T30 Hard drive upgrade failure - blinking cursor - will not progress
I am having difficulty upgrading the hard drive on my Thinkpad T30.
I am trying to upgrade a 40GB HD to a 250GB HD. (New Drive is Western Digital Scorpio WD 2500B EVE)
I have used the Western Digital Lifeguard Tools to clone the drive. Unfortunately when I insert the new drive into the computer, the startup stops and sits at the blinking cursor.
I have used the PC Tools from Lenovo to test everything.
I have used Western Digital Lifeguard Tools to check the Hard Drive.
I have updated my Bios and the embedded controller program.
When I start up the computer and press F1 to enter the Bios, the plus sign shows beside the Hard Drive. I understand this means that the Bios recognizes the Hard Drive.
I have entered setup to choose the hard drive as the boot device, but the computer still hangs at the blinking cursor.
When the new hard drive is attached to the computer by usb in an external case it shows that the contents of the old drive are copied onto the new drive.
What do I do now to fix this and get the computer to boot from the new drive?
Solved!
Go to Solution.
A program often recommended by ortegeluis is Easeaus Disk Copy a freeware which may help you.
Andy ______________________________________
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Terminal window blinking cursor will not accept keyboard entry
Have SunBlade100 w/ Solaris8.
This is probably a dumb beginner question...
When I enter certain commands at the terminal window - in this particular case
# cat /dev/cua/a
and I hit <return> the cursor skips to the next line, and
continues blinking , and will not accept any keyboard entries.
1. What is the significance of this? Is the cursor waiting further action, and if so, what?
2. How do I get back to the prompt?
3. Under this condition, is it safe to exit the terminal window by closing from the Window menu? (I can't type "exit" because the cursor won't accept keyboard entries, and Help for "closing the terminal" warns against closing from the Window menu because any background processes will not be terminated (and this may cause problems).
Thanks in advance for any info on this.Thanks again for the info. <control>+C was exactly what I was looking for. It's coming back to me now-- the last time I had contact w/ UNIX was back in '85 at UC Berkeley (no GUI's back then!).
I'm assuming that <control>+C is a graceful (i.e. relatively harmless way to exit the command. -
hello, so here is the story...
i bought my iMac about a little more than half year ago and i really like this mac. About 3 months ago, my computer started popping up me hard drive is full messages, and i did not really bother to delete any files. Because i have been using computers before this one, and i have never used up all the spaces before and the computer i have used before had even smaller hard drives. At the time i did not think it is going to effect my usage of this computer so i kept on using it. After about a month, while i was using my computer, it suddenly shut down and when i restart it my desktop is a plain blue background, with no wallpaper or any icons. Then i tried to delete some files, but when i try to do so, i can not even open up my applications or any kind of window. The only thing that i can open is safari, so right now i can only serve the internet, can not even watch any videos or movies online...
can anyone tell me how to delete files right now, because my hard drive is so limited right now, i can not even open up anything, so there is no way to delete any filesIn all your use of computers, did you learn how to recover your backups and have a good backup strategy in place?
Or are you going to need help now on backups, recoverying files (already some good threads to just re-read), and rebuild your hard drive.
For starters you will need one or more external drives, and install OS X on one of them and use one or part of one for recovering files.
You should be able to free up space. Just go to your home account folder / library / caches and trash anything to do with Safari like Metadata cache folder to free up a little.
You don't need to "open" anything other than Finder. And you probably want to boot with SHIFT KEY at the least on startup - continue to hold shift key until you hit the desktop.
But you really should not or limit any use of this hard drive, and work from and boot from another hard drive for now.
Pick up some USB/FW drives:
http://www.macsales.com/firewire -
Re:blinking cursor -- will not boot up
cpu --- intel (r) atom (tm) cpu Nz80 speed 1660 mhz - built-in HDD/ssd:toshiba MK2555GSX-(s1) total memory
1024 mb bios version v1.60
i think my son watched a movie and added on an viewer that erased the original drivers...now hd is gone and needs to be restored. attempted several times going to f12 and changed configurations back to original default settings and pressed f9 to save and f10 to exit.
also attemped hdd recovery mode and there were to options to restore when pressing f8 advanced -- computer locked up; left overnight to see what happens and error message keeps referring to check cable. have reboted with ac adapter and without (only blinking cursor) attempted to take out battery but unable to unscrew and attempt to use only ac adapter...
i know nothing else -- any tips will be helpful or it goes to local guy that hopefully can do a recovery....
Solved!
Go to Solution.got the toshiba recovery disks today (2). sorry but i'm still having trouble with this process.
steps to recovery
1. place the disc into the drive - Toshiba mini starter notebook does not have a drive.
2. power up the computer while holding down the "C" key
release the "C" key when the screen reads Toshiba
3. the computer will format the hard drive and install the factory image. follow all instruction on the screen
4. Once the process is complete remove the recovery media and press any key to restart your computer.
I went out and purchase a Male to Male connector to transfer files. Got one file in back of hard drive that has cd/rom drive and one on side of mini notebook. Press and held down "0" to get to boot menu. There is no choice to select, DVD drive or Flash Drive to highlight so that either one will know who to communicate with to make the
transfer. (ex: transfer recovery mode disks from d drive to c: drive on mini notebook).
upon inserting Recovery disk in d: drive; screen pops up that says AutoPlay open folder to view files from DVD drive E removable disk instead of getting selection here to transfer files on d drive to c:mini notebook.
Do you know what the problem is? please help if you can...I will be waiting.
thanks fixmeup -
Firewire Hard Drive corrupts OS Lion and will not boot
I have re-installed OS lion on my macbook pro 5-6 times now. There seems to be some conflict with my firewire hard drive enclosure which causing it not to boot shortly after using it when restarting. I am trying to get all my data off this hard drive.
When I boot in Verbose Command + V
I get this error which goes into a loop and does not allow the computer to boot.
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
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ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
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ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
ERROR: Firewire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in: handleUnrecoverableErrorInt
I end up having to reinstall the OS every time and it fixes it temporarily.Fixed it without even reinstalling the OS this time. I connected a firewire 400 cable between the mac book pro and my other mac and held down the "t" key to boot the dead macbook pro as a hard drive on my other mac. The hard drive didn't show up but it seem to get it out of the loop it was locked in not allowing it to boot and unable to reinstall the OS. After restarting it booted right back up like normal.
This was an easy fix if my enclosure caused this problem again and does not allow my computer to boot after using the FW 800 cable. -
I used the start up disc to get the software and now i can't update to maverick
Does your MacBook Pro meet the minimum hardware requirements to be able to install OS X 10.9 Mavericks.
To install Mavericks, you need one of these Macs:
iMac (Mid-2007 or later)
MacBook (13-inch Aluminum, Late 2008), (13-inch, Early 2009 or later)
MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid-2009 or later),
MacBook Pro (15-inch or 17-inch, Mid/Late 2007 or later)
MacBook Air (Late 2008 or later)
Mac mini (Early 2009 or later)
Mac Pro (Early 2008 or later)
Xserve (Early 2009)
Your Mac also needs:
OS X Mountain Lion, Lion, or Snow Leopard v10.6.8 already installed
2 GB or more of memory
8 GB or more of available space -
IPod sync problems after hard-drive upgrade/change
Hello all,
Can anyone PLEASE help?
I have just had my hard drive upgraded/changed from the original 640GB drive to a new 2TB drive. I've also had an additional 4GB of RAM added to now give me 8GB RAM.
Absolutely everything else seems to be working fine (unusual for me and I'm often at the end of bad luck in such circumstances). The only thing I'm having problems with is syncing my iPod Classic with iTunes. Incidentally, I have the latest version of iTunes and my iPod software was up to date the last time I checked.
Before I go further, my system specs are:
iMac
24-inch, Early 2009
Processor 2.66 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
Memory 8 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce 9400 256 MB
Software OS X Mountain Lion 10.8.2 (12C60)
When I connect my iPod Classic, the iPod screen initially shows 'Synchronisation in progress' (or whetver similar wording it actually is)... but this is just very briefly. It then indicates "Connected", and that's the way it stays and doesn't change at all.
It takes time to actually show up in iTunes, and when it does, I now have to very quickly click the iPod button (to bring up the iPod screen on iTunes) before the pointer turns into the spinning beach ball.
Now, it hangs... and hangs... and hangs... and hangs.
During this, I notice that "Manually manage music and videos" is ticked (which I didn't have ticked before), and also 'Enable disc use' is also ticked, although greyed out.
Occasionally, the spinning beach ball will disappear and the pointer will return, but this is very very briefly and I have a split-second to try unticking - first - the "Manually manage music and videos" box and then - later, if I'm lucky - untick the 'Enable disc use' box. However, on the odd occasion I've managed this, I haven't been able to go further except for two occasions when I managed to click "Apply". The iPoid on those to occasions started to update... but went nowhere... it just did nothing.
When the thing finally just hangs and hangs, I eventually have to 'force quit' iTunes and unplug the iPod without first ejecting. There was one other occasion when I managed to - split-second when the spinning beach ball disappeared - to click "eject" and the iPod succesfully did so.
There were a couple of occasions in the past when I had trouble with my iPhone and was told to delete/trash the iPhone photo cache folder. Remembering this, I tried this for the iPod (iPod photo cache) and it made no difference... same situation.
I did notice on one occasion at the beginning of all this that when I managed to unplug my iPod from iTunes, all the album covers were missing from the iPod (although still in iTunes). This was long before I tried deleting the iPod photo cache folder though.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Best regards
BionicDanFirst things first the spinning beach ball is usually an indication that Search is going nuts.
Turn off Search entire Library by clicking on the downward pointing arrow to the right of the Magnisying glass and untick Search entire library.
Is your music still in iTunes on your new hard drive or is it only on your ipod?
If it is in your itunes then you should be able to plug in the iPod and uncheck Manually Manage music and sync
If the music is only on the ipod connect up as above click on the device and Drag all the music from your device to the library. then you can uncheck manually manage music and sync as normal -
The VGN-UX380N uses a MK4009GAL Hard Drive it is a 1,8 W 54mm x H 5mm x 71mm Zif 40 connector is there a 120 GB hard drive replacement for it that will work?
I was looking at the MK1214GAH with Zif40 connector also but the hight is 8mm is there a good one in 5mm that is 120 GB?Notebook manufacturer must offer support for hardware upgrade and give you info about compatible devices so I think it is wrong place for your question.
We can discuss about Toshiba 1,8 HDDs but I don't know if this will help you.
I have 60GB MK6006GAH HDD with Zif40 connector and use it with older Portege model.
To be honest I don't think Toshiba has 120GB HDD with the same connector. 120 GB has micro-SATA connector.
Talk with notebook manufacturers hotline and ask for help. -
Time Machine confused after iMac hard drive upgrade
Here's the deal. I had my 24" iMac internal 250-gig hard drive upgraded to a 1-Terabyte drive. Tech guy cloned them with SuperDuper. New drive booted right up and works great. My question is regarding Time Machine, which I have set up to backup to an external drive. I assumed because old drive was cloned to new drive, Time Machine would think it was the same drive and just keep backing it up as it always has. But what happens is Time Machine just keep saying "processing" and nothing ever happens.
Is there a way to tell TM to start backing up the new drive as it always did or do I need to delete my current (1 1/2 yr. old) TM files and let it start from scratch again? I really don't want to do that. Any ideas?As V.K. says, that procedure may or may not work.
The reason for the long preparing stage is that TM, seeing a different drive, is examining every file and folder on your system, and may do a full backup of your entire system.
Download the +Time Machine Buddy+ widget. It shows the messages from your logs for one TM backup run at a time, in a small window. You'll probably see a message about a UUID error referencing your internal drive --that means TM doesn't recognize it as the same one it last backed-up.
Then you'll probably see one about a "deep traversal." That means TM is looking at every file and folder on your system to see what needs to be backed-up. This takes quite a while, of course, and you won't see anything being backed-up (xx MB of yy GB) until it's done.
If TM does perform a full backup, it may have to delete a lot of your old backups to make room for the new one. If it can't delete enough, it will fail. -
G40 2384-A9U Hard drive upgrade
I updated the bios to 1.21 which seems to be the latest bios 2006. The hard drive upgrade listed for purchase 2004 was an 80G. I was hopeing that I could put a larger dirve in because the newer bios was 2 years past the hard drive upgrade listing. I tried a 250G but it does not seem to be recognized. Does anyone know what the max hard drive size the latest bios supports?
Solved!
Go to Solution.I first entered CMOS (setup) and under security, and set the desktop to disable. I was able to transfer the data to the 250G from the 40G using Ghost 2003 and selecting the image setting -IB (Image Boot). I was fortunate enough to have a floppy drive on the notebook (G40 2384-A9U). I attached an external USB 40G drive to the notebook, booted with Norton's Ghost 2003 boot disk created with USB support enabled. I went into options and selected Image Boot under the image tab and then copied the existing 40G drive to the external 40G USB drive. I then replaced the 40G drive in the notebook with the 250G drive, booted with the Norton Ghost disk and selected the image boot again and copied the 40G USB drive to the new 250G drive now in the notebook. I went back into the CMOS (setup) and put the security for the desktop back to normal. The only thing different seem to be the utilities are missing if you hit the IBM access button. I notice that when you disable the security for the desktop in CMOS, you will see an unpartitioned space of almost 2Gigs. This appears to be where some of the 4 sectors that lenovo uses to hold the boot information and probably their utility programs. The norton -IB switch does seem to get the boot sector information but not the utility portion of the unused area. The result is the unused space is reduced to only 2 megs on a 40 Gig drive and shows up as 4 megs on the 250 Gig drive.
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Spinning beach ball after hard drive upgrade
Im running a macbook pro i7 2.2ghz 8gb ram version 10.6.8 SL
I recently upgraded my 128gb ssd to a 512gb ssd drive. I cloned the drive to new drive and ever since then, I get the spinning beach ball very often whereas I never got it prior to the hard drive upgrade. Is there anything I can check or do to eliminate the freeze ups? It is VERY annoying. Or do I just need to do a fresh install on the new hard drive.
thanks in advanceDid you properly prep the drive first:
Drive Preparation
1. Boot from your OS X Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
If you are preparing an external or a non-startup drive, then open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area. If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing. SMART info will not be reported on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID (for Intel Macs) or APM (for PPC Macs) then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size. -
I have an IBM T60p with original 90 gig HD. I spent a weekend trying to upgrade to a larger capacity drive. Downloaded several commercial programs. None of them worked properly. I finally found a way to use Vista to complete the task. This procedure works, have a new 320 gig WD 7200 RPM drive working correctly in my computer. Hard drive Upgrade in Windows Vista
This procedure was used on an IBM ThinkPad T60p with 90 gig SATA HD.Machine was upgraded with a Western Digital 320 gig BEKT SATA drive (Scorpio Black).
Before you start:You need to change the BIOS setting for Windows to recognize your new drive.
Reboot and enter BIOS
Select “Config” => Serial ATA (SATA) => SATA Controller Mode Option: => COMPATIBILITY
Save and exit
Review Boot priorities to enable the Boot from CD option
Have a copy of Windows Vista on CD; the version does not matter, you will use this only to boot from CD.
See WD product description at following website
http://www.wdc.com/en/products/products.asp?driveid=477
You will need an external USB hard drive to back up your existing hard drive.
It needs to be large enough to back up your existing drive.
Plug in the drive, Windows should recognize it.
Format the external hard drive so it is clean.
Backup Existing Drive
Back up drive C to the external drive using Windows Vista.
Go to Control Panel => Backup and Restore Center
Select the “Back-up files or your entire computer” option
Select “Back up computer
”Windows displays “Where do you want to save the backup”
Select “On a hard disk”
Windows displays hard drives available,
Select the drive you just plugged in
Click “Next”
Review the screen “Confirm your backup settings”
Windows displays “Local Disk (C) (System)” in the bottom window.
Click “Start backup”.
Backup will take 1-2 hours.
When completed, you have a complete image of your drive created by Windows Vista on the external HD
Install new Hard Drive
Shut down the machine.
Install the new hard drive per manufacturer instructions.
http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?lndocid=MIGR-62826
Boot the computer using the Vista CD.
Once files are loaded, Vista will open
Click “Next”
Click “Repair Your Computer”
Windows displays a window showing operating systems available, the window will be blank.
Click “Next”
Windows displays “Choose a Recovery Option”
Select “Windows Complete PC Restore”
Windows displays the saved image from your external drive
Click “Next”
Windows displays the restoration information
Click “Finish”
Remove the Windows CD
Restore will take 1-2 hours
Set up the new drive
After restoration, the system will reboot and you should be at the Vista Log In screen.
Log in normally and check to be sure your programs work.
You now need to tell Vista you have a new drive, and resize the partition to the capacity of the new drive.
Tell Windows to recognize the new drive
Start Menu, L click “Computer”
Drive C displays the stored image with the same capacity of the old drive.
R click on drive C => properties
Select the “Hardware” tab
Highlight drive C
Select the “Properties” tab, bottom right
Click on “Change settings”, bottom left
Click on the “Volumes” tab
Click the “Populate” tab
Windows will now populate the table with the settings for the new drive.
Save the settings and Reboot the computer.
Windows will now recognize the new higher capacity drive.
After reboot
Start Menu, R click “Computer”
Select “Manage”
In the L window, select “Storage” => “Disk Management”
Disk “0” is your new drive
Select Drive C
R click Drive C, select “Extend Volume”
The Extend Volume Wizard will open
Click “Next”
Click “Finish”
The new drive capacity is now operational.
You will now have two partitions, one for Windows, one for programs and data.I'm also interested if anyone knows. I called the Square Group in London (Nex Oxford Street) but they said they'd get back to me ... but they didn't ...
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My MacBook Pro (2012) hard drive is almost full, Apple refuses to provide hard drive upgrade service, how can you get hard drive upgraded in Netherlands without losing warranty?
Dear Ralph, and All
My MBP is indeed non-retina.
I also have Apple care support for 3 years
I was in touch with Apple suport since last week. Response I got on Phone was pretty astounding (waiting email confirmation). They say following
- Apple support does not provide such service of upgrading hard drive
- Doing it yourself means you will lose warranty (due to nature of operation one would need to perform on the computer)
- None of authorised delars will provide such a service
So as such there apparantly is no way to get your hard drive upgraded without losing warranty.
Leaves me a bit perplexed
I do understand MBP retina (or iPAD / iPhones) are manufactured in way that makes it technically impossible to upgrade certain parts. But why non-retina MBP?
What do you all think? is this reasonable? is this what a MBP customer would expect?
Really appreaciate the quick responses i have recieved from you and others on this forum.
Many thanks
Tirath Shah -
Need help picking the correct hard drive upgrade for my MBP
I need help picking the correct/best hard drive upgrade for my MBP. It is the 15" 2GHz Core Duo. Came with a spacious 90GB drive.
Suggestions and recommendations very appreciated.It will take almost any 2.5 inch sata drive.
Take a look at www.newegg.com and www.macsales.com to see what's out there and how much it costs.
Toshiba have a 320gb 2,.5 inch drive in the works, but it's not quite out yet and will be expensive.
I'll start you off..
http://www.newegg.com/Store/SubCategory.aspx?SubCategory=380&name=Laptop-Hard-Dr ives -
Bootcamp/Hard Drive Upgrade questions
Hi everyone, i have a couple questions about upgrading the HD in my MacBook Pro 15" Mid 1012. Potentially I want to use bootcamp, but I need some answers before I make any decisions. So basically, I want to Bootcamp Windows so i can play PC games that I've owned since before the switch (I am an art major so I had to switch to Mac). I used Bootcamp before but I couldn't register my copy of Windows 8 because it was an upgrade version, so I removed it.
My first question would be if anyone knows how to get an upgrade version of Windows 8 to work? Im pretty sure I remember seeing that it didnt work, but that was a couple months ago. Maybe things have changed since?
I have no issue buying another copy of Windows 8 if need be. I only paid $15 to upgrade anyway so it's not a major loss. The last time I used Bootcamp though, i only partitioned like 25GBs to Windows, just because I didnt know how much I would actually need. I came to realize that that was not enough. I have a 500GB HD in my MacBook Pro right now, so I would like to upgrade to a 1TB to provide more space on both sides. I've searched for a few on Amazon and such. I need to know if the physical size of the HD matters because i noticed there was two different ones. I also need to know if I can use any HD or if only certain ones are compatible? I don't want an SSD either, it is too expensive for that capacity. Basically, if anyone can recommend an exact HD, one that would be compatible with my MBP or give me an idea of what would work and what won't?
Another question would be... im not extremely comfortable popping open my Mac. This is not something that I do, even though I have read that it is extremely easy. I wanted to look first if there were any places that provide this kind of service for a reasonably cheap cost? Apple themselves, or Best Buy, Office Max etc. I don't really have a preference as long as its cheap enough. If not, or it is too expensive then I will follow instructions to perform this myself, I do know how to read after all, but I would prefer to look for a 3rd party first. Also, does anyone know if this procedure voids any warranties or anything on my Mac?
Sorry for the length. Question overload, but if anyone can answer some or all of my question, I would appreciate it so much. Thanks everyone!MathewMelo,
for any Mac that supports Boot Camp, no, you can’t use any upgrade version of Windows; you’ll need to use a full install version. For your 15-inch Mid 2012 MacBook Pro, you can use a full install version of either 32-bit Windows 7 (with Boot Camp version 4), or 64-bit Windows 7 or Windows 8 (with Boot Camp version 5).
For the size of a hard drive that will fit inside of your MacBook Pro, you’re looking for the 2.5-inch form factor. A hard drive that supports SATA III will ensure best performance with your model MacBook Pro. A 1 TB hard drive like the Hitachi Travelstar 7K1000.B (part number 0S03563) might fit your needs, and it has a three-year warranty. I haven’t used this particular model myself, but I’d used a different Travelstar disk in my old ThinkPad for many years, and it worked well for me.
As far as replacing the hard drive, I don’t know who offers the service cheaply in your area — you should call your local computer shops and ask them. It’s not difficult to do yourself, as long as you take care to discharge static electricity before touching anything inside of your MacBook Pro. The only unusual tool that you might need is a T6 Torx screwdriver; at least in my Mid 2010 MacBook Pro, the hard drive is held in place by four T6 Torx screws, and if your model is similar, then you’ll need the T6 screwdriver to remove these screws from your stock internal drive and put them into your new internal drive so that it will stay in place. Changing the hard drive yourself does not void the warranty, but if you damage anything else while changing the hard drive, your warranty specifically does not cover that damage. The hard drive is one of the easiest things to replace in the pre-Retina unibody MacBook Pro, so it isn’t difficult to avoid damaging other components during the transplant.
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