Skip to main content

Put away your screwdriver: Apple’s new Macs are a bear to disassemble

Though Apple recently revealed and launched the highest-resolution iMac yet, along with a long overdue Mac mini upgrade, iFixit has already taken the two desktop PCs and ripped them apart. iFixit’s professionals performed both teardowns, and we advise that you not try anything similar at home.

Of the two, the 2014 Mac mini is easier to service, scoring a six out of 10 repair-ability grade, compared to five out of 10 for the iMac with Retina Display. If you’re thinking of tweaking the RAM, CPU or hard drive yourself, you should know that it’s only possible to do so on the 27-inch iMac with Retina Display.

The Mac mini has both the processor and memory soldered to the logic board, so they’re not user upgrade-able. In a way, it makes perfect sense, since the extravagantly priced 5K iMac addresses a target audience that presumably doesn’t see money as a problem, whereas the Mac mini starts at $499.

If Apple were to allow user upgrades, there would be less incentive for people to cough up an extra $200 for the Mac mini that packs a 2.6GHz Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB RAM, and a 1TB HDD, or another $300 on top of that for the 2.8GHz Intel Core i5 version with 8GB RAM, and a 1TB Fusion Drive. It’s a little cynical, maybe, but from Apple’s point of view, it’s healthy business approach.

The entry-level Mac mini comes with a modest 1.4GHz Intel Core i5 processor, 4GB of memory, and a 500GB hard drive. The latter two could be easily replaced for better guts at lower cost, if such a thing were possible.

Unfortunately, the new iMac with Retina Display’s modular components don’t make the $2,500 (and up) system any easier to disassemble and repair. The glass and LCD are fused together, and a number of additional hurdles obstruct the path to upgrade success for amateur DIY-ers.

Here’s the bottom line. If you want to service either of these Macs, it’s best to handle them with care. Don’t dismantle them just for kicks.

Editors' Recommendations

Adrian Diaconescu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adrian is a mobile aficionado since the days of the Nokia 3310, and a PC enthusiast since Windows 98. Later, he discovered…
Apple did the unthinkable with the new M4 chip
Apple introducing the new M4 chip.

Apple is doing something crazy with its new M4 chip. Although we're used to seeing new Apple silicon debut in Macs, Apple is bringing the M4 chip to the new iPad Pro first. The updated chip, which comes with an entirely new CPU architecture, builds on the GPU found in the M3 chip with ray tracing, mesh shading, and Apple's special Dynamic Cache.

With the M4, Apple says the new iPad Pro can deliver the same performance as a thin-and-light PC while using only a quarter of the power. That's due in no small part to the 3nm architecture the chip uses. The power envelope, according to Apple's claims, is all the more impressive considering the iPad Pro doesn't have any active cooling.

Read more
The 6 key things Apple must fix in the next version of macOS
Craig Federighi introducing macOS Sonoma at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June 2023.

I use macOS every day, and there’s no doubt that I love it as an operating system. Yet, despite how full of genuinely brilliant features it is, there are still a handful of things I just wish it did better.

Luckily, Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) is just a month away, which means there’s not long until we see what kind of software improvements Apple has in store for us. I’ve been thinking hard about what kind of changes I’d like to see happen, from Siri to Stage Manager and everything in-between. Here are the key areas I think Apple needs to fix in macOS 15.
Hey Siri, meet AI
Even when I ask Siri for the WWDC date, it can't give me a straight answer. Digital Trends

Read more
Apple has backed itself into a corner
Apple iPad Pro 11 with Apple Magic Keyboard.

Apple is rumored to finally be updating its new iPads at its forthcoming May 7 event. While this may come as a relief to anyone who’s been patiently waiting to upgrade their iPad Pro or iPad Air, a new report has thrown the whole situation into confusion.

That’s because the latest Power On newsletter from Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman claims that the upcoming iPad Pro will contain an Apple M4 chip. On first blush, that doesn’t seem all that unusual -- the iPad Pro has come with an Apple silicon chip for years, after all. But here’s the wrinkle: this launch plan would mean the iPad will get an M4 chip before the Mac, and that has all kinds of weird implications. By delaying the iPad for so long, it looks like Apple has left itself with a very odd update cycle for its chips this time around.
The end of the M3 Ultra?

Read more