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Dieser Teardown ist keine Reparaturanleitung. Um dein MacBook Pro 16" 2019 zu reparieren, verwende unsere Fehlerbehebungsseite.

  1. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019, Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 1, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019, Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 1, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019, Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 1, Bild 3 von 3
    • De moderne MacBook Pro wordt gezien als het toestel van Apple met de meest uiteenlopende meningen. Maar dit was niet altijd zo. Wij hopen dat dit nieuwe model een terugkeer naar het succesvolle model van voorheen betekent. De specificaties van ons demontageslachtoffer demontagesubject zijn:

    • 16" LED‑backlit IPS Retina scherm met True Tone, 3072 × 1920 resolutie (226 ppi)

    • 2.6 GHz 6‑core Intel Core i7 (Turbo Boost tot 4.5 GHz), gecombineerd met een AMD Radeon Pro 5300M

    • 16 GB van 2666 MHz DDR4 SDRAM

    • 512 GB SSD

    • 100 Wh batterij

    • Zesvoudige speakersysteem plus een high-performance microfoonaanbod

    • Van buiten valt er weinig aan de Apple te ontdekken - alhoewel we kunnen stellen dat ze het design niet hebben aangepakt puur om impulskopers te paaien. Het enige wat ons wijzer maakt is het nieuwe modelnummer: A2141 en EMC 3347.

    This video is blatantly erroneous and gave me just enough confidence in the wrong move as to (cosmetically only) damage the computer I am working on. It should be taken down immediately. If you dont know what I'm talking about consider getting a new job. "With a bit of force" smh. And I fell for it. The correct answer was buried under several copies of this same (well promoted and extremely bad) video. The correct answer is to pull the backplate towards the front of the computer NOT "WITH A BIT OF FORCE". I am wondering how many people have damaged their equipment as a result of this extremely amateur video coming from the people who make the toolkit I have in my hand.

    Fix this please. Its embarrassing. For you.

    Tyler Vega - Antwort

  2. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 2, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 2, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 2, Bild 3 von 3
    • Als we ze op elkaar leggen als een stapel pannenkoeken, kun je zien dat de nieuwe MacBook Pro beduidend groter (en slechts een haar dikker) is dan het meest recente 15" model. De 16" is echter vrijwel even groot als het 2015 model - echter alleen in grootte, niet in het aantal poortingangen.

    • Met de ruggen tegen elkaar geven de 16" Pro en het 2015 model je het idee dat je dubbel ziet.. totdat je iets beter kijkt. Het schermscharnier is veranderd en de toetsen van de oude Pro steken net iets meer uit.

    • In hetzelfde spelletje "zoek de verschillen" met de twee 2019 MacBook Pro's krijgt de 16":

    • Een fysieke Escape-toets los van de Touch Bar

    • Een matte afwerking van de Touch ID en de aan-/uitknop, overeenkomstig met de andere toetsen

    • Een ongeveer 19 mm minder lange Touch Bar

    • Omgekeerde-T pijltjestoetsen, alle half de grootte van de andere toetsen

    • Wanneer je inzoomt op het linkerrooster kun je drie gecamoufleerde openingen zien die de verbeterde, drievoudige microfoon verhult. En nu zul je het nooit meer over het hoofd kúnnen zien.

    Ich habe mein MBP16” Im Februar 2020 erhalten und dieses hat die erwähnten Löcher für die Mikrofone nicht…

    Atomic One - Antwort

  3. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 3, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 3, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 3, Bild 3 von 3
    • Tijd om eindelijk te doen waar we goed in zijn: onze tools in dingen steken en kijken wat er allemaal los en tevoorschijn komt.

    • Laten we met wat toetsenbordtoetsen beginnen. Herinner je je het Magic toetsenbord van de iMac nog? Het is een veel geprezen, betrouwbaar design dat Apple heeft gebruikt als "core technology" voor het nieuw ontworpen toetsenbord in deze nieuwe MacBook.

    • Maar dat kan worden gelezen als een understatement: we moesten ons uiterste best doen om überhaupt een verschil te vinden. Scissorswitches, toetsenbordtoetsen... Er is net iets minder ruimte vrijgelaten rondom de nieuwe toetsen en de experts zullen de nieuwe pijltjestoetsen zeker waarderen - voor de rest is alles vrijwel identiek.

    • Nieuwtje: er is niet eens een stofdicht membraan te vinden onder deze nieuwe toetsen. Wij interpreteren dit als een erg goed teken. (Het betekent ook dat we eindelijk weer Doritos kunnen eten tijdens onze demontages.)

    • Om de vergelijking te voltooien, hebben we een derde afbeelding van de controversiële (en berucht grillige) "butterflyswitch" bijgevoegd, te vinden in de 15" MacBook Pro die een aantal maanden geleden nog werd gelanceerd.

    • Om ons punt nog duidelijker te maken: hier is een foto van de scissorswitch in het "unibody" MacBook-design uit 2012...

    • ...plus een scissorswitch uit Apple's meest recente laptop met nog een "goed werkend" toetsenbord, de MacBook Pro met Retinascherm uit 2015.

    Its hard to follow which bullet point is related to which picture.

    Gouthaman Raveendran - Antwort

    You meant “there's even” and not “there's not even “ right?

    kabir - Antwort

    The absence of a dust membrane is the culprit of many issues with the keyboard. This model Mac has the worst keyboard ever witnessed on a Mac. I have such a Mac for one year now, and I'm going to need my second replacement topcase!

    E.R. - Antwort

  4. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 4, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 4, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 4, Bild 3 von 3
    • Wat is er onder het scissor-mechanisme te vinden? Hey, wij stellen hier de vragen - haal jij dit ding maar uit elkaar.

    • Wacht even, dat nemen we terug - draai het beter om.

    • Hier zien we de "door Apple ontworpen rubberen koepel met meer ruimte voor de potentiële energie van een druk op de toets."

    • Daaronder vinden we een backlight-module met een interessant patroon - waarover later meer.

    • En daaromheen een dunne, zwarte pakking - waarschijnlijk om het felle licht binnen de perken te houden en niet voorbij de specifieke toets te laten schijnen.

    • Nogmaals in vergelijking met het Magic toetsenbord op de desktop:

    • De twee scissor-mechanismen zien er vrijwel identiek uit. De oude Magic-scissor is net ietsje dikker (1.6 vs 1.38 mm).

    • 0.22 mm lijkt misschien niet heel erg veel, maar voor ons bestaat er geen twijfel dat er veel tijd, techniek en moeite is gestoken in het creëren van deze nieuwe, iets dunnere scissor-switch.

    What happen if we use desktop magic keyboard scissor mechanism(the thicker one) in Macbook Pro keyboard ?

    Friday - Antwort

    I'd rather have the 0.22 mm and a reliable keyboard. Instead of this useless piece of garbage.

    E.R. - Antwort

  5. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 5, Bild 1 von 2 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 5, Bild 2 von 2
    • Ondanks het minimale verschil in dikte lijken deze toetsenborden zodanig op elkaar dat we wel een beetje zwarte met witte magie móesten mengen om te zien wat er zou gebeuren...

    • *Hemels koor zingt* De creatie van magie

    • Ja, wat je hier ziet is een witte Magic toetsenbordtoets uit 2015 op een 16" MacBook Pro toetsenbord met scissor-mechanisme. Het werkt!

    • De oudere Magic-commandtoets is ietwat kleiner (vandaar iets meer ruimte om de toets heen) en dikker dan de nieuwe.

    • Niet iedere toets is verwisselbaar en de oude Magic-toetsen hebben geen doorzichtige letters om de backlight door te laten. Dus helaas moeten de toetsenbordknutselaars hun enthousiasme een beetje temperen.

    Let’s start Modding of Macbook Pro :)

    Pavel - Antwort

  6. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 6, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 6, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 6, Bild 3 von 3
    • Nu dat we het toetsenbord (voorlopig) aan onze testen hebben onderworpen, is het tijd om de behuizing van haar deksel te ontdoen en de binnenkant te bekijken.

    • Apple gaf ons reeds een voorproefje van de boze uil in een GIF die ze naar buiten brachten in een persbericht, maar wat we nog niet zagen is een röntgenfoto van diezelfde boze uil om te zien wat er zich daarachter bevindt.

    • Op de röntgenfoto kijkt de uil nog bozer! Pas maar op! Gelukkig namen onze vrienden bij Creative Electron alle risico op zich - wij gaan verder met de demontage als alles is bedaard..

    I’m still not clear on how exactly the keyboards are different - all the snark got in the way, but quite bemused by the ‘angry owl’!

    Kit - Antwort

    The six screws on the bottom plate of the MacBook Pro 16 are Pentalobe P5 type.

    Greg Conquest - Antwort

    The six screws on the bottom plate of the MacBook Pro 16 are Pentalobe P5 type. The two near the hinge are longer, about 7mm. The other four are about 3.5mm long. After removing these screws, though, the plate does not come off. Are there more screws under the rubber feet?

    Greg Conquest -

    You lift off the front of the bottom panel and pull forward. The back edge near the hinge has a series of prongs that slide out forward for removal, and backwards until you hear/feel a snap/click sound for reinstallation.

    Dice Yamaguchi - Antwort

    Thanks, Dice. Why on earth iFixit didn't include this in their step is beyond me.

    colleenthompson -

  7. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 7, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 7, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 7, Bild 3 von 3
    In diesem Schritt verwendetes Werkzeug:
    Marlin Screwdriver Set - 5 Specialty Precision Screwdrivers
    $22.99
    Kaufen
    • Torx schroeven, schmorx schroeven - onze Marlin schroevendraaierset kan het allemaal. (Alhoewel, nu we er zo over nadenken: we moeten nog een passende taak vinden voor de schmorx-bitjes.)

    • Zelfs wanneer deze computer open is, blijven er echter mysteries op ons afkomen - een gemaskerde MacBook! Ben jij het, Bruce?

    • Apple heeft grootse verbeteringen aankondigd in het thermische design van deze MacBook Pro en claimt dat het koellichaam maarliefst 35 procent groter is. (Wij gokken dat het 34 procent is, maar voor deze ene keer geloven we Apple op hun woord.)

    • We vonden verder ook nog wat verbeterde hardware die geplaatst is ter bescherming van, zo geloven wij, nieuwe, snelle GDDR6-chips - een koperen beschermplaat en een aantal aluminium thermische panelen.

    The photo in the linked Marlin screwdriver set is of four Phillips and one flathead driver, rather than the described pentalobes, torx and tri-point?

    Feanor - Antwort

    Thanks for the catch! We’re working on fixing the incorrect image.

    Arthur Shi -

    Shouldn't the thermal paste cover more of the CPU heatspreader, or is that a normal amount?

    cgjovag - Antwort

  8. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 8, Bild 1 von 2 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 8, Bild 2 von 2
    • We kunnen ook niet meer voorkomen dat we in deze logic boards een dikke snor zien, dus laten we deze analogie nog verder uitbreiden en de haren helemaal uitkammen. Hier is er wat er aan onze kam blijft hangen:

    • 9e generatie Intel Core i7-9750H 6-core processor

    • 16x Micron MT40A1G8SA-075 8 Gb DDR4 SDRAM (16 GB in totaal)

    • AMD Radeon Pro 5300M mobile GPU

    • 4x Samsung K4Z80325BC-HC14 8 Gb GDDR6 RAM (4 GB in totaal)

    • Toshiba TSB4227VE8434CHNA11926 en TSB4227VE8437CHNA11926 flashgeheugen (512 GB in totaal)

    • Apple T2 APL1027 339S00536 coprocessor

    • Intel JHL7540 Thunderbolt 3 controller

    Five (5) NAND packages… Doesn’t that strike anyone else as odd? How does that possibly work out to 512 GB?

    repoman27 - Antwort

    Same question here. One for redundancy? Want to know how 1T,2T,4T,8T organized.

    Walter - Antwort

    For the GDDR RAM, you say “8Gb” and then “4GB total”…can you clarify that notation? Is there 4GB of GDDR in the machine, or 8? If onul y 4, then what does the “8Gb” refer to?

    dontinw - Antwort

    8Gb is the capacity for single GDDR6 chip. There are four 8Gb GDDR6 chips. Total video memory capacity is 32Gb(4GB).

    JJ Wu -

    @dontinw: 8Gb is 8 gigabit (how memory and flash manufacturers specify chip capacities). 8 bits to a byte, so 8Gb = 1GB (capital B). So 4 x 8Gb chips for a total of 4GB GDDR6 RAM.

    Colin Ng - Antwort

    @repoman27 @Walter Five flash chips is a little odd, but flash chips are made in odd sizes. The 2018 Retina MacBook Air had three flash chips at 43 GB each for a total of 129 GB, sold as 128. This was also the reason for its weird 1.5 TB max capacity. The 2019 refresh dropped to two chips.

    My bet is 103 GB flash chips are a little bit cheaper per gigabyte than 128 GB. 1 TB and up will probably be eight chips.

    Zimmie - Antwort

    Can the hard disks be easily upgraded?

    L Tan - Antwort

    Is this “Apple T2 APL1027 339S00536 coprocessor “ there to protect boards from 3rd party and unauthorized repairs?

    Babak - Antwort

    Ostensibly no. It’s a hardware encryption co-processor. It allows for much higher speeds while maintaining very high levels of encryption.

    It also integrates many extra functions. It replaces many of the discrete components into a single black box as well.

    System Management Controller, image signal processor, audio controller, and SSD controller

    Taken from https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT208862

    It also is the core of Touch ID and all of the secure boot and encrypted storage functions.

    However there are concerns that this may become the fact. As this is the SMC (System Management Controller) it could be used to track the serial numbers or other applicable identifiers to make sure that no component is replaced without an AASP resetting the coding.

    This is only a concern but with apple and the iphone error 53 fiasco we know they obviously have no qualms screwing over their customers to prevent 3rd party repairs.

    Grant Spedding -

    Where is the Soundchip / DAC?

    Edit: Sorry, next Step. maybe the Renesas 225101C

    Ballerjockel - Antwort

    What DAC and amplifier are there?

    djmultik -

    i started using Macs Fan Control to control heating and the app takes advantage of controlling the two fans independently. What is the orientation of the logic board. Are we looking at it here as if you were facing the laptop with the screen open? I’d like to know which components are closest to which fan, R or L. Thanks.

    smithereens - Antwort

    Hey smithereens! The orientation of the Logic board in the first photo is the same as its orientation in the computer when working on it face-up, meaning it’s flipped horizontally from what it would be when you are using it—L is R and R is L. Hope this helps, it’s a bit hard to describe with words! If you want you can go back and look at the photos above this step (while the board is still in the laptop) and map it out the orientation in your mind based on visible ICs on the board.

    Taylor Dixon -

    Where is the SPI flash rom?

    abductedaliens - Antwort

    Is there any way to get access to the hard drive to backup the information if the logic board isnt working?

    David García - Antwort

    Hi David.

    Difficult question.

    In some cases if the board dies the data dies with it.

    In others it can be connected to another machine to recover the data.

    In others it can be but needs board repairs (apple does not offer this so 3rd party only and bye bye warranty)

    Best case would be to ensure an up to date backup is kept and keep nothing mission critical on the machine

    Grant Spedding -

  9. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 9, Bild 1 von 2 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 9, Bild 2 von 2
    • We blijven kammen tot we op silicoon stuiten. Silicoon wordt gemaakt van zand. Hebben we dit altijd al verkeerd aangepakt?

    • Intel SR40F platform controller hub

    • Texas Instruments CD3217B12 (waarschijnlijk power controllers)

    • 338S00267-A0 (waarschijnlijk Apple PMIC)

    • Texas Instruments TPS51980B power controller

    • 339S00610 (waarschijnlijk een Apple Wi-Fi/Bluetooth-module)

    • Intersil 6277 PWM modulator

    • Renesas 225101C

    It’s a pretty minor bit of silicon, but I also spy an NXP CBTL06142 DisplayPort 1.2 switch in between the CPU and GPU, likely for switching between integrated and discrete graphics for the built in display panel. This one is marked 6142E, but several previous iFixit Mac teardowns have revealed either the 6142F variant, or the Diodes Incorporated (Pericom) equivalent PI3WVR12612. For instance, the 13-inch MacBook Pro with Touch Bar has a pair of these to share the two display outputs from the integrated GPU with both Thunderbolt 3 controllers.

    And is the Intel QMS380 chipset custom for Apple or does this appear elsewhere? It’s tiny compared to the normal PCH package.

    repoman27 - Antwort

    You have listed a WiFi/Bluetooth module there. I can’t it’s location marked on the board. Can you tell me if it is a fixed module solded to the board. I only ask as Apple has again not gone the full Monty and only put in an AC spec wifi module when they have included the AX spec in the new phones.

    Michael Rapkins - Antwort

    I can’t tell which component is the Apple 339S00610 WiFi/Bluetooth module in that illustration. Is it still on an m.2 card, or has it been soldered to the motherboard now?

    Bryce Glover - Antwort

    @ Michaek Rapkins & Bryce Glover: It’s the silver component circled in light blue in the second image. It’s a Broadcom based combo SiP module from Universal Scientific Industrial (USI), and it’s soldered to the logic board.

    repoman27 -

  10. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 10, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 10, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 10, Bild 3 von 3
    • Nu het moederbord weg is, kunnen we een blik werpen op de rest van het verbeterde thermische design.

    • Excuseer als we even een luchtje scheppen. Vergeleken met haar iets oudere zusje (de 15-inch versie uit 2019), heeft de nieuwe MacBook Pro aanzienlijk grotere uitlaatgaten.

    • Dat, in combinatie met de nieuwe ventilatoren die ook grotere waaiers bevatten, zorgt ervoor dat er 28% meer lucht door de nieuwe Pro wordt geblazen.

    • Wellicht klinkt dit allemaal als gebakken lucht, maar deze toffe verbeteringen zorgen er waarschijnlijk wel voor dat deze 16" Pro tijdens intensieve processen tot 12 watt meer aankan dan haar voorganger.

    The dancing indie video game creatures are adorable!

    Kent Jenkins - Antwort

  11. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 11, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 11, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 11, Bild 3 von 3
    • In de hoop wat magie te vinden, halen we voorzichtig de backlight van het toetsenbord weg.

    • De backlight-module bestaat uit een flexibele verdeler die het licht tot aan de hoeken verspreidt. Flexibele verdelers zijn veelvoorkomend, maar de hoeken van deze verdeler lijken speciaal ontworpen, waarschijnlijk om de helder- en gelijkheid te maximaliseren.

    • Onder de backlightmodule stuiten we op een aantal pentalobe P2-schroeven die langs de hoeken van het metalen toetsenbordframe zijn geplaatst. Zou het kunnen? Kunnen we dit ding volledig ontschroeven om een kapotte toets te vervangen na een met Doritos-overladen type-a-thon?

    • Neeeee! Wederom is het toetsenbord compleet vastgenageld. Ondanks dat de toetsen minder vatbaar zijn voor de aanvallen van kruimelige belagers, is het toetsenbord zelf niet beter repareerbaar dan het toetsenbord met vlindermechanisme.

    • Het is weer net zoals in 2016: we hebben een nieuw toetsenbord inclusief onrepareerbaar design met enkel Apple's belofte dat het "niet kapot zal gaan." En dat terwijl dit toetsenbord niet eens onderdeel is van het Keyboard Service Programma, dus... : /

    • Het enige lichtpuntje is dat dit toetsenborddesign extreem veel lijkt op vorige Apple-toetsenborden die de tand des tijds meestal wel hebben weten te doorstaan.

    • Weigerend deze toetsenbordtest met lege handen te verlaten, wrikken we het toetsenbord toch nog omhoog om een blik te werpen op hetgeen het klikgeluid veroorzaakt. We worden beloond met een kijkje tussen de toetsen en de metalen backplate, waartussen de PCB-laag gesandwiched zit. Hier komt dus het klikken vandaan... maar helaas geen magie.

    Apple keyboards are notoriously prone to liquid damage. Would have been nice with screws.

    Matthias - Antwort

    “Apple keyboards are notoriously prone to liquid damage. Would have been nice with screws.”

    No, Apple doesn’t like its products repairable. Reparability means recyclability means less profit for Apple.

    Harry - Antwort

    is the backlight glued ?

    Ale - Antwort

    my keyboard is not working even after I replace the logic board purchased from apple twice. and keyboard I replaced Chinese copy is there any sensor or terminal command that help keyboard detecting after main logic board replaced.

    Atif Ali - Antwort

  12. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 12, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 12, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 12, Bild 3 von 3
    • Nu dat al onze toetsenbordvragen zijn behandeld, kunnen we door met de rest van de onderdelen.

    • Als eerste nemen we deze fancy nieuwe XL-earpods speakers met vergrote behuizing en tegenovergestelde speakers aan de boven- en onderkant.

    • De tegenovergestelde speakers zijn zo geplaatst om elkaars trillingen te reduceren. Dit lijkt een beetje op de anti-ruis feature van de nieuwe AirPods Pro, maar... met bass. Anti-bass?

    • We weten niet helemaal zeker waarom de behuizing verlengd is, maar onze gok is dat de nieuwe vorm het geluid zo beter geleidt en dus verbetert. Wellicht was een beetje extra volume ook nodig om een tweede speaker te kunnen behuizen.

    • Vervolgens, nog een geluidsverbetering: een drievoudige "high-performance" microfoonopstelling. Deze liggen in eenzelfde soort opstelling als die in de MacBook Air versie uit 2018, maar deze lijken iets dikker, wat zou kunnen duiden op kwalitatief betere microfoons.

    • Ten slotte, de lithium krachtpatser waar je het vliegtuig niet zomaar mee in zou komen: Apple's 99.8 Wh batterij (11.36 V, 8790 mAh).

    • Dit is de grootste batterij die we ooit hebben gezien in een MacBook - een toename van 4.8 Wh ten opzichte van de 17" MacBook Pro en een enorme toename van 16.2 Wh ten opzichte van de meest recente versie van de 15" MacBook Pro.

    • Waar komt deze extra capaciteit vandaan? Hier kun je zien hoe Apple de batterijcapaciteit van een iPhone 11 verbeterde - iedere cel lijkt precies op die van haar voorganger behalve dat deze gemiddeld 0.8 mm dikker is.

    The battery is only .3 Wh larger than the 2015 MBP 15”, though, which has a 99.5Wh battery: https://support.apple.com/kb/sp719?local... So you would probably be better off mentioning that than the 17” macbook pro, which is almost a decade old at this point.

    steven - Antwort

    The speaker enclosures are mostly to eat the sound which would otherwise radiate from the back of the driver. A free-floating electromagnetic speaker radiates from both sides of the membrane, but 180º out of phase, and the resulting audio interferes with itself in complicated ways. By having one face radiate into an enclosure, you get less self-interference. The problem is enclosures contain air, radiating sound into them compresses that air, and air doesn’t want to be compressed. A larger enclosure presents less resistance to the driver’s movement. Odd shapes don’t help quite as much as regular shapes, but the added volume is still beneficial.

    Zimmie - Antwort

  13. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 13, Bild 1 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 13, Bild 2 von 3 Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 13, Bild 3 von 3
    • Demontage update: Hey, wat doet deze kleine flexkabel hier? We kunnen ons niet herinneren deze eerder gezien te hebben en MacRumors was zo vriendelijk ons hierover te berichten.

    • We moeten, om dit te onderzoeken, het hele scherm weghalen, maar het blijkt dat er een nieuwe sensor bij het linkerscharnier geplaatst is en aan het scharnier een magneet. De pijl op de magneet geeft de polariteit aan en deze draait mee met het scherm.

    • Het lijkt erop dat Apple een schermhoeksensor heeft toegevoegd. Waarom zouden ze dit nodig hebben? Zou dit ten behoeve van een toffe, nieuwe macOS-feature geplaatst zijn?

    • Misschien. Het zou ook een handige tool kunnen zijn voor Apple om de gebruiksgeschiedenis van het toestel te achterhalen wanneer het moet worden gerepareerd. Apple zou, bijvoorbeeld in het geval van kapotte schermkabels, willen achterhalen hoe vaak en hoe veel het scherm is bijgesteld om een idee te krijgen van het gebruik.

    • MacRumors heeft wat extra speurwerk gedaan en heeft uitgevonden dat Apple deze sensor na iedere reparatie weer kalibreert. Check onze post om met ons mee te speculeren!

    I wonder if they doing some HRTF audio tricks and bouncing sound off the display, it does have amazing stereo imaging. The sensor may allow them to calculate the screen angle and adjust output. I suppose it could be used to improve the mic noise cancelling with the same info, calculating delay/distance to the reflected sound off the display

    mail - Antwort

    Its still a Hall sensor! In this case is a radial sensor so the rotation is sensed. The 2019 used two edge sensors just in front of the USB ports (L&R) to sense the lifting of the lid. The only thing I can think of is if you are using an external display with a BT/USB keyboard/mouse/trackpad the lid could be placed at an angle so the speakers can broadcast outwards. The three microphones could even be used to measure the reflectance, similar to the HomePod.

    Dan - Antwort

    Apple wants this little sensor calibrated after repairs.

    I hope they don't use this as another way to curtail repair (think iPhone XS battery). I can see it now:

    Cannot adjust brightness. Please visit AASP for calibration.

    Patrick Lienau - Antwort

    Not really a tech, but could it be used to detect clamshell mode for some reason?

    kevinharter - Antwort

    I would guess that with six speakers, two fans and a haptic touchpad, they were running out of spots to place the pair of a magnet and hall effect sensor where they wouldn’t get cross-talk from other magnets. Sticking the pair right on the hinge and measuring rotation makes sense in that there was probably less competition for space there. The tradeoff is the need to calibrate the hall effect response rather than doing a more naive binary threshold.

    Nirav Patel - Antwort

    This is a welcome improvement over the old, too sensitive sleep sense arrangement. This will prevent the machine from waking when the display is barely lifted from park and will also eliminate waking if a key is depressed when the display is closed - which can easily occur since the display rests just 0.40 mm above the keys when folded. Noticed this immediately while qualifying RadTech’s ScreenSavrz for this machine.

    John Grzeskowiak - Antwort

    if combined with time and logged a complete lid-position history. will be created, which could be used for research purposes. Info about typical viewing angle could be a subject. However, so fare John Grzeskowiak’s comment is my favourite for the correct answer.

    bjoern holst jespersen - Antwort

    Agreeing with John, this would just seem to be a replacement for the old laptop close sensor.

    It would need to be recalibrated after repairs because a hall effect sensor and magnet pair form a vary… analog… arrangement. That is, while the values should be very repeatable in ‘static’ arrangement, as soon as things get jostled about, the values could jump quite significantly from pre-jostled ones.

    Eric Merrill - Antwort

    Eek. I can smell what they are planning on doing, and not in a good way.

    But how cool is a lid-angle measuring device? Pretty cool if you ask me…

    If you think a magnetic closing lid is to disrupt microphones, think again. Most lids now more or less have magnetic-assisted closing motion, anyway.

    Xavier Jiang - Antwort

    I can see it as a way to replace the old “lid closed” sensor. Especially if you wear an Apple watch with a magnetic clasp. I’ve had a MacBook Pros go to sleep while I was using it because the band I had on was using a magnetic clasp, trigging a false lid closed.

    tech - Antwort

  14. Demontage van de MacBook Pro 16" 2019: Schritt 14, Bild 1 von 1
    • Laten we hebben over onze gevoelens over deze MacBook Pro:

    • Ondanks dat het nieuwe, oude scissormechanisme langer mee lijkt te gaan dan het meer kwetsbare vlindermechanisme, is het toetsenbord nog steeds volledig vastgenageld aan het frame.

    • Het vernieuwde thermische systeem is een welkome verbetering in de Pro lineup, die bekend staat om haar hete temperatuur en vermogen om vol gas te geven.

    • De 99.8 Wh batterij mag nog net mee het vliegtuig in, maar levert wel 16.2 Wh meer aan capaciteit dan haar meest recente 15" voorganger. Gezien de slechts kleine vergroting van de laptopbehuizing zien wij deze toename in capaciteit als positief verrassend.

    • Ondanks de dikke, nieuwe speakers, de microfoons die een podcast-kwaliteit kunnen leveren en dat reusachtige scherm, hebben we toch nog het gevoel dat Apple beter kan - helemaal na het zien Microsoft's moeite om hun nieuwe laptop beter repareerbaar te maken. Bij dezen spreken we de hoop uit dat de nieuwe 2020 Pro lineup onze adem werkelijk weg zal nemen.

    • Voor nu is het enige dat rest deze laptop een repareerbaarheidsscore te geven.

  15. Fazit
    • De trackpad kan nog steeds worden verwijderd en vervangen zonder al te veel poespas.
    • De meeste kleine componenten zijn modulair, maar de processor, de RAM en het flashgeheugen zijn vastgesoldeerd aan het logic board.
    • Lijm en/of klinknagels houden het toetsenbord, de batterij, de speakers en de Touch Bar op hun plaats en bemoeilijken elke mogelijke reparatie van deze onderdelen.
    • De Touch ID-sensor vormt de aan-/uitknop en zit vast aan het logic board, wat reparaties veel lastiger maakt.
    Reparierbarkeits-Index
    1
    Reparierbarkeit 1 von 10
    (10 ist am einfachsten zu reparieren)

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Taylor Dixon

Mitglied seit: 06/26/18

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100 Kommentare

almost no repair choices even though its a “pro” device

Gage - Antwort

What does being a “pro” device have to do with high repairability? “Pro” (itself more of a marketing term than a technical one) covers a proud range of areas. My sister is a pro graphic designer. She can do amazing things with illustrator or photoshop. She couldn’t tell you the next thing about processors or keyboard switches. For her the “pro” is what she can get done, not whether or not she can pop open the case. I’d be willing to lay odds thats true for a lot of people.

Repairability and pro are not connected. Some people value the former, some the later, some both, some neither.

kreutz -

In response to kreutz.

Hypothetical:

The Pro Graphic Designer is working on a commission that has taken several weeks. She has completed another days worth of work while out and about (the main point of a laptop, portability) someone drops liquid into the unit and it fails.

She could just redo the hours of work she just lost after her last backup (assuming she is someone who backs up religiously), however her deadline is tomorrow morning.

If she is using a true pro device she could drop by a computer repair place. Have them remove the SSD and recover the data. (in the macbook pro the SSD is soldered and even if it wasn’t the T2 chip prevents an external computer from reading it). If she is using the “PRO” device that apple sells she is $@$* out of luck and has to pull an all nighter to redo the work or loose the commission and be out all of the work she has done.

The ability to respond to unexpected situations damage, moisture, internal failure or design fault is what should set a PRO device apart.

Grant Spedding -

@grantspedding The T2 does not prevent an external computer from reading the SSD. It is connected to one of the USB-C ports. There is a tool you can connect which will boot the T2 in DFU mode, prompt for the user’s password, tell the T2 to load the SSD, then dump all the data to an external drive.

Though I seriously wonder what professional would use a machine with no backups of in-flight work. Especially when it’s a Mac, and every macOS since 10.5 in 2007 has included Time Machine.

Zimmie -

For those suggesting that the moniker PRO doesn’t need to mean ‘repairable’, ‘accessible’, ‘non-complicated’, just consider any other PRO industry who relies hugely on repairability and the ability to get inside their devices / tools / instruments to keep them going as long as possible. A music producer wouldn’t throw away a 50 channel recording deck because 2 channels failed one day. A musician wouldn’t put their guitar in the dump because a machine head broke, $10 would get that musician back on stage again. A chef that finds their knife no longer sharp doesn’t look for the bin and a wholesale knife catalogue to buy a new one, they get a hone, or a stone and in 10 minutes their knife is possibly as good as new.

Apple have chosen this route for us and all to shave a few millimetres and grammes off laptops that Pro’s need to have as functional as possible. The moniker PRO is assumed to not only be top quality but top at saving the day when $@$* hits the fan and these machines are no longer that.

John Ward -

Between work I’ve done at an advertising agency, and a free lance photographer; you’d be amazed how many people market themselves as "Pros” but don’t have any backup of their work. Or they have a single external HDD which has all their work and accept that as their backup because time machine is running on it. The idea of “PRO” here is its Apple’s highest end laptop, and people can feel like calling themselves “pro” is justified. This has nothing to do with sensible backup strategies or thinking ahead to the what if scenario of a computer failure.

Gouthaman Raveendran -

@zimmie So if the motherboard fails completely. ie when a mac gets a whiff of moisture in the air (hyperbole obviously) and the main board craps out and cannot enter DFU mode. What then?

Grant Spedding -

@kreutz Additionally I would agree that the PRO moniker is massively overused/misused however all of Apple’s marketing really emphasizes specifically pro use.

As you said

“Repairability and pro are not connected. Some people value the former, some the later, some both, some neither.”

I would argue however that the pro you are referring to is a marketing gimmick just like “Mitsubishi Heavy Industries” in reference to normal domestic air conditioners. It has no right to claim the “Pro” moniker just as the air con has no right to claim “Heavy Industries”. So the people valuing PRO are quite literally valuing an empty marketing promise over something that could save their business when something goes wrong.

Grant Spedding -

@grantspedding You CAN do that, but not always. For example, recovering data after damaging the laptop would be much harder since everything is encrypted. If the T2 chip is damaged in some way (by water, for example), then all of the data on there is unrecoverable.

Ethan Zuo -

@ethanzuo

The T2 chip is separate to my issues with this unit. Yes (very) theoretically you could recover from a damaged board. If you look at a comment above by Phillip Hue this requires several things including an intact T2 Chip and power rails to supply power.

However my big problem is the use of an ssd soldered to the motherboard. With a removable ssd it is possible to recover data even if the rest of the board has literal holes in it, components completely corroded off the board or if the USB-C ports are damaged (as in the comment above by Phillip specifies that these are required). My problem is with the way that apple have chosen to have absolutely no replaceable parts.

1 Ram chip fails… That’s a motherboard

1 Ssd chip fails… That’s a motherboard

A USB-C socket fails… That’s a motherboard

The wifi module fails… That’s a motherboard

anything goes wrong… That’s a motherboard

It’s a wasteful and anti consumer decision that cannot be justified

Grant Spedding -

As a pro user, there’s definitely something to be said for repairability. However, as any pro should know, you never trust any one device or system completely. 99.9999% reliability still isn’t quite perfect, and I’ve experienced failures. That’s why I have backups. I NEVER rely on one storage medium. It’s much easier for me to quickly recover a file from Backblaze and work on another machine.. Price is also an important factor - it’s much less costly for me to quickly download a file and get back to work on a backup computer and FedEx my laptop to get repaired under warranty than it is to take time out of my day, pay out of pocket, and wait for a repair shop to recover my data. SSDs fail too, and being able to remove an SSD doesn’t do me much good if it’s what’s broken. Most of us work from servers or external drives regardless. Repairability matters, but my camera bag is already heavier than I’d like - if I have to sacrifice repairability for my back health, I’ll take it

Ashley Ryan -

well well. like 30 years of PRO models by every single other manufacturer.. well including apple till 2015, including Mac Pro. one of the best examples is HP Probook. it is clearly designed to be serviceable, you can swap the hard drive with 2 screws, you can clean fans, you can replace keyboard, etc. PRO means that you do not need to buy a new one as soon as you drop a few drops of liquid.

RipperDoc -

I can totally agree that a device’s performance is not affected by its repairability. But while you think that your device’s repairability has nothing to do with you, as you are not a professional repairer, the repairability of the device is very important when you run into a hardware issue. For example, a Thunderbolt 3 port on your MacBook is not working due to a malfunction of the Intel JHL Controller, that’s a motherboard right there, equivalent to nearly 2000 bucks, unless the repairer can perform micro soldering (Apple won’t do that). And who’s paying that fee? You, of course. Your screen cracks, another couple hundred bucks. Your keyboard breaks, no coverage program, bam, more money spent. In the end, you are suffering too. Apple’s gimmick is that they make things so unrepairable that your repairing fee is basically the same as buying another device (a tad bit cheaper), or that they simply don’t repair, so you are forced to buy more devices, and the more you buy, the more money Apple makes out of you.

KillerLab 233 -

I had my SSD cable broken last day, took out my SSD and connected it via USB, continued working until my new cable arrives in 3 three days. I do not have another laptop or PC. Being a pro does not mean you have multitudes of everything but being able to find quick solutions on the go. Now we can not do this with the new MacBook ‘pro’ . I upgraded my MacBook Pro (mid-2012) with an ssd and extended its life, but no more, now it is old and should get a new one. Stuck!

Deniz Ozut -

oh boy…why even allow it to be opened in the first place? rivets and glue just make this design worse.. I think you need to have a negative number for your review system- thx for the work on busting open these devices.

MND DESIGN - Antwort

i wish they would just allow the batteries to be easily replaced at the very minimum

jamieexeter - Antwort

Step 8. It says “Toshiba TSB4227VE8434CHNA11926 and TSB4227VE8437CHNA11926 flash storage (512 GB total)”.

Does it mean that it has two SSD sticks? RAID? Thanks!

Peter Gamble - Antwort

Just two NAND modules, one controller, so not RAID

nitesh singh -

Individual LEDs under each key cap are gone. Guess it can’t all be wins, I did like how much more precise the light was without bleeding out around it. Does the new one have more light bleed then?

nitesh singh - Antwort

Thanks for the teardown! Did they fix the fragile display cable? Or is that still bound to break?

Felix - Antwort

Hey Felix! It’s hard to say for sure whether they’ve totally fixed it, but last year they adjusted the length of the cables in question and as far as I know, those machines have yet to experience any display or backlight issues directly related to those cables. The 16” Pro’s display cables are still precariously placed and built into the display, but like the “improved” Pros of last year, they seem to have enough slack that they shouldn’t get stretched over the display controller board and short out over time.

Taylor Dixon -

Thanks Taylor!

Felix -

Men, I really hoped we would see replaceable RAM or SSD. I am still waiting out with a fully upgraded Macbook Pro 13 2012 non retina.

Guess I have a little longer to wait for a replacement. Nice to see the keyboard fixed though.

Peterdk - Antwort

Same here :( but low tech is the futur … ^^;

snoid2 -

I’m dissapointed about flash memory. The flash memory is soldered!!!! :(

Estoy decepcionado sobre el almacenamiento flash. El almacenamiento flash está soldado!!!! :(

joerfrada - Antwort

What’s the difference between TSB4227VE8434CHNA11926 and TSB4227VE8437CHNA11926 SSD?

Jay S - Antwort

No mention of the soldered on flex cable between the display and the motherboard. Is that still the case with this model?

wiggin - Antwort

Had the same question and got this very informative answer: Teardown des MacBook Pro (16 Zoll, 2019)

Felix -

I’m not sure it’s technically correct to conclude that “the keyboard itself isn't any more repairable than the Butterfly boards” just because the keyboard assembly is riveted in place. The Butterfly keyboards were less repairable than Apple’s 2015 Scissor keyboards, which were also riveted in place.

The Butterfly keyboards didn’t allow you to remove/replace keycaps, so if debris got underneath the key, your only hope was to spray some compressed air around the edge of the key and hope for the best. The ability to remove a keycap, spray for debris, and then replace the keycap itself makes this keyboard at least a little more repairable. (The MacBook keyboard has never had replaceable keyswitches AFIAK.)

dan - Antwort

This is a bummer. I should have waited until this release, before I bought mine. I really want the 32Gb. I was hoping to be able to upgrade it.

limegrntaln - Antwort

At least batteries should be replaceable with removable stretch tape. If half the computer has to be thrown away to replace a keyboard or battery, this is not environmentally friendly.

Richard Burton - Antwort

Hopefully Apple can apply the same improvements to the 13” to make it a 14” and change how batteries are attached to improve repair ability.

Richard Burton - Antwort

UWB - Ultra Wide Band Chip anywhere?

Steffen Thieringer - Antwort

Why does it weight 2x an LG gram? Would love to see you tear down one of those and compare the weight of each part

Gregg Tavares - Antwort

Shame that people still buy these units. Soldered on everything is an absolute joke. What's even more comical is seeing all the articles come out commenting on the much improved keyboard. Does anyone even acknowledge the stupidity of that statement? It's a 2k-6k laptop and that's all the majority of people care about? Thank you for everything you do here, hopefully one day I'll be able to upgrade my 2011 17” mbp.

Mike M - Antwort

You nailed it. A decent keyboard is kinda expected, right? Not to mention that the Apple has been trying to quietly kill the MacOS for a long time. It needs a complete overhaul. iOS on ARM processors is the future, right? Buying a Macbook Pro is more costly than the initial inflated (customer gouging) purchase price. Open up the wallet people!! $379 + service fees.

AppleCare+ for MacBook Air and MacBook Pro includes:

Three years (total) limited hardware warranty.

Three years (total) technical support.

Coverage for two incidents of accidental damage (subject to a service fee of $99 for screen damage or $299 for other damage)

Customer901428 -

What makes a PRO device PRO is not necessarily “upgradeability” (which is also true) but repairability and compatibility…

When you have a memory, storage or any component failure (battery, display, etc) and you have to change the whole unit (maybe at your own expense) this is not a PRO device, it’s just a very fancy consumer product.

When you have to change your peripherals (PRO expensive peripherals you have acquired through years) just because your new “PRO” computer has changed the connectors and forces you to buy converters, dongles and all kind of expensive $@$* just to connect your existing equipment to a computer from the same manufacturer, then you don’t have a PRO computer. Even if it does have “PRO” in the name.

When you are forced to buy new equipment every 2 or 3 years to keep pace with the always-changing technology, or just to cover repair costs, you are never capable of getting a return of investment. That’s not a PRO equipment.

esmuposible - Antwort

I have been waiting for a fixed keyboard and 16 inch MacBook for a while. $@$*!& repairability, but it looks like I don’t have any other option other than buying it. Don’t want to go back to Windows, nor buying 2015 Macbook :(

Javanshir Alammadli - Antwort

Apple uses recycled aluminum for their bottom line, not to protect the environment from unnecessary waste. If you can repair you own MacBook Pro, then you don’t need to pay the Apple tax. Apple is terrified of losing a revenue stream. State of California, where are your right to repair laws? Laws for everything else. What a joke! Say one thing, do the opposite. My Lenovo Thinkpad (repairable) is more enjoyable to use, and gives me access to Ubuntu and Windows 10. Gaming and a work covered. My use cases for Macbook Pro, web browsing, email, imessage, and photo editing. Is the Macbook Pro worth the cost for mainstream users, not really. “innovation” (or reverse “innovation”) is being celebrated. Basically, it works like this, Apple makes a design decision for you in a vacuum. Then, you have to wait years and years for Apple to admit the mistake (if they do) and reverse it. If you have to buy a Macbook Pro, get it used for half the cost and help the environment from less Apple waste.

Customer901428 - Antwort

After nearly 8 years with my upgraded mid 2012 MacBook Pro Unibody, I decided it is time to get the 2019 16”.

With 4TB of SSD, 16gb ram and 2.7ghz Quad, there hasn’t been enough of a leap (or really a need) to get a new machine for my needs (lightroom, photoshop, indesign, illustrator). I’m uncomfortable with the all-soldered board - I’ve had 3 SSD failures on my current machine, but they were always an easy swap. Gone through 4 batteries as well.

With Ethernet, FW800, USB3, and ease of serviceability I believe this is one of the last truly Pro laptops from Apple. Unfortunately, quality parts are getting harder come by. The old keyboard needed to be replaced but is not as good as the original. Batteries from iFixit are failing much quicker than the Apple component. Cant even find a protective case for it these days.

I hope I can get the same amount of years out of the 2019 16”.

jason - Antwort

Shameless laptop, MUCH overpriced, no PRO at all, Will past………… A JOKE AT BEST

maximinlida - Antwort

@zimmie Youre actually wrong about the T2 part, specifically how it actually works. I work as an AASP technician, heres how it works. 1: it is not a tool, its a secondary macbook running apples Data Transfer Utility, which is part of the Mac Confoguration Utility Suite provided to us. 2: In order to *use* those utilities, you must have access to an AST2 account (https://diagnostics..apple.com) and be authorized to use that tool by whatever AASP you work for, or be authorized by apple for an apple store style job. 3: you must *also* have an active repair in apples GSX system (Global Service Exchange, gsx.apple.com) AND have the Logic Board (or replacement laptop) added to the repair itself. If no replacement board is added, then this utility tells you to f*ck off. 4: This tool 100% relies on the fact that T2, CD3215, USB-C port, NAND, and any relevant power rails and data lines are not dead or broken. If your T2 chip died, or a power fail on the board responsible for T2 dies, or NAND on the board dies, or any similar issues, youre f*cked. Plain and simple. You *have* to do board repait at that point to get it to a state where this actually works, assuming it isnt NAND , T2, or ISL9240 that killed itself. If these killed themselves then you have 0 chance of recovery since you cannot get these parts at all. Since you worded it as if any plain Jane can do it, youre intentionally making your argument invalid and youre also spreading misinformation about apples repair side and peoples ability as a consumer to actually practice recovering data form theirt dead macbooks.

Phillip Hue - Antwort

If you can get the machine to boot into Thunderbolt Target mode and have another Mac available, you can recover your own data. And every SSD has the same issues if the controller, SDRAM cache if present, enough NAND dies / packages, or host interface cease to function. The additional complexity of the Mac logic board does mean there’s a lot more opportunity for things to go wrong though. But you’d also be surprised what professional data recovery services are capable of, even going back to the days of spinning disks. If you’re comfortable doing BGA rework in the first place, it’s not that big of a deal to transfer a known good PMIC from another logic board. And depending on the circumstances, the data recovery may be worth enough to the customer to pay for something like that.

repoman27 -

@repoman27 While you are correct that involved repairs that require specialized equipment and training IE BGA rework. can recover almost anything from a macbook in any condition. Have you ever checked the cost of having someone do BGA rework on a motherboard? And will Apple ever offer the service?

And failing that will Apple ever help 3rd parties to complete these type of repairs, ie supply the required parts and manuals?

If you watch some of Louis Rossmann’s videos regarding parts availability and the CBS special on taking a macbook with a simple fault that was immediately quoted the cost of the unit and with no data intact.

Apple could resolve this cheaply and simply by making the SSD removable and to use either a removable TPM or include the encryption method on the SSD to allow for it to be connected to another system for data recovery.

Grant Spedding -

I won’t buy a new computer unless it’s repairable and upgradable. Apple is very close to loosing my 35 year allegiance (and I have purchased dozens of Macs over that period). The Windows notebooks my employer furnishes are not as pretty but they are way more repairable and upgradable. Apple charges more and used to offer top quality and longevity in exchange. Their last 4 or 5 years have been a downward spiral in both “advantages” accelerated by a string of buggy OS releases.

gary - Antwort

Pro is short for prostitute.

It just means that you get paid for doing it.

I expect a Pro device to be designed to minimise the chance of it needing repair.

Generally repairability is achieved at the expense of reliability.

Ifixit, great as they are, are biased on this topic as they make their money from device repairs. They have every motive to promote repairability over reliability.

Alex Bowden - Antwort

Let’s park the name pro. This is a very expensive laptop. So it should work for 8 - 10 years. In order to do so, it must be possible to upgrade and repair. But it is not.

Besides, our earth is fragile and has limited resources. Repair helps the planet. But this fancy laptop can hardly be repaired.

Ooh Apple, why are you so money focussed in stead of creativity focussed? Where are all the new devices and creative designs that you used to make in the past? We only see more of the same: thinner, lighter, with better battery and with a subwoofer. But no new products at all. No new groundbreaking pro software either. Apple was fighting Big Blue/ The System back in the 80’s. I’ll guess Apple itself is now The System…

Danny - Antwort

The bottom cover’s screws are still P5?

tong1774 - Antwort

Correct! They are still P5.

Arthur Shi -

They COULD do better, but why would they?

Apple is the only company with their own wireless (no blame for delivering Airdrop), apple-branded SSD (what the heck), T2 “security chip”.

That have nothing to do with “Pro”. That said, “Pro” users most likely will modify their hardware to suit their needs (or swap out broken stuff to make it live longer) but as far as I know this is against Apple’s intentions.

Hey, they still use screws.

Xavier Jiang - Antwort

10 points to Gryffindor for the Angry Face tear-down layout. Well played. As for the unit itself, I’m thrilled that they got so many of the crucial details right: massive RAM and SSD options (RAM reasonably priced, SSD…not so much), more battery, reliable heat dispersion, a keyboard we know works and feels right, and a small improvement in screen real-estate. I’m still on my original MBPr from 2013, and she’s still a workhorse. But the years are showing and it’s time to put her out to pasture. To those people who claim MacBooks are way overpriced, I counter with my nearly 7 year old MBPr and say, “$2,800 over 6 years is a pretty damned good ROI.” Hopefully, this new 16” will see 5-7 years as well.

I just wish Apple would bring back the glowing  and the boot-chime…C'est la vie

AniMill - Antwort

960€ for additional 48GB ram, while one can get 64GB for 416€ (steepest price I could find) on the free market.

I wonder.. what kind of cool aid did you take to call Apple’s ram prices “reasonable “?

Ceyx -

Here’s another perspective on the “Pro” label. One might say, “who cares about ease of repairs if you’ve got a paid service plan like AppleCare…however they do it, it’ll get taken care of”. In the PC world, the business line of Dell’s laptops (“Latitude” labeled) are designed to be *very* repairable, especially compared to their lowest end products. How does this help the “pro” user? Pro’s who use their laptop every working second of the day really *hate* to part with it for long, especially if it is still mostly functional. It means that when someone has a broken keyboard, we can arrange for a company rep to visit on-site (This is included in the sub $200 service plan) and they’ll sit at our conference table and replace the keyboard in under an hour (their toolset consisting primarily of a few phillips head screwdrivers). Compare that to taking their MBP to the Apple Store and being told they’ll have it back in 2 days (or so).

davidw - Antwort

Overpriced paperweights. That is all these things are. The very idea that Apple makes it so difficult, if not impossible to repair your system, or even perform some of the most basic types of upgrades that virtually every other manufacturer allows you to make, is just a huge middle finger to their customers. I’m not gonna drop $2,500 on something that I can’t repair if something happens or goes wrong. I will stick with my $800 - $1,200 Windows machines that I know I can repair if needed. My current $850 lappy is still going strong after about 5 years of heavy use, and shows no sign of slowing down.

And Alex Bowden, Apple is equally, if not MORE biased in making sure that you are forced to purchase more of their products as often as possible, and they do that by making their devices unable to be repaired, or even upgrade-able. (Really? You can’t even let us upgrade the SSD now?)

Ryan Clarke - Antwort

I have to say the word “PRO” or Professional was or is an important factor in the ability to keep on going, or have the choice to make upgrades or any improvements along the way. As a person who has spent over 30 years in the “Pro” Audio recording business we have spent thousands of “Extra $” for the ability to repair, or upgrade as needed. And as quickly as possible! In the “Pro” markets, hardware, firmware and software upgrades are part of the deal. We anticipate the expected as well as the the unexpected. We do NOT spend tons of $ to “Use once, Then Throw Away “ I had considered buying the new 16” unit…. but now I shall pass after seeing what iFix-it has revealed to all of us “Pro” folks in the field. Another day, another dollar .

vic - Antwort

And yet Apple still refused to cool the VRMs properly. Those things will throttle like !&&* under full load, throttling the CPU and GPU. Why couldn’t they just put a copper plate on that covers the CPU, GPU, VRMs, and GDDR6? If I pay this much for it, I better not have an incentive to break into it with a screwdriver and a pack of thermal pads!

Ethan Zuo - Antwort

I don’t know how to put a thumbs up for definition of PRO for Grant Spedding & John Ward. Good jobs

Babak - Antwort

What about the cable connecting the LCD to the logic board? With the 2016+ MBP 15-Inch the cable was fixed on the LCD side and overtime got pinched. Did they fix this with the 16-inch?

Update: Flexgate issue -> https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/21/18634...

manish - Antwort

I will have to await an iMac redesign that will allow easy opening for cleaning/repairs/upgrades. Absent that, I will simply continue to make do with my late 2013 Macpro. While not upgradeable, except for memory and ssd, at least it is engineered to be dismantled for repairs. (Note ifixit’s repairability score.) The trash can’s performance is more than usable for my purposes, and it does run cool - the cpu rarely gets above 65C. Apple can’t seem to get it through their heads that the marketplace is demanding a repairable MacBook, and failure to provide one is only going to do continuing damage to their reputation.

Robert Meppelink - Antwort

I will correct myself here and say that the marketplace seems to be wanting a Macbook pro with a user replaceable ssd and battery, to be done with minimal tools, simply by removing the bottom cover. This would probably require the Macbook pro to be thicker, and very noticeably so. No one would care.

Robert Meppelink -

Do you see the flexgate issue recurring in this new MBP? It seems that with new design comes problems and i’m skeptical that they may have overseen the display flex cable issue this year.

Any clarification would be appreciated

Brian Ramirez - Antwort

I have owned and used many Apple products since 1999 (a relative newcomer, I admit, compared to many). It has always been for me a love/hate relationship. But lately, there’s been a lot more on the hate side than the love side. This 16” MBP does nothing to change that perception. I currently am using two 15” MBPs, a company-supplied 2018 i7 Touch Bar model, and a personally owned 2015 i7 Retina. The former has been rather a disappointment all the way around, while the latter is likely the last MBP I will ever buy, unless Apple changes course. I cannot, and will not, support the concept that devices with a finite number of write cycles should ever be soldered to a motherboard, let alone the lack of upgradeability.

My 2015 recently received a 2TB NVMe M.2 SSD upgrade, and actually has better R/W performance than the 2018. Cost around $200. I don’t even want to know what a comparable upgrade would cost for the 2018.

Useful lifespan used to be an Apple selling point. Not anymore, it seems.

JCinGG - Antwort

Apple’s trend towards soldered-on components and deliberately complicating repairs really makes me sad. I have tried to leave to other systems several times but I love the Apple ecosystem and always come back for it. The new continuity features are just amazing, especially SideCar… !&&*, I would spring for one of these new MBPs if they were more repair and upgrade friendly! but I’m not dropping $3k on something that, if a necessary component breaks a year later after warranty is up, will leave me out hundreds or thousands of $$ for costly repairs.

Apple wants people to just buy another one or pay a lot of $ for their Apple Care scam. Well, screw you too Apple, I’ll just keep buying older used Apple products on Craigslist and not give you any $ until you get your act together.

Tyson Roehrkasse - Antwort

I’m so salty that I bought a $4500 MacBook Pro like 3 months aaago. See what I did there? Any chance I can slaap one of those keyboards in for this HORRIBLE butterfly junk?

Drew Payment - Antwort

I see whattt you did there! Unfortunately, the internal frames between the butterfly and scissor keyboards are different and not swappable without considerable modifications.

Arthur Shi -

Hello what about the screen câbles which HAD problems before. Are they better now ?

Nicolas Rat's - Antwort

Check this comment out for a detailed response!

Arthur Shi -

Guess I’m keeping my 2010 pro another year at least…

turcottesh - Antwort

Curious whether this uses “TouchID 1” like the other Macbook Pros, or if we’ve gotten an upgrade to the faster TouchID 2 introduced in the iPhone 6S.

Eric Jacobsen - Antwort

do you discuss and demonstrate the complications of removing the bottom cover to this 16” computer? where is the demonstrating of pulling it off in your video? after taking screws out of the bottom cover, it is complicating to unhook it from the machine via specialized hooks - unlike older macbook pro computers.

please notate, thanks.

tiko - Antwort

tiko, these bottom covers are pesky to remove! We don’t have a guide for this 16” MBP yet, but you can check out our guide for the 15”—the procedure is the same. Hope this helps!

Taylor Dixon -

Hi! Thanks for the article. Can you please give a bit more details how to remove the speakers? Are they just glued?

sir_paul - Antwort

I’ve been in both the broadcast and consumer end of electronic repair for several decades and the label “Pro” use to be tied directly to the accessibility and repair-ability of electronic equipment. Pro equipment was designed to be repaired and maintained with relatively easy access. There where call outs on circuit boards and tie points for test equipment along with straight forward disassembly and reassembly. None of that existed on cheap consumer, non “Pro” equipment. Apple has merged the “Pro” and “Consumer” moniker to some degree with the high price of “Pro” and the inability to maintain or repair that embodies cheap “Consumer” equipment. They have not done themselves a great service by taking this approach.

Robert Dorr

Robert Dorr - Antwort

Hi! Thanks so much for your guide. Do you think is there any risk to speakers if you pass the vaccum cleaner over the spearks grill?

With regards!

Juan - Antwort

Could we have more details on the 3-mic array? It seems not a single source is available on the Internet about it.

Jiahe Shi - Antwort

Is it possible to fit 2017” MacBook pro 15” components in the 16” chassis? Asking for a friend.

Bobby - Antwort

Any comments on the LCD panel: how they achieved thin borders and its stack up?

V Sethna - Antwort

Hi any update on the LCD panel itself? I am interested on its thin borders and the overall stack up of the components. and the replaceability of the LCD panel.

V Sethna - Antwort

I cracked my trackpad. I see you note it’s replaceable, can I use the trackpad from an 15 MBP?

Gig - Antwort

I think the accelerometer was to prevent platter damage in a drop, there are on platters in this book, any idea why is the accelerometer there?

perris - Antwort

Hi,

Could be possible to exchange the keycaps on a Macbook A2141 with US keyboard, with those of a last Italian desktop Magic Keyboard?

https://www.apple.com/shop/product/MQ052...

Thanks

Regards

Carlo - Antwort

Hi Carlo,

If the Italian Magic Keyboard is similar to the American Magic Keyboard, then yes, most keys should be exchangeable. You may have some issues with the larger keys, such as the shift and space keys.

Arthur Shi -

“Pro” means flexibility, and always has. It isn’t about whether the user does the upgrades themselves; it is about the power to upgrade a machine. This ability to continue to invest in your investment is part of what makes a machine “Pro.” I would rather pay an extra $1000 for a machine that is upgradeable, than for one that is not. Apple got it all wrong in this arena this time. Thin is overrated in a “Pro” product; Apple could have traded thinness for upgradability.

Segue - Antwort

The only reason I would trade in my matte screen 2011 MBP is that a charge only lasts an hour with a new One World replacement battery. I have googled the problem but found nothing beyond the usual “check if an app is using a lot of power”. After reading this, I think I will have to suffer a bit longer unless one of you guys can help me out with an explanation.

Ronald Chalmers - Antwort

where in the world is the FULL tear down video???

David Hernandez - Antwort

Tim Cook has slowly and deliberately undermined every reason to buy a Mac. He’s turning out to be Apple’s Steve Ballmer, no genuine passion for quality, just concerned about profits. But I’m not buying shares.

Came here to see if I could replace my mid-2009 with something viable for the same amount of years. It’s been through many hard drives, most spinning, and a few batteries. There have been times when I swapped a drive right out of a backup case and kept going. But the passion for quality and the company customer advocate was buried since my 2009 was made.

I hate dealing with the Apple Store, it feels like a contrived scam and I don’t want to give some big company my old hard drive with my data on it, nor do I want their techs to have access to it.

Thank you, iFixit, you’re doing dog’s work.

speedyk - Antwort

Would someone mind sharing where the Touch ID Cable is located and possible make a guide on how to reseat the connection. I am getting that dreaded “Touch ID Failed to complete Enrollment” Error. and nothing has worked to resolve it (PRAM,SMC,Fresh macOS, Revived/Restored Firmware via DFU mode) leaving me out of options. third MacBook Pro with this problem, and apple refuses to fix it. go figure.

Stefan Lewis - Antwort

No idea if it will help, but you can reseat the connection following steps 29-31 of this guide. Good luck!

Jeff Suovanen -

How on earth can Apple get away with attaching the battery in such a way that a battery replacement requires also replacing the top case, speakers and keyboard? Certainly they could have found a less user hostile way to attach a component with a finite life span.

Justin Sitter - Antwort

“Apple have chosen this route for us and all to shave a few millimetres and grammes off laptops that Pro’s need to have as functional as possible.”

That is a lie that they want us to believe. Microsofts new surface books are not glued together anymore and still are the same size. It is complete BS that glueing stuff together makes the device more slim.

Apple is corrupted by greed. It is simple “planned obsolence” what they are doing. Their environmental greenwashing statements they post on their website are nothing but shallow lies. Time to change. I am not buying Macs anymore unless this practice has ended.

Dr Dillio - Antwort

I have the 8TB model, and the flash storage isn’t Toshiba - it looks to be SanDisk. The chips are marked SDSBEGGKH-1T00 CN, and all 8 locations are populated (4 on each side of the motherboard), so I’m assuming that each chip is 1TB.

Jason Eckert - Antwort

OK let’s put it this way. The Thinkpad competitors to this notebook would be the P series. The P series actually have a parts list with FRU part numbers. FRU means field replacement unit, ie. they send it to you so that you can pop open the case and swap the bad part with the good part. Makes in place repair within a couple of days possible. Depending on the warranty coverage you can actually get 48-72 hours on-site repair, where a tech comes ou tot you with a tool case and spare parts and pretty much fixes the laptop on the spot. That is pro level hardware support for professional gear. BTW, I own a 16” MBP, so I actually have a horse, or two (couple of thinkpads) in the race.

sinan yilmaz - Antwort

If you want the ultimate in portability I suppose you need to accept that certain things are glued/soldered. I can understand this being the case for parts which rarely fail. But when you rivet the keyboard, solder the memory and SSD and glue the battery, this makes no sense.

I can also understand that it is more economical for vendors to replace entire boards while under warranty: the service centers need less equipment, less regulations to comply with (ventilation and exposure to toxic fumes), the technicians need less trainings, it is faster and potentially more reliable on the long term.

But basic components that frequently fail (memory, disk drives, batteries) should be end-user replaceable or at least without specialized skills/tools.

I have a ASUS ZenBook Flip which is even thinner than a MacBook Pro (ASUS is 13.9 mm thin while the thinnest MBP is 14.9 mm). Yet, the battery, disk drive and memory modules for ASUS are easily serviceable (they are not glued/soldered/riveted).

Bogdan - Antwort

Which sound chip does it use? Sound even through the 3.5mm jack seems nicer than on previous 15” macbooks or is it just me?

Alex - Antwort

애플이 이번에 수리 난이도를 겁나 올리려고 작정했고 결국 성공했군.

Turtle - Antwort

What happen if we use desktop magic keyboard scissor mechanism(the thicker one) in Macbook Pro keyboard ?

Friday - Antwort

Framework 16 is the laptop to go if you want high repairability

Albert - Antwort

How embarrassing this is NOT the late 2019 i9. THE LATE 2019 has an 8 core CPU!

Scott Tranchitella - Antwort

Did you notice how the SSD chips are exposed and not covered by a metal plate as previous 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 15"? Meaning this machine will be more prone to have SSD failure as its right next to the air intake of the machine on the sides. I cant even imagine anyone close to a humid area

Thumbs down apple!

I If I get this machine I will put either conformal coating or sillicon to cover those SSD chips and save myself a lot of headaches with repair costs when they blow up.

guZzy92fs - Antwort

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