Saltar al contenido principal

Procesador Intel de doble núcleo modelo A1502 / 2.4, 2.6 o 2.8 GHz / Lanzado en octubre de 2013

Preguntas 552 Ver todo

Parts needed to replace the keyboard?

My MacBook took a swim in some coffee. Well, more like it got splashed by coffee. I was able to get it powered off right away and turned it upside down with screen up to let any residual liquid drain. Later that day I tore it down to the logic board and I didn’t see any liquid at all inside. I then put the computer in a box with rice on it for two days.

This morning I tried to power it on and it wouldn’t come on. As soon as I connected the power cable it turned on and everything seemed to work fine. I checked the buttons on the keyboard and everything worked except for the M key and the power button. I was unable to lock it by pushing command-option-power. I did a shutdown through the menu and when I press the power button it won’t come on. So, it seems like everything is fine other than the M key and power button.

im thinking of just replacing the keyboard. To do this, other than the keyboard, what other parts are needed? Additional adhesive to glue the battery back down? Adhesive to seal the plastic covering on the back of the keyboard?

is there a tear down video on here for this? The instructions I found on here stop after the trackpad is out. Doesn’t finish telling you how to get the keyboard out.

Contesta esta pregunta Yo también tengo este problema

Es esta una buena pregunta?

Puntuación 0
1 comentario

I love rice! Sadly, it’s useless in drying out wet devices. You need to physically wipe the parts down or replace them. Leave the rice in the kitchen.

- de

Agregar un comentario

1 Respuesta

Respuesta Más Útil

From the sounds of it you need to replace the uppercase as being the easiest way to get going here. Here’s the part you’ll need MacBook Pro 13" Retina (Late 2013-Mid 2014) Upper Case Assembly and here’s the IFIXIT guide: Reemplazo de la carcasa superior del MacBook Pro 13" Retina Display Late 2013.

I strongly recommend getting the part with the battery & trackpad as you likely have damaged them as well.

if you are very brave you could replace the discrete keyboard. But I need to warn you it’s a hellish job as you’ll need to unscrew a ton of screws or pop rivets which you the need to replace with the correct screws. And lastly, you end up with a fair about of cut fingers :-{

If you haven’t done one before I think the quick way is better.

Update (08/20/2018)

Here’s the right way to apply thermal paste Are You Applying Thermal Paste Correctly?

This is way to much!

Block Image

Imagen de MacBook Pro 13" Retina (Late 2013-Mid 2014) Upper Case Assembly

Producto

MacBook Pro 13" Retina (Late 2013-Mid 2014) Upper Case Assembly

$149.99

Fue útil esta respuesta?

Puntuación 1

7 comentarios:

Thanks for the reply! You think there’s a good chance the trackpad and battery are damaged? I used it for around 15 minutes and the battery was displaying what I co skdeeed to be the correct percentage and the trackpad seemed to work well.

I agree tho. The case replacement would be the easiest. If I do the keyboard replacement it looks like all I need is the keyboard and the 50 ‘000’ screws. Is that right? I’ve pretty much had the thing Thorne all the way down other than the logic board, so I’m not concerned about doing it other than being able to get the keyboard out and the new one in correctly. Would only cost me $27 shipped. This is for my work, so was kinda thinking of that didn’t fix it, we would just replace it.

- de

Then just get one of the others that don't have the battery and trackpad then its still better!

- de

I got the top case replaced. It came with the battery, trackpad, and keyboard. For the last week it's been working great. Today is the first time doing anything heavy with it. I've been editing video and uploading. It's hovering around 169 degrees F and every 5 minutes or so it spikes to 210 and then fans speed up and cool it back down. Seems pretty hot for just uploading video.

I did use the arctic thermal paste and their cleaner/purifier. Can putting too much paste on cause problems? When I put it on I wondered if I got too much. I just used a credit card to smear the paste around the top of the cpu and then I put the heatsink back on.

- de

If you laid it thick then you’ll need to clean it off and start again. Thermal paste is intended to be applied as a thin coat.

What happens it gets onto other components messing them up.

- de

OK, I probably put it on too thick. I'll clean it off again, use the purifier on both the cpu and heatsink, then use a plastic glove and put a thin even coat on it. Sounds like it's too thick and it's not cooling properly.

- de

Mostrar 2 comentarios más

Agregar un comentario

Añadir tu respuesta

Taylorman22 estará eternamente agradecido.
Ver Estadísticas:

Ultimas 24 horas: 0

Ultimos 7 días: 0

Ultimos 30 días: 1

Todo El Tiempo: 62