It’s fall, and time for our favorite Apples: 2021 MacBook Pro teardowns! We’re excited to tuck into these fruits from a branching 2016 timeline—the MacBooks that could have been. While more ports, a durable and usable keyboard, MagSafe, and swapping the Touch Bar for good ol’ function keys all bring the nostalgia, there’s also futuristic Apple silicon and super-retro case stylings. These MacBooks are so cool they blew right past “Plus” on their way to Pro and Max.
This teardown has been updated with the teardown team’s latest findings. If you’re looking for the Polishing Cloth teardown, it’s after all the shiny new stuff.

Right off the bat these Macs are serving early aughts and we are here for it. If the repairability scores match the straight-walled aluminum cases, our little fixer hearts will surely grow three sizes.

Just look at those ports. With so many places to plug things in and so many dongles scorned, Jony Ive must be rolling in his …. Ferrari. MagSafe also makes a triumphant return to the MacBook, despite its iPhone moonlighting—happy news for all the clumsy cord-kickers, the pet owners, and well, most everyone.
But we didn’t come here to ogle the design. They say true beauty is on the inside, so let’s see if it’s true.
X-ray! X-ray! Read all about it!

But before we break out the tools, here’s a see-through preview of the 14” M1 Pro MacBook Pro (great names, Apple, so easy to keep track of these things), from our friends at Creative Electron. The X-ray might look like an angry owl, but don’t worry, it won’t bite. Or … peck. Whatever owls do.
Zoom in on this X-ray and count the 33.7 billion transistors in the M1 Pro package under the heatsink. Go ahead, we’ll wait.
Okay, you can’t count the transistors from here, but you can clearly see there is a lot going on in that package. Elsewhere you can see the faint outline of the metal keyboard frame, with stabilizers over the long keys, as well as the dark magnets in the speakers, trackpad, and fans.
Avengers, disassemble

Can you hear angelic music, or is that just us? Sure, the rear case is still secured by discouraging pentalobe screws, but there’s still no adhesive this far in—and the clips are even less terrifyingly tight! Cross your fingers (and spudgers) that the trend continues.



Please act surprised, even if you already saw Apple’s stylized renders of the internals during their keynote. I mean, we started this whole “teardown” thing first, plus our imagery includes all the gritty details, like keyboard and backlight cables. We keep it real, Apple.
It does look like we’re “missing” a couple chips, or, rather, you’ll note some empty solder pads where additional storage would go. Spoiler alert: we didn’t spring for the top-tier specs (We blew most of the budget on polishing cloths). Compared to the 2019 15” Touch Bar MacBook Pro, these models seem to make even better use of interior space. Speakers and batteries fill every cozy cranny, without sacrificing a robust-looking cooling assembly.
Major differences between the 14” and 16” models seem pretty few and far between: different rear cover clips, chip arrangements, and hinge bracket shapes. Feel free to spot the differences on your own, but to our eyes these look like nearly identical designs at different scales. And of course, they look fantastic as always—it’s basically a work of art in there—but, the miserable MacBooks of butterfly and Touch Bar fame shame looked nice in early teardown images, too. It’s time to get excavating to learn more.

You always want to start by disconnecting the battery—if you can figure out how. After a little exploratory surgery, we found the battery terminal hidden under the big trackpad cable. From there we’d normally leave the battery for last, because removing recent MacBook Pro batteries requires infinite patience, a bottle of isopropyl alcohol, and an optional bottle of human-friendly alcohol. But as we peer into the guts, we notice something unexpected. The wind carries a whisper of three words, a faint utterance that makes our hair stand on end: battery pull tabs.
Y’all really aren’t ready for this battery reveal
The four outer battery cells all sport subtle but noticeable pull tabs, a.k.a. stretch-release adhesive—those thin white strips we know and love from the iPhone and MacBook Air. If your technique is right, you just pull on these things to stretch out the adhesive, and, in theory, whatever’s attached to it falls right out.

Even better, it appears this battery isn’t trapped under the logic board. That could enable straightforward battery swaps without removing all the brains first—a procedure we’ve been dreaming about for a while.
But wait, we don’t see any pull tabs on the two center cells, and they refuse to budge. Are we screwed—or, worse, glued? (It wouldn’t be the first time we’ve found some promising-looking pull tabs, only to be let down.)
This stumped us for a bit, until we had the desperate brilliant idea to remove the trackpad. We hoped for a better look underneath the battery, but got something better.



It turns out there are pull strips under the remaining battery cells, accessed through precise cutouts in the chassis, beneath the trackpad. What do you know—some smart person gave repair and access some thought.

And just like that, the battery is jettisoned. No alcohol. No pry tools. No incessant cursing.
Batteries all spec’d out

This year’s 16-inch MacBook Pro packs a 99.6 Wh battery (11.45 V, 8693 mAh)—a close second to the 99.8 Wh battery in the 16-incher from 2019. The 14-inch Pro meanwhile has a smaller, 69.6 Wh battery (11.47 V, 6068 mAh)—blowing right past the M1 MacBook Pro battery from last year, which clocked in at 58.2 Wh (11.41 V, 5103 mAh).
The icing on this battery cake? Our tests confirm that battery replacements are fully functional and warning-free! (Yes, we ponied up for extra 14” and 16” models to try some parts swaps for you, because we care.)
All eyes on screen


Slack isn’t just on your MacBook desktop these days, it’s in the computer. In the display cables, that is. On the way to detaching the display, we found these cables have been redesigned with roughly 100% more slack—will flexgate truly be a thing of the past? (We need to start a bingo card for all the issues these new MacBooks seem to fix.)
Display replacements have also been streamlined, physically anyway—there are fewer fussy screws, springs, and cables to dispatch, and no more separate display board to extract. But a brief downer before we continue: our tests confirm that DIY display replacements will kill True Tone function. It’s not a foundational feature like Face ID on an iPhone, but it’s still a bummer to lose functionality while trying to restore your device through repair. If you want a 100% complete repair, you’ll have to pay Apple their exorbitant fee (or else demand your right to repair be enshrined in law).

Speaking of Face ID, if you thought surely it would fit right into that display notch, we have news. Here’s a Face ID module from our recent iPhone 13 teardown, alongside the MacBook Pro’s display for comparison. These sensor modules have literally been reaching new heights, and seemingly won’t be squeezing inside that uber-thin display lid anytime soon. That said, there’s a curious amount of space carved out here for a simple webcam. Check out this X-ray of the notch internals:

In this image you can clearly see the camera sensor at the center, with its indicator LED just to the right. At left is (presumably) the ambient light sensor. And then, vast stretches of additional notch to either side. The notch itself remains a somewhat divisive design choice (as it has since its introduction in the iPhone X)—especially considering how slow Apple was to implement the necessary UI accommodations … and still is.
Hello M1 Pro


The logic board—and the accompanying heatsink and fans—are beefy, to say the least, and this isn’t even the M1 Max model. Both M1 Pro and M1 Max feature custom system on a chip (SoC) packaging similar to last year’s M1.
The M1 Pro is flanked by two memory modules (four on the M1 Max), soldered up close and personal to the SoC for maximum bandwidth. These memory modules make up Apple’s “unified” memory, meaning they can be shared between the CPU and GPU simultaneously, dramatically increasing the pool that both can draw from.
What does all this fancy-pants unification mean for repairability? Well, nothing great, and we’ve said it before: long-term repair options—or even removal of parts for salvage or recycling—are slim. Everything is on the board. Future-upgradeable RAM? Nada. Better shell out as much as you can afford up-front. Future-upgradeable storage: maybe technically possible, but highly impractical. You’ll either need to put those zippy Thunderbolt 4 ports to work with an external drive, or it’s the cloud for you, baby.


All the Apple chips you can eat
Also known as Chip ID:

Front side highlights (ROYGBIV order):
- Apple APL1103 M1 Pro system-on-a-chip (SoC)
- Samsung K3LKYKY0EM-ZGCP 8 GB LPDDR5 SDRAM Memory (16 GB total)
- Kioxia KICM225UZ0460 2×128 GB NAND Flash Memory
- Apple APL1098/343S00515 Power Management
- Intel JHL8040R Thunderbolt 4 Retimer
- MegaChips MCDP2920 DisplayPort-to-HDMI Converter
- Genesys Logic GL9755A Card Reader Controller

Rear side highlights (ROYGBIV order):
- Kioxia KICM225VF9081 128 GB NAND Flash Memory
- USI 339S00912 Bluetooth/WiFi Module
- NXP Semiconductor SN210V NFC Controller w/ Secure Element
- Texas Instruments CD3217B12 USB Type-C Port/Power Delivery Controller
- Renesas ISL9240 Li-Ion Battery Charger Controller
- Cirrus Logic CS42L84A-CWZ Audio Codec
- Texas Instruments SN012776B0 Audio Amplifiers
If you’re still hungry for chip ID, community member C. Chin has helpfully identified over 75 chips on the motherboard and touchpad! You can find his full chip ID post here.
Bobbing for the rest of the bits



The port situation looks as good on the inside as it does out: most of these ports are highly modular, including the much-loved MagSafe. If they fail, you can swap them out individually, without an expensive board repair. The only exceptions are the SD card reader and the HDMI port, which are quite thoroughly soldered to the logic board. Damage to them means a pricey repair, full board replacement, or else a return trip to Dongletown.
We’re also big fans of the cooling setup, but not as big as these ones. Reviewers say you can barely hear them, but it’s nice to confirm they exist and your laptop isn’t waiting to throttle or cook itself. (Pro tip for reviewers: unplugging the trackpad cable prompts the fans to spin like crazy.) For now, the MacBook Air remains the only Apple notebook with no actual internal fan. In the above photo, the larger Nidec-made fan is from the 16” model, and the other from the 14”.
A keyboard caution

The only thing on this keyboard that’s somewhat convenient to replace is the power button/Touch ID combo, but even then you won’t be keeping Touch ID without paying Apple their fee. The rest of the keyboard remains problematic to replace; Apple stores and AASPs will likely continue replacing your entire top case rather than deal with the hassle of repairing their own keyboard design. (Thankfully it’s not a butterfly affair anymore, so repairs should be far less frequent—just be sure to keep a tight grip on your latte.)

We peeled up the backlight layer to check the keyboard—still screwed and riveted down. The new black keyboard surround isn’t a separate module that drops in, like we hoped—it’s just a new anodized finish, probably purely for cosmetic purposes.
Repairability
Apple’s M1 silicon is rocketing the industry forward in a bunch of ways, and it’s unfortunate repairability isn’t advancing as quickly. Still, this design represents a major move in the right direction. The battery replacement procedure, while far from easy—and certainly very far short of the drop-in simplicity you get in a Framework Laptop or even a Dell XPS—is still vastly improved. May we never again relive the nightmare of surgically removing faulty cemented-in batteries from a “Pro” laptop.
We’ve also griped about soldered memory in the past, and while we still don’t love it, it’s hard to argue with the performance and battery life advances Apple has engineered here. It’s possible you couldn’t get anything quite like this from a socketed design. (Although we’d be curious to know if that was even considered.)
The biggest blight on this machine? Soldered-down, non-removable storage—a major bummer for repairability, upgradeability, security, data recovery, and overall flexibility. This would be difficult to justify in any consumer product, but for professional use it seems like an even bigger misstep. And forget about removing the drive to protect your data during repair or when you sell it; you’ve gotta shred the whole logic board if you want failproof security.
In the end, the new MacBook Pro earns a 5/10* on our repairability scale (10 is easiest to repair):
- Battery replacements are reasonably well prioritized, if not exactly easy.
- Display replacements have been greatly streamlined.
- Many other components are modular and can be independently replaced, including the trackpad, most I/O ports, and fans.
- Repairs are hindered by pentalobe screws, a riveted keyboard, glued-down speakers, and some software barriers.
- Permanently soldered storage is a huge detriment to a “Pro” laptop.
- Apple publishes a free service manual and offers replacement parts for sale to end users.
* Editor’s Note: We initially awarded a repairability score of 4/10, but uprated it to 5/10 after Apple came through with a public service manual and replacement parts.

One more thing…
While our primary teardown team spent the week hard at work on the MacBook Pro, our other teardown team was just as busy. The black ops team. They have no names and no budget, and they tear down only the best, the trendiest, the most unobtainable products on the planet. So naturally they went for …
The Thinnest Apple Device Yet: Polishing Cloth Teardown
If you didn’t notice (but who are we kidding—you did), Apple quietly released their own “Polishing Cloth” for $19.

The material feels identical to the inner lining of an iPad Smart Cover, which features a thin layer of microfiber on the inside. Both have a distinct synthetic leather feel to them with a hint of fuzziness, similar to Alcantara.

What else could you buy instead of a singular (su)premium polishing cloth?
- A dongle.
- A Moray Driver Kit.
- Two of our cleaning bundles.
- Eight of our slightly less cool cleaning cloths.



Upon closer inspection, it’s actually two cloths glued together! If you feel a bit underwhelmed by your $19 purchase, pull both layers apart and suddenly you have two cloths, each costing only $9.50.

But let’s go a bit deeper.
Under a microscope the premium quality of Apple’s polishing cloth comes to life. On the left, you’ll see a plain old cleaning cloth. Boring. On the right? Miniscule fibers intricately woven together, uniting to become not just a tool for cleaning, but an object of beauty worthy of being cleaned itself. Amidst the beauty, a thin line delicately traces the form of mankind’s foundational fruit: an apple.

Wait a minute, this is a piece of cloth. What are we doing here? Where did this come from? And where did our twenty dollars go? It’s time to get back to the Mac(Book).
The new Apple Polishing Cloth earns a 0 out of 10 on our repairability scale, for distracting us from a very important MacBook Pro teardown and not going back together after we cut it into pieces with scissors.

78 Comments
Please get to the bottom of the 16” M1 Pro / Max weight difference.
Bigger heat sink than on the 14”?
Rounding anomalies?
Brian B - Reply
I’m sure the heat sink is larger both mass size as well as its radiator fin area between the 14” & 16” systems.
I’m also curious if the heat sink is so different between the M1 Pro vs M1 Max chips in the both 14” & 16” systems.
Remember you can also get the M1 Max in the 14” as well. I’m thinking the Max version has a smaller heat sink (mass) that sits on the chip on the 14” model as the height is less Vs the 16” which offers more space for a higher heat sink (mass) for the Max chip.
Dan -
The M1 Max package is larger than that of the M1 Pro package by a little bit and the cooling contact patch needs to be larger to cover the larger package. Luke Miani compared the two in a video: https://youtu.be/q8F3K7se2ww?t=320
Between that and the physically larger package could cover most of the weight difference between the two.
questionlp -
How does the Display cable compare to the previous Macbooks, especially concerning the cracking of said cable and display issues associated with it. The new display technology must have brought changes cable wise too, right?
Perko M. - Reply
A very valid concern! Stay tuned—we’ll look into it!
Arthur Shi -
Yes! I would hate to see FlexGate II
Also is the chin plate glass? That also messed up people when it breaks from forgetting something sitting on the keyboard when you close the display, punching a shard into the cables.
Dan -
I just replaced the display assembly on this model, and I can comment about the sturdiness of the display cables.
They are much thicker ribbon cables, and they seem to have an abundance of length, enough to easily provide the play necessary even for those who open their Macs way too far. Also reducing the wear is likely the absence of a rolled cable that required uncoiling/coiling with every open/close in the previous models.
Clamp type mounts secure each display cable to prevent pulling on their connectors. Overall the screws are bigger and mostly stainless steel (I think). All in all, I just seems like a sturdier build with a design that should see less tension between the screen and the main body and the anchors to hold the connections securely in place.
Y'all's thoughts?
Chris Leeds -
Any chance of a teardown of the new Apple Polishing Cloth?
Richard Murray - Reply
Find out where those $20 fit!
Ezequiel Rocha -
What a ridiculous suggestion. As if we have time for such silliness. We’re definitely not doing this right this very instant. Definitely not.
Jeff Suovanen -
Lol somebody’s mad @jeffsu
Mark S -
Really curious to see what’s taking up all that room in that notch!
Dimitri Bouniol - Reply
The camera, with placeholder space for future face ID & center stage. You also fail to realize rather than losing space, you are gaining the extra pixels to the right and left of the camera that are now used for the menu, rather than the menu eating up the top of your screen.
brian -
Is the keyboard any different from the last version? Key travel still 1 mm?
Anirban Chakraborty - Reply
I’m not holding out hope, but I would love to see the storage if replaceable. I would love to get this machine with 2TB but not sure I want to feel the gouge right now. 1TB would be fine for a few years.
Juan Monroy - Reply
Taking a look at the empty solder pads on the left side (compared to the chips symmetrically on the right), and taking a guess that this is the base model with less storage, I am going to guess it is not replaceable…
Dimitri Bouniol -
Depends on your soldering skills & bravery.
brian -
This would be a real boost to Apple, imho, as those of us who owned (and I still do) the mid-2015 MBP was the last model to offer end-user upgrades.
What would be interesting is if anyone from MacSales/OWC is on this thread (or read it at least); they might provide some additional insight.
-Merlin
George McCallion -
Please look at display glass - is the outward surface (if I get a fingerprint on the screen, will I be cleaning it off glass or plastic?) since 2012 retina screens on MacBooks have been plastic, and the anti-reflective coating has been fairly delicate as well - I didn’t hear anything about this from Apple, though they do list arsenic free display glass on the website (this could be under a layer of plastic, which is my concern) thanks!!
Matt - Reply
The display cover has been glass for years. What makes you think it’s plastic? There hasn’t been a MacBook Pro with a plastic screen cover since the Late 2008 17-inch MacBook Pro, 13 years ago…
moiety -
I just used a steel (.009” cheapie one) razor blade to create a tiny scratch on a 2017 15” retina screen - scratched with basically no pressure - if it were glass I doubt it would have scratched…
if it is glass, can you please measure the of the screen (as is common with phone screens)?
Matt -
Would be interesting to try to swap battery from another mbp, with recent serialization tends I wouldn’t be surprised if this is strictly for Apple convenience only.
Mindaugas B - Reply
Probably a hedge against supply chain issues. Much easer to keep stock of batteries, than a whole bottom cover with glued units for warranty and out of warranty “repair”
brian -
Mostly curious about subcomponents like the wifi controller, HDMI and the like—and where that points towards future improvements! Really disappointed with the early reports that we’re stuck on 2x2 802.11ax—will personally move up my switch to 6ax at home.
john - Reply
I agree. would have been great if they had maintained 3X3 at least, and or 6E. I assume the 6E will show up in M2, since 6E routers are really just now starting to come down in price in consumer space, and starting to filter into the enterprise wifi space.
brian -
At least you can get into it enough to clean the fans and associated cooling parts without encountering massive amounts of glue. This looks reasonably designed so far.
roj2323 - Reply
My horror scenario is that a drink destroys the MacBook
Pro. Can you please analyse, if there is kind of „ spilled
coffee protection" from keyboard/trackpad side? Is the
keyboard placed in some kind of tub? Thank you!
Kai_Uwe - Reply
There is no kind of spilled coffe protection and if you spill your coffe on this MacBook Pro or older MacBooks, you will damage logic board and the computer will be unusable and unrepairable.
Andrej Pracovný účet -
Curious to see where the .14 pound difference between the 16” Pro and Max comes from. Very likely the heatsinks/heatpipes, but I want to see the difference
tipoo - Reply
Is it true that the display stops working if you use a third-party polishing cloth?
Kris Rodriguez - Reply
If it’s true, I foresee a “cloth gate” happening very soon.
Gorilla -
Funny!!!
;-}
Dan -
How about TCON board’s position? Does it prone to failure due to its position close to heatpipe as prev gen?
wood wood - Reply
If you compare the older 16” presentation air flow drawing and the this series you’ll see a new air flow pattern! There is now a clear inbound flow in the middle of the back.
I’m not saying the cooking T-CON’s issue is resolved it does appear its been acknowledged as a problem!
Even still placing your system on a bed or dense rug so the vents become blocked will still cook your system as well as serious dust buildup on the fan blades.
Dan -
Hey guys, can you lower the images in this post? Not even the cdn can fast deliver
Arnaldo - Reply
this is really good article, thank you for sharing with us
nash devas - Reply
Are the Micrphones removable/replaceable?
Does an extra wire go to the camera or is it put into the LVDS or Backlight Cableset?
Is there some kind of antenna bar or do they go into the Screen?
That’s what I’d like to know :)
Cedric Bambooza - Reply
LVDS is no longer being used, iDP is the signaling method now.
It started with the retina models back in 2012 (it was called eDP then). Yes, both travel over a ribbon cable which can confuse.
Dan -
Oh, well that I didn’t know but I suspected that LVDS had a successor.
Still my questions remain and I would love to get an answer :)
Cedric Bambooza -
That Notch! Is there a reason Apple didn’t go with a smaller one for this series?
While I can guess they were thinking about FaceID and for some reason pulled it, what is the space they had to work with? Will a newer iPhone or iPad Pro FaceID unit have fitted?
I hate the idea of buying this newer systems only to see next years version with the FaceID unit.
I still don’t like the intrusion of the notch, I can live with it IF I can make the menu bar black with white text and as I’m a menu bar hog an option to lower the bezel space down so the menus are below the notch.
At least that can be fixed via software, and yes I would not like to loose the screen real-estate but the notch from the presentation and pictures looks like a large visual distraction when working on projects. Sure, watching a movie Apple hid the notch but anyone who is a creative composing or editing their work has to deal with it sitting smack in their view.
Dan - Reply
Hey Dan! We hear you! We’ll definitely explore that in our update. Stay tuned!
Arthur Shi -
I’m curious to see inside the new power adapter, as it is reportedly the first Apple GaN product.
moshee moshee - Reply
TechInsights did a quick teardown of the AC adapter ( https://www.techinsights.com/blog/apples... ), but it would be nice to see the full iFixit treatment.
I’m also very curious about the USB Type-C to MagSafe cable, as it is responsible for communicating with the host Mac (historically this was done via the center adapter sense pogo pin using 1-Wire), negotiating an appropriate USB PD contract with the power adapter, and updating the status indicator LED. So there’s definitely some logic tucked away in the ends of that little cable.
repoman27 -
About the cleaning cloth:
I really appreciated your systemic sarcasm. Not to mention the fact that, in the end, the compulsive teardown-syndrome prevailed and you decided to buy it too. HAHAHA
[deleted] - Reply
Is there anything that indicates whether or not the keyboard can be replaced al a carte without needing a whole top case?
Nick C. - Reply
Thunderbolt Controller - Which chip is being used? JHL _ _ _ _ ? same with USB4 controller? thanks!
Michael Lewis - Reply
The Thunderbolt 4 host controllers are integrated into the M1/M1 Pro/M1 Max chips. The identifier presented by ioreg is “AppleSynopsysUSB40XHCI”, indicating that Apple is using IP provided by Synopsys. Looking at Apple’s die shots, the M1 can support 2 Thunderbolt / USB4 ports, and the M1 Pro and M1 Max can support up to 5 Thunderbolt 4 ports. In both cases, the number of Thunderbolt / USB4 PHYs is equal to the maximum number of display output streams supported by the GPU.
Thunderbolt 4 is USB4 with support for Thunderbolt 3 interoperability. Intel also mandates various additional requirements for Thunderbolt 4 certification. The M1 (non-Pro/Max) could not provide 2 display output streams to its integrated host controllers because one stream is dedicated to the eDP link for the built-in panel (or HDMI port on the mini). Thus Apple calls them Thunderbolt / USB4, rather than Thunderbolt 4.
The Intel JHL8040R chips used in previous M1 Macs are just Thunderbolt 4 retimers, not host controllers.
repoman27 -
@danj, I’m really concerned, according to Apple Insider, they’re sold out until Q1 22. Think some people know something we don’t.
Kris Rodriguez - Reply
When you cut the polishing cloth apart, did you see any magic smoke escape?
Richard Murray - Reply
Don’t know about smoke, I do sense a smell that couldn’t be far off from Tim Apple’s worn socks.
Jay vdLee -
You state the Face ID sensor is too thick to fit into the screen, but without a specific x-ray of the display lid by itself, we do not know how highly packed the components inside are.
Also, the Face ID sensor in the phones are intentionally engineered to be in small tiny ‘towers’ such that other components can be placed around them. Surely the large space in a thin space can allow them to be spread out in a more place orientation whilst keeping the optical sections at a bare minimum height.
Has iFixIt ever taken the Face ID scanner apart further to see the intricacies inside? That would be fascinating. I’m willing to bet Face ID will be the distinctive new feature next MacBook Pro model - touting ‘double security’ for those who enable both Touch ID and Face ID as they see fit.
Daniel - Reply
So the Yellow and Red part on the motherboard, that layout is mirrored on the other side so if you have an 8TB drive, you would have 8 times a 1024 GB NAND Flash?
[deleted] - Reply
I see there’s a 6 axis gyroscope and accelerometer on the M1 Pro MBP, does anyone know why? It clearly is not used for the force touch for the touchpad. This used to be used as a sudden motion sensor back when Apple still uses mechanical drives, but Apple has been using SSDs like 8 years by now?
wyuenho - Reply
Very nice write-up, good to see at least some repairability is coming back.
Alas, you had me up until storage and memory. Ugh on Apple! It’s why I’m still running an ‘09 MPB pro as my mobile unit. Don’t need to render footage on that machine, it’s … mobile. If I want super horsepower, I go back to the desktop unit (which is actually just a beefed up Intel box running OpenCore, and still has a proper nVidia GPU).
While there’s nothing illegal about any of the data on my storage, shame on Apple for making it unsafe to repair my device. Not letting my bits out of my sight.
osxtra - Reply
I’m not really a fixer and there is a ton of stuff referenced here that I have no clue about but it’s such a delight to just read your write up. So funny and clever. Love the cleaning cloth tear down. Hilarious and so on point lol.
Stef - Reply
I wonder how much the EU’s Right to Repair has influenced the minor improvements on repairability? They certainly still have a way to go, but at the same time if Apple can solder something to the main board they probably will.
Andre Mas - Reply
Nice teardown and I dig the AMERICAN PSYCHO reference. Ripping that beautiful machine apart, Bateman would be proud.
MacProUser - Reply
I came for the Macbook Teardown. I stayed for the Cloth Teardown. +1 to Charisma you can now cast “Shade” at Level 3 at will
Sketkh - Reply
Do you think the USI 339S00912 wi-fi part would be replaceable when Apple moves to 6e/6ghz in the future? Would it also require new physical antennas? Looks like it’s a soldered part though from the back of the logic board if I’m seeing that correctly =/
Neil Q - Reply
Dang, I was hoping we’d see what was behind the notch.
Alan Westbrook - Reply
Will you be including the 1080p webcam in your detailed teardown? I’m curious about both its total footprint, and its sensor size.
Mark Smith - Reply
In order for Apple to add Thunderbolt to a non-Intel Mac all they had to do was add an “Intel JHL8040R Thunderbolt 4 Retimer”?
Are there other chips that are needed to make this Thunderbolt 4 compliant?
kevinha - Reply
Are the feat replaceable? It was always my biggest annoyance that when they fell off my 2012, Apple said I needed to replace the entire bottom panel ($200) or get a third-party product on eBay ($5) whose adhesive only lasted a few months.
Nik - Reply
I know I posted this subject earlier, but any ideas about the HDD being user-upgradable? Ya know…order a 500GB and then buy a 1TB or 2TB as a replacement?
-George
George McCallion - Reply
I think the images on “Avengers, disassemble” are in the wrong order - the centre image is the 16” model, and the right one the 14” - the caption has them the other way round.
Liam Self - Reply
In the video, while talking about upgradeable storage and memory on computers, you show a Raspberry Pi. The implication being that the Pi possesses these qualities.
Could you please do a tear down on a RAM-upgradeable Raspberry Pi? Because as far as I know, one does not exist. Beyond that, a selection of Raspberry Pi laptops that don’t look like the 90s would be great.
danyon@gmail - Reply
Can’t read from your photos: What are the battery part numbers? What code is under the C-UL-US cert/mark on the batteries?
Scott Giles - Reply
Updated the post for you—battery image is now click-to-enlarge so you can read the markings.
Jeff Suovanen -
Hi, is there any photos for the logic board of 16 inch version? Also can you compare m1 max version with m1 pro version?
Wang Shanker - Reply
apple flagship polishing cloth details was awesome. apple go to !&&*
Sunday Funday - Reply
https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2021/11/a...
This will probably boost the repairability score by some.
Sean D'Adamo - Reply
Is the 100% more slack claim true for both the 14” and the 16” model? Really worried about Flexgate tbh (not because I’ve seen worrying things in this teardown but considering the price they’re asking).
Yannik Heinze - Reply
what is the model number for the display? ex: Samsung LTM201M1-L01
thanks!
moussa ham - Reply
I see on ebay some a2442 us keyboard layout replacement that i might be intrigued to buy, but this article is saying its not able to be dropped in and be used, or do they mean the led layer, rivets, key layer?
Andres Molina - Reply
Hi @nineways09,
MacBook keyboard chassis have their keyboard layouts milled into them. For example, if one ships as a US qwerty then it'll always be a US qwerty. (Hope this helps!)
Amber Taus -
I love these teardowns so much... The jokes are as good as the help it provides people like me who are used to fixing machines I built myself. Thanks again for this, I will be able to clean the MBP 16 internals a bit now. :)
Sean Frohman - Reply
Official repair manual is available. It's a fascinating read. Curiously, the battery is deemed "not removable" and is part of the top case assembly!
https://manuals.info.apple.com/MANUALS/2...
Key caps can be replaced.
My 16" M1 max 1TB weighs 2159g.
cheongi - Reply
The true tone display being lacking on any replacement is a bummer ( unless apple ever give diagnostic software access ) , but the pull tabs on the battery are a nice bonus.
Nick - Reply