Il est possible que cette traduction ne reflète pas les dernières mises à jour du tutoriel source. Aidez à mettre à jour la traduction ou bien consultez le tutoriel source.
Introduction
Avec ce tutoriel, remplacez le boîtier supérieur de votre MacBook Core Duo, qui comprend aussi le pavé tactile et le clavier.
Ce dont vous avez besoin
-
-
À l'aide d'une pièce de monnaie ou une spatule, faites pivoter la vis de verrouillage de la batterie de 90 degrés dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre.
-
-
-
Dévissez les trois vis cruciformes espacées régulièrement sur la paroi arrière du compartiment de la batterie.
-
-
-
-
Retirez les 3 vis suivantes :
-
Une vis cruciforme #00 de 11 mm au milieu du boîtier
-
Deux vis cruciformes #00 de 14,5 mm.
-
-
-
En commençant près de l'écran et en vous rapprochant de l'avant de l'ordinateur, soulevez le boîtier supérieur en faisant levier. Il est maintenu par des clips sur le côté au-dessus du lecteur optique. Ceux-ci s'ouvriront sous l'effet d'une ferme pression de levier.
-
Faites attention en soulevant le boîtier supérieur. On se coupe facilement le bout d'un doigt. C'est le sacrifice que les dieux Mac exigent parfois de ceux qui tiennent à exécuter leurs propres réparations.
-
Pour remonter votre appareil, suivez les mêmes instructions dans l'ordre inverse.
Pour remonter votre appareil, suivez les mêmes instructions dans l'ordre inverse.
Annulation : je n'ai pas terminé ce tutoriel.
176 autres ont terminé cette réparation.
Merci à ces traducteurs :
83%
Ces traducteurs nous aident réparer le monde ! Vous voulez contribuer ?
Commencez à traduire ›
7 commentaires
I'm working on 3 different Macbooks, and having Keyboard/Trackpad probs with a 2.0 Mid-2007, a 2.16 Mid-2007, and a 2.1 Early 2008.
The Black 2.16 Black seemed to have a faulty logic board and wouldn't start up. I swapped the logic board from the 2.0 White into the Black and it fired up right away. Good news. I then put the Black 2.16 logic board into the White "just for fun". And it started up just fine too! Weird, but good news.
But the new Black KB/TP (from eBay) has just stopped working after 2 weeks. The power button works to start up, but that's it. No KB or TP activity at all. I've tried it on both Macbooks.
And now the White KB/TP, installed on the Black, stopped working. Starts up, but no KB/TP. Causes? Any compatibility problems? IIRC the cables are all silver.
And the 2.1 2008: it starts and works fine, but NOT the KB/TP: either its own, or from a 2.0 C2D. And its KB/TP works on OTHER Macbooks. Any ideas?
P.S. know of any guides on replacing upper case Flex Cables (2007-08)?
Well I did the keyboard replacement with ease. I was fooling around back and forth with other things but my best guess is that it took less than one hour total. Yes I did make a one drop blood sacrifice. Be careful when reaching under that keyboard as there are some sharp metal edges. One thing I did do was write the step numbers in scraps of paper and placed the screws on those. In reality it is probably not needed.
These instructions are some of the clearest, easy to follow guides I have ever run across. Thanks Ifixit!
The only thing that spooked me was that I removed a battery that was near fully charged. When I put all back together it showed a 0% battery and the mac would shut down immediately after unhooking the charger. Now about a couple hours later it is showing over 75%. I am guessing maybe the removal of the battery resets things inside the mac and it thinks the battery is dead? No idea why but it seems to be charging up. Just a mystery that bugs me.
Followed the Guide to replace hard drive (blank, recently formatted) and dvd drive. When I turned on the Macbook Pro, the screen was dark but the push button latch LED was lit, but the power button wasn't lighting up. Anyone run across this problem?
Did you recheck all of the cables? If those things were working properly before, then replacement of just the hard drive and/or dvd player, would not cause it to start happening. Make sure you didn't disturb any of the other cables while you were in there. Sometimes it just takes a nudge. I've been inside laptops that had never been opened before, and found cables that had loosened just over time and the movement of the laptop.
Also, did you "zap" the PRAM when you first started the MacBook up? The laptop might not be recognizing the new drive and software on it. Hold down this key combination (in the order presented) after pressing the power button, "apple control" + "option" + "p" + "r". It is usually recommended to hold them all down until the computer restarts itself two or three times - then release the keys and let the computer start again on it's own. I often hold them down for five or six restarts though, especially if the computer has already exhibited errors. See if that helps.
Check also that the RAM has been reseated properly and that no dust or fine hairs, or even fingerprints on the gold pins of the pieces, between the pieces and where they make contact with the ram holder contacts.