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MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen

What you need

  1. MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen, Gehäuseunterteil: step 1, image 1 of 1
    • Entferne die folgenden P5-Pentalobe-Schrauben, mit denen das Gehäuseunterteil am MacBook Pro befestigt ist:

    • Acht 3,0 mm Schrauben

    • Zwei 2,3 mm Schrauben

  2. MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen: step 2, image 1 of 1
    • Hebe das Gehäuseunterteil von der Kante aus, die der Kupplungsabdeckung am nächsten liegt, vom MacBook Pro ab.

    • Lege das Gehäuseunterteil beiseite.

  3. MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen, Akkuanschluss: step 3, image 1 of 1
    • Ziehe den Warnaufkleber über dem Akkuanschluss ab.

  4. MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen: step 4, image 1 of 2 MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen: step 4, image 2 of 2
    • Heble den Akkuanschluss mit dem flachen Ende eines Spudgers vorsichtig aus seiner Buchse auf dem Logic Board heraus.

    • Biege die Akkukabel nach hinten und aus dem Weg, so dass der Akkuanschluss nicht versehentlich mit dem Logic Board in Kontakt kommt.

  5. MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen, SSD: step 5, image 1 of 1
    • Entferne die einzelne 3,1 mm T5 Torx-Schraube, mit der die SSD am Logic Board befestigt ist.

  6. MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen: step 6, image 1 of 2 MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Ende 2013 SSD austauschen: step 6, image 2 of 2
    • Hebe die rechte Seite der SSD leicht an und schiebe sie aus ihrer Buchse auf dem Logic Board heraus.

Conclusion

Um dein Gerät wieder zusammenzubauen, folge den Schritten der Anleitung in umgekehrter Reihenfolge.

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Andrew Optimus Goldheart

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14 Comments

According to Everymac (http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/ma...) this would not be possible for late 2013 15" retina models, with PCIe based SSD. So, will these steps also apply to that model? Just want to be really sure!

Levi

Levi - Reply

I read the whole article, and from what you have written i hope you meant about this part.

"Specifically, the "Mid-2012" and "Early 2013" models use a 6 Gb/s SATA-based SSD whereas the "Late 2013" and "Mid-2014" models use a PCIe 2.0-based SSD. These SSD modules are neither interchangeable nor backwards compatible."

If so it means you can not use an SSD meant for "Mid-2012" and "Early 2013" for a laptop of "Late 2013" and "Mid-2014" or vice-versa, they are still removable and replaceable but please do make sure that the replacement is intended for the model that you have.

Abbas Mustafa Bhaijibhai -

I have 1 TB solid state drive and I need more space if you can believe it. Hate working with externals. Is there a 2TB SSD even available for the mac that I could replace on my late 2013 15" MBP retina?

Liz - Reply

Samsung makes a 2tb and 4tb internal SSD. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078DPCY3T/ref...

Make sure you’re backing up your system to either an external drive or backblaze since you’re storing so many valuable files. Keeping it all in once place is an easy way to lose it should your drive fail or your computer need to be reset. I’ve lost all the info off my mac twice due to it needing to be reset at apple.

Nicole -

I wish I had read this BEFORE getting a hybrid 2TB replacement drive. I had no idea an SSD was so thin. There is simply no space for even a laptop Hybrid drive. I cleaned my computer a lot though, so all was not lost - and I have an external bootable backup.

Simon Anthony - Reply

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