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250GB laptop drive kit includes enclosure
#3
Posted 12 June 2007 - 01:37 PM
This is an interesting concept, and the price is great! I just wonder how many people are willing to void their AppleCare warranty by doing drive swaps? I paid $50 to have a 160 GB drive put in my PowerBook G4 by my local Apple Authorized repair center last spring. That decision allowed me to get my PowerBook repaired for free under AppleCare last September (at 35 months after purchase) when its motherboard failed in an electrical storm. That was $50 well spent -- not to mention the 60 minutes technician time involved in the swap.
#5
Posted 12 June 2007 - 02:26 PM
Since when does replacing the HD on a new MacBook void your warranty? I was told by several sources that both RAM and HD can be user upgraded without losing your warranty... /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/frown.gif I did mine already with a 200GB form Toshiba and it was a piece of cake, took less than 5 minutes.... Gonna call my local Apple store and find out...
Update: Well, apparently updating the RAM is allowed, but swaping the HD will void the warranty. Good thing I have kept my original drive intact... I think I'll put it back in there, and pay a Certified Apple tech $50 to put in my 200GB officially, as I do plan to purchase Applecare on a laptop... I hate when Apple is being so anal about something so simple to do...
Update: Well, apparently updating the RAM is allowed, but swaping the HD will void the warranty. Good thing I have kept my original drive intact... I think I'll put it back in there, and pay a Certified Apple tech $50 to put in my 200GB officially, as I do plan to purchase Applecare on a laptop... I hate when Apple is being so anal about something so simple to do...
#7
Posted 12 June 2007 - 03:22 PM
I think it is a left-over from the iBook and PowerBook days. The MacBook drive change is very easy, the iBook and PowerBook were a nightmare. The MacBook drive should be considered a user serviceable part. ShermanHoman
The MacBookPro, on the other hand, requires the removal of 21 screws to replace the hard drive. The procedure is very straightforward. I certainly wouldn't call it "a nightmare." However, there's no question that the average home user should not be attempting a procedure of this complexity. There is therefore no way that Apple can allow such an operation under the terms of its warranty. Having different policies for different models would create nothing but confusion.
The MacBookPro, on the other hand, requires the removal of 21 screws to replace the hard drive. The procedure is very straightforward. I certainly wouldn't call it "a nightmare." However, there's no question that the average home user should not be attempting a procedure of this complexity. There is therefore no way that Apple can allow such an operation under the terms of its warranty. Having different policies for different models would create nothing but confusion.
#8
Posted 12 June 2007 - 04:32 PM
Apple used to allow HD swaps without voiding your warranty as recently as the TiBooks (if I remember right). $50 for a technician to do this is a bargain for most of us, especially considering how phenomenal Applecare service is for laptops. IMO, it's well worth preserving your access to Applecare.
Apple looks the other way with Mac Mini RAM upgrades. It doesn't void your warranty as long as everything goes well, but if you screw up..... /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/frown.gif I upgraded my own Mac Mini RAM without voiding my warranty. I'm not sure about Mac Mini hard drive swaps, though.
Apple looks the other way with Mac Mini RAM upgrades. It doesn't void your warranty as long as everything goes well, but if you screw up..... /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/frown.gif I upgraded my own Mac Mini RAM without voiding my warranty. I'm not sure about Mac Mini hard drive swaps, though.
#9
Posted 12 June 2007 - 04:52 PM
Quote:
Having different policies for different models would create nothing but confusion.
Having different policies for different models would create nothing but confusion.
Apple specifically calls the MacBook hard drive a user-upgradeable part and covers the procedure under warranty:
http://manuals.info.....com/en/MacBook[u]13inchHardDrive_DIY.pdf
(PDF download)
#12
Posted 12 June 2007 - 06:50 PM
Quote:
Apple specifically calls the MacBook hard drive a user-upgradeable part and covers the procedure under warranty:
http://manuals.info.....com/en/MacBook[u]13inchHardDrive_DIY.pdf
(PDF download)
Quote:
Having different policies for different models would create nothing but confusion.
Having different policies for different models would create nothing but confusion.
Apple specifically calls the MacBook hard drive a user-upgradeable part and covers the procedure under warranty:
http://manuals.info.....com/en/MacBook[u]13inchHardDrive_DIY.pdf
(PDF download)
Sweeet!! /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif Thank you Dan, that's a relief! So much for the confidence-almost-snootiness with which my Apple store mis-informer answered my question...
Cheers.
#13
Posted 12 June 2007 - 10:51 PM
Quote:
Apple used to allow HD swaps without voiding your warranty as recently as the TiBooks (if I remember right). $50 for a technician to do this is a bargain for most of us, especially considering how phenomenal Applecare service is for laptops. IMO, it's well worth preserving your access to Applecare.
Apple looks the other way with Mac Mini RAM upgrades. It doesn't void your warranty as long as everything goes well, but if you screw up..... /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/frown.gif I upgraded my own Mac Mini RAM without voiding my warranty. I'm not sure about Mac Mini hard drive swaps, though.
Apple used to allow HD swaps without voiding your warranty as recently as the TiBooks (if I remember right). $50 for a technician to do this is a bargain for most of us, especially considering how phenomenal Applecare service is for laptops. IMO, it's well worth preserving your access to Applecare.
Apple looks the other way with Mac Mini RAM upgrades. It doesn't void your warranty as long as everything goes well, but if you screw up..... /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/frown.gif I upgraded my own Mac Mini RAM without voiding my warranty. I'm not sure about Mac Mini hard drive swaps, though.
A hard drive is very easy to change in the Ti PowerBook. I changed mine out at least twice a year. This meant that I always had a fresh hard drive in my PowerBook. This ease of changing hard drives ended with the Al PoerBook & has continued on with the Intel MacBook Pro. This entails the 21 or so number of screws & a very delicate connector that connects the track pad to the motherboard. If you break the connector it is a $150-3 or 400 repair. My 17" Al G4 PowerBook still has its original drive in it. The PowerBook is becoming very useless to changes with the internal drive.
With my Ti PowerBook I ran my company with just a PowerBook or 2, no real desktop for a few years. I would worry about the reliability of my PowerBook or Intel MacBook Pro with the same drive in it for more than a few months of 24 hour a day hard drive running. I now start my PowerBook only occasionally. The hard drive has no room on it. I have added only a handfull of new customer files rather than all of them. When I really get serious about using my PowerBook I run it from an external hard drive. I have a 3.5" Seagate SATA hard drive connected to my PowerBook using a FW800 adapter. This drive can take 5, 10 or maybe even 15 seconds to start transmitting data if the drive has been at rest for very long.
I'm waiting for Apple to produce an Intel MacBook Pro that has an easily User replaceable hard drive. One like the Intel Mac Book would be nicest. One at least as easy as the ATi PowerBook would also do. With the backlit keyboard on the Intel MacBook Pro, I would only expect to see the Intel MacBook way.
When people ask me about my PPC PowerBokk I say that I liked my old one but my new one was not user servicable & thus they should stay away from them. So far none of them have gone through iwth their previous plans to purchase any of the Al PowerBooks or Al Intel MacBook Pros.
By now I would have had a 120 GB, 160 GB & now a 250 GB had drives in my PowerBook. I may even have one of those new Intel MacBook Pros.
Have I purchased my last PowerBook Intel MacBook Pro? Probably with the way Apple is about user servicable parts on their computers. Writing this replay with my Intel Mac Pro makes me miss the simple days of my Ti PowerBooks.
Bill the TaxMan
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