old battery that went to 50% after 10 minutes with only a browser running.

Gerald Derrick -

I'm so unhappy with the results of my transplant. I followed the instructions, the battery seems to be working fine... but the computer is now unusably slow and the fans run hot. From poking around online, the most likely problem is that I reconnected one of the wires not quite right. But which one? Apple removed the Diagnostics tool from the OS; I loaded TG Pro but the computer won't boot it; the Diagnostics tool in Activity Monitor produces a ream of impenetrable reports. I wish I had just gone to the Apple Store. The savings from doing it myself are not worth the struggles I've had to try to get my computer to work -- and I haven't even gotten there yet.

atlemar -

Honestly not mentioning the trackpad connector that is right under the battery is really the most significant forget out of all of this tutorial almost feels like they wanted us to fail.

I was very satisfied with it in the end but that honestly is like leaving out a key part of the puzzle at the most crucial part of a surgery.

I highly recommend anyway attempting this to forget about it and simply get it done by a professional or just buy a new MAC

The frustration is not worth the savings... a great effort Ifixit but man that was extremely disappointing.

Youness Sedraoui -

Great tutorial. If you're careful and take your time you can get the old battery out without disassembling the entire computer. That said, I didn't use the adhesive remover until AFTER I got the battery out. Then I cleaned up the leftover residual adhesive with a plastic card and qtips.

Gerald Derrick -

Thank you! Without the adhesive remover, the batteries were very very stuck. I would say like many others I had tried to remove the batteries first hoping it would work without a hitch however when I realized the angles I was going to have to work at and ripping open a lithium battery by accident was not what I wanted to do. This guide was thorough and very helpful especially the color coordination of the screws!

Cameron Coppoletta -

Completed earlier today, great guide. Completed easily with battery from iFixit store and brought a device back to life.

Richard Starwind -

I think it would be helpful to rewrite this article to incorporate many of the feedback comments, given some of the steps require other steps to be actioned out of sequence. If the article remains in the current sequence, then perhaps add a disclaimer at the top of the article recommending readers to read all step feedback comments before proceeding, as there are very helpful comments that could prevent damage.

Tim Telcik -

PLEASE READ THIS!!!! You do not have to remove the logic board! Just use a fine piece of string (I used dental floss) and work the string behind a cell with a plastic spudger. Have someone hold the MacBook and saw the adhesive away by pulling towards you. Don’t pull up. Do this for every cell. Remove all the old adhesive. Then install your new battery. Don’t forget to calibrate! Hope this helps anyone!

BMWman1029 -

Ce tutorial est très bien fait, les photos complètent parfaitement les explications.

La manip est longue et il faut être minutieux, mais rien de réellement compliqué dans tout ça.

Mon Mac retrouve sa jeunesse !

Merci !

francois rigal -