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This teardown is not a repair guide. To repair your Apple TV 1st Generation, use our service manual.

  1. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown, Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 1, image 1 of 1
    • We got our new Apple TV today, skipped the 'plug it in' step, and went straight to our disassembly. It's Apple model #A1218.

    • The packaging has been reviewed to death other places, so we're going to skip that.

    • Peel up the rubber base (remove the rubber carefully so you don't tear it) and remove the four T8 Torx screws beneath:

    • Two 10 mm T8 Torx by the ports.

    • Two 15 mm T8 Torx near the front.

  2. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 2, image 1 of 1
    • Lift off the metal base, revealing the hard drive.

    • Disconnect the ATA hard drive cable from the right side of the logic board. Try to pull straight up so you don't bend the pins on the hard drive.

    • The hard drive is mounted on the baseplate of the unit. It is a 40 GB 2.5" Fujitsu ATA drive (NOT an SATA drive). You can replace this drive with a standard ATA laptop drive if you want to upgrade it.

  3. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 3, image 1 of 1
    • Behold, the Apple TV. Looks like a Mac Mini sans the optical drive and all the useful ports.

  4. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 4, image 1 of 1
    • Disconnect the two airport antenna cables.

    • Remove the T8 Torx screw in the top left corner of the airport card.

  5. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 5, image 1 of 1
    • Lift the airport card up and out of the Apple TV.

    • This is the exact same Broadcom wireless card as the Mac Pro, down to the Apple model number (020-5280-A). Note the (now standard) two antennas. Our card came scractched from the factory. Makes you wonder what's going on over in China...

  6. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 6, image 1 of 1
    • Disconnect the fan connector from the logic board.

  7. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 7, image 1 of 1
    • The fan is mounted on rubber posts to dampen vibrations and make it quieter. Apple claims the Apple TV is 7-10 dB, which is extremely quiet.

    • Use tweezers to compress the top of a rubber post and push the post down into the hole. Repeat this for each rubber post.

    • Once all three posts are pushed into the fan, lift the fan up carefully. The posts should easily slide out, freeing the fan.

  8. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 8, image 1 of 1
    • Disconnect the power supply. Push in the release catch on the connector and then pull the cable straight up. If the connector is too tight, try rocking it back and forth.

    • The power supply (Apple part #614-0395) is manufactured by Delta Electronics (model ADP-36BF). The unit is compact, but it seems a bit clunkier than Apple's usual engineering.

  9. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 9, image 1 of 1
    • Remove the following three screws from the power supply:

    • One 4.8 mm T8 Torx screw on the left side of the power supply.

    • Two 5.8 mm T8 torx screws attaching the power supply to the logic board.

    • Lift the power supply out of the unit.

  10. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 10, image 1 of 1
    • Put the screwdriver through the hole in the metal shield next to the battery, and remove the T8 torx screw concealed within.

  11. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 11, image 1 of 1
    • Remove the metal standoff next to the digital audio port with a T15 or something better.

  12. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 12, image 1 of 1
    • Disconnect the IR cable from the logic board.

  13. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 13, image 1 of 1
    • Lift the logic board up and slide it out of the Apple TV.

    • The upper case remains. Continue reading if you're interested in its technical specifications, close-up logic board photos, and troubleshooting tips.

  14. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 14, image 1 of 1
    • The top of the logic board.

    • The two SAMSUNG chips are DDR333 SDRAM, probably video RAM.

    • The chip with the SST logo is an EEPROM: SST 89V54RD2 33-C-TQJE 0649041-B2

  15. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 15, image 1 of 1
    • The bottom of the logic board.

    • The system has 256 MB DDR2 400 MHz RAM, also soldered to the logic board.

  16. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 16, image 1 of 1
    • The Apple TV has an NVIDIA G72M chipset with 64 MB DDR2 video RAM.

    • Interspersed throughout the pictures are troubleshooting tips from Apple for when hardware failure inevitably strikes.

    • Flashing question mark: As most Mac owners are aware, a flashing question mark means the Mac can't find the OS-- signifying a bad hard drive or corrupted OS. The same can happen with the Apple TV, but Apple's suggested remedy is taking it in to an Apple Store.

    • No video: The Apple TV defaults to HDMI, so make sure you don't have HDMI plugged in if you want to use component video.

  17. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 17, image 1 of 1
    • The processor is an Intel Pentium M 1.0 GHz with 2MB L2 cache, soldered to the logic board.

    • No video via component cables: Apple says to "Hold down the Menu and Menu up/scroll (+) buttons simultaneously on the Apple Remote for 6 seconds." This forces it to cycle through every resolution. Press play when it reaches the resolution you want.

    • Unpair your remote: To set the Apple TV to work with any remote, hold the "Menu and the Previous/Rewind (<<) button for 6 seconds."

  18. Apple TV 1st Generation Teardown: step 18, image 1 of 1
    • Factory restore: According to Apple, "Press and hold both Menu and Menu down/scroll (-) on the Apple Remote for 6 seconds or until the status light blinks amber." Then select your language, and factory restore.

    • Networking: The Apple TV uses UDP port 5353 (Bonjour) and TCP ports 3689 (iTunes Library Sharing), 80 (iTunes store), and 443 (iTunes store).

    • LEDs: The status LED can be white or amber. Apple has a table listing all permutations.

iRobot

Member since: 09/24/09

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My Apple tv not start please

Chunara Vishnu - Reply

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