Make an iMac super fast with an SSD - LFC
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- Опубликовано: 1 июн 2022
- Last time I made a video about this, it wasn't very good. Here's a better swing of the axe. See note below about Fusion Drives.
So I entirely forgot that the Fusion Drive exists while recording this, here's a quick Q&A:
1. What is the Fusion Drive?
Apple's Fusion drive iMacs still have a regular HDD in them, but it's cached by a very small NVMe SSD mounted on the logic board.
2. Do I need an SSD if I have a Fusion Drive?
Yes. The fusion drive is better than HDD only, but it's still pretty bad. Hybrid drive setups like this are a stop-gap, and still nowhere near as fast as pure SSD. Also the HDD can still be failing, bringing down the entire system.
3. How do I deal with a Fusion Drive? Can I still use it afterwards?
My recommendation is to change the HDD to an SSD as per the video, and just erase the Fusion SSD in Disk Utility, leaving it unformatted and unused. It's too small to be useful. Technically, there are commands to rebuild a fusion drive to work with the SATA SSD, but this is generally a terrible idea that will just overcomplicate things for no benefit.
4. Can I fit a big NVME SSD instead of a SATA one?
Yes, but this requires removing the logic board. IMHO it's not worth it unless you're working on a top-spec iMac that really really needs the disk performance for video editing or VMs or something like that. Most iMacs in the wild are low/mid spec office machines, and won't benefit from anything faster than SATA.
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I'm like 3 minutes or so in and I honestly just love your professionalism and attention to detail, the care you're putting into this.
So I entirely forgot that the Fusion Drive exists while recording this, here's a quick Q&A:
1. What is the Fusion Drive?
Apple's Fusion drive iMacs still have a regular HDD in them, but it's cached by a very small NVMe SSD mounted on the logic board.
2. Do I need an SSD if I have a Fusion Drive?
Yes. The fusion drive is better than HDD only, but it's still pretty bad. Hybrid drive setups like this are a stop-gap, and still nowhere near as fast as pure SSD. Also the HDD can still be failing, bringing down the entire system.
3. How do I deal with a Fusion Drive? Can I still use it afterwards?
My recommendation is to change the HDD to an SSD as per the video, and just erase the Fusion SSD in Disk Utility, leaving it unformatted and unused. It's too small to be useful. Technically, there are commands to rebuild a fusion drive to work with the SATA SSD, but this is generally a terrible idea that will just overcomplicate things for no benefit.
4. Can I fit a big NVME SSD instead of a SATA one?
Yes, but this requires removing the logic board. IMHO it's not worth it unless you're working on a top-spec iMac that really really needs the disk performance for video editing or VMs or something like that. Most iMacs in the wild are low/mid spec office machines, and won't benefit from anything faster than SATA.
AND ANOTHER THING... I also forgot that the 27" exists and has a 3.5" desktop drive in it. It will require a 2.5 to 3.5" adaptor for the SSD. But the assembly, SSD used, and transfer process is all the same.
@@Adamant_IT Nimbus do 3.5" SSDs. They're high capacity and very expensive.
My late 2013 27” iMac has a fusion drive, one of the earlier 256 GB incarnations, not the tiny ones Apple used as standard fare in later iMacs. I’d like to continue using that drive as extra storage if possible… as a second drive allocated to temporary downloads or whatever. Is this possible? Also, are there any caveats for removal of the larger 27”? Lastly, at some point Mac OS became prematurely unavailable for this generation iMac simply due to the fusion drives (something about implementing APFS). If I’m no longer using the “Fusion” feature (i.e. the fusion SSD is set to act merely as another drive or-if I must-disabled entirely), can I tell the Mac OS installer to chill TF out and give me the most recent version my iMac is capable of?
I have a 2020 5k iMac that's being used for Premiere Pro editing. I'm interested on the NVME upgrade. Do you have a specific tutorial about this?
I have an older, thickbody imac and adding SSDs to it made a TON of performance improvement. Worth every moment.
Man thank you for everything you do. I own and operate a pretty successful hardware repair business. We've mostly been focused on phones and the occasional laptop here and there. Lately we've been taking in a lot more laptops and I do know how to do a large amount of repairs (including micro soldering at a pretty competent level.) But I have learned a lot from watching your videos at a much more advanced level. I particularly love the way you treat your viewers as though they are professionals, but aren't demeaning towards them like you have all of the answers. I have issues with most RUclips videos in this genre as most do one or the other.
But you just nail it. You're so warm and welcoming, but get straight to the point. Thank you for providing such valuable content for free and overall just seeming like a cool guy to grab a beer with. Truly hope your business and RUclips career continue to flourish. It's much appreciated by us shop owners in particular.
I like Your channel and tutorials. I appreciate the effort you put into details and explanation and keeping things simple . Keep up the good work. I have learned so much from your channel
I'm just watching this video over and over again. That's how good it is. 👍
Since I found your channel I’ve fixed 2 computers, a iPhone 8 , and looking to upgrade old builds! Great Content and explanations!
Regarding Internet Recovery and macOS versions, if you start it up with Opt-Cmd-R rather than just Cmd-R, it will install the newest version of macOS compatible with your computer.
I can't get it to install.
Useful tip. My 2015 junker booted El Cap and I made a usb of Monterey. Would have saved a night of tinkering!
Very nice video with specific instructions and detailed essential information. I really, really appreciate that. I particularly appreciate being able to actually see specific video shots of each step so that I am not left guessing about something that is assumed by someone who knows what they are talking about while I do not. Thanks for making it look like it is easy enough for me to tackle because I cannot afford a new iMac.
I have been watching your videos and especially like your honesty and no-nonsense approach to your tasks. You have a way of explaining things that is very interesting and informative. Keep up the good work, I prefer your approach to computer repairs and upgrades to all other youtubers!
I had thought to update my MAC for sometime but I initially was not encouraged. However watching your instructions, I took the plunge. The MX500 was on offer and it and the stickies were £80 on Amazon. The installation of the new drive took less than 10 minutes, with just the removal of the old glue taking a bit of time. The installation of the new software took around an hour with a further 90 minutes for the migration from the old drive. Very happy!
Appreciate both the clarity of your instructions and your attention to detail. 👍
Hello there , I just came here to say thankyou , I repaired a dead gaming laptop tonight (shorted cap on main power rail) , I watched some of your videos a while back and used what I learned in those vids to do this repair. Top bloke . Thanks again .
Thanks for posting the video it has given me confidence to have a go myself at this one. I have used other videos of yours to help repair a couple of macs as well. Keep up the good work mate!
Thank you so much Adam for this video tutorial. I followed each step and now my iMac run better than when it was brand new! I'm so happy, thanks mate!
Nice job on both the I-Mac and the tutorial. I've done this for both MacBooks and Minis but have
stayed away from I-Macs because of the whole screen (removal) issue. I may have access to
an I-Mac that I can purchase (cheap) and I now feel confident enough to install an SSD just
for the sake of hands on learning. I had no such interest or confidence in doing so until I saw
this excellent tutorial. Much gratitude to you !!!!!!!!!!!🇨🇦
This was a great help. I have just successfully installed an SSD in my wife's 2017 21.5" iMac. THANK YOU!!
This really couldn't have appeared at a better time...thank you very much.
this video was amazing, as someone who is used to do this type of jobs on Windows, Mac OS have always scared me a little, this video gave the confidence to start working on them, thank you so much!
I must say that your video was faultless. Concise and to the point.
Many Thanks
Regards from a Brit living in Germany.
I shall order the tape today and give it a go next week.
Perfect timing!
I’m scheduled next week to do an ssd upgrade on a iMac 2016. Boy am I nervous but you made it seem so calm and simple lol thank you for the video sir!
Well, how did it go?
awesome video! this gives me more confidence in attempting this much needed upgrade
Worked perfectly! Thank you so much for making this video. With a new SSD drive my iMac has a second life
This is the best tutorial for this that I've seen .. you are a perfectionist .. superb!
I just upgrade my 21.5" IMac. I could not have done it without your video/guidance. Thank you!
Nice work! I have done mainly mac mini upgrades and found that clearing the NVRAM (CMD+OPTION+P+R) before the first boot with the new SSD will not only speed up the initial boot, but avoid as well all kinds of Apple shenanigans once you are setting up the new disk.
I had also heard this, I did another one of these on the podcast last saturday and it took forever to boot from the macOS USB, and the NVRAM reset would've sorted this. It's not mission critical, but yas, good tip!
what would you press on a Windows keyboard?
@@yotoprules9361 You don't unfortunately. I have yet to find a Windoze keyboard that the Apple bootloader would accept. You just have to have an old, wired original Mac keyboard to evoke the 'option' selection menu. 😞
@@mwolfer1 the customer gave me the original keyboard so all was good.
Hiya thankies for this helpful video. In the shop where I work we tend to always recommend our customers that we really clean out the mac since it is one of the only moments you can really blow out all that dust that accumulate inside and creates this insulating fuzz inside of the machines. It will make the system even more quiet and slightly less warm. They tend to become hot as furnaces if you keep them all dusted in. ^^
learning a serious amount how to work on these now that I'm moving to Mac, thank you.
Excellent video! So much good information here. I would humbly add 2 things: First, a 16GB RAM upgrade is absolutely doable without removing the boards. Unscrew the T10 torx from the top of the board, right next to where the modules are (it twill give you just that little extra room to gently bend out the board a tad, don't go crazy though...) and with some delicate work you can pop the modules out and jimmy the new ones in there. I turned the imac 90 degrees, long edge up so it was right in my face, so to speak, and I got it done.
Second: at 19:10 as you are pulling on the left speaker it is worth mentioning BE CAREFUL of the power button wire, which is routed right there along the right edge of the speaker (visible also at 19:38). I made the mistake of removing the speaker completely, which wouldn't have been so bad but I didn't realize I tugged on the power wire lead and it broke off of the power button, argghhhh! I had to remove the power button and do a solder job to fix that.
Quality content my friend, i appreciate your professionalism and not giving into mediocrity, respect.
I just wish you lived in Canada. It's hard to get people to do what you do. They would rather I buy a used iMac that already has an SSD. You make it look so easy. I have a 2013 iMac and an SSD would make it just perfect. Thank you for making such a great video.
I'm not Mac guy nor do I own one but your video sure was an interesting one. I was riveted to the show the whole time. Thank you !
You forgot to show the most important thing. How it was running and opening apps and windows, before, with the HDD and at the end the same thing with the SSD.
I have discovered USB NVME enclosures and boy what an easy job of migrating they make it. You can set the NVME to clone off the old HDD while you are doing all of the technical work then just plug into the NVME slot or use it as a USB flash drive to copy onto the new drive. Great video!
Nice work as usual! No substitute for experience and skill.
I tried to install a 1 TB ssd in place of the fusion drive on my old 2012 imac. I made two major mistakes: I cut too deep at the top of the screen and severed some wires that lead to a distorted screen and mistake number two: when I took the screen off again to investigate I ruined the very delicate and way too short ribbon cable. I took it to a repair shop and they put in a 'seconds' screen and a new ribbon cable. It's not my main computer but it still works after 10 years.
Good clear presentation!
Love the videos. Thought I’d mention when doing internet recovery, depending on the key combination, option+command+R or option+shift+command+R you can get either latest macOS version compatible or macOS version that came on mac from manufacture or closest available. Not a criticism just thought maybe this would help someone in the future so I thought I’d plop it in the comments.
Outstanding video. Great job! Thanks.
After following your video I found it wasn't so frightening to remove the screen and replace it. I had already done a SSD install in my old iMac 2011 which made it super fast. On the old Mac I had done an external boot with a fresh install of High Sierra which was fantastic. I just took the SSD out of the box and put it into a new sata bracket and then booted- boot time was 24 seconds! There was no need for a new install of the mac os it was up and running. So after this experience I did the same on the 2019 iMac , preparing an external usb-c box with a fresh Ventura os to get rid of old files etc. Not as fast as I had hoped ( 59 sec) but at least faster than the internal fusion drive. Screen off and the SSD installed - and woww boot time is now 32 seconds and straight into the desktop. With the external drive boot done first there was no lagging to find the HD as it was already used to startup from the SSD. Sticking the strips of adhesive and screen replacement was really easy . Thank you for such a detailed video and giving me the courage to finally do this thing!
Hey Graham. Couple of tips if I may. Invest in a service wedge, it will solve the issue with the iMac screen wobbling about. Definitely get yourself a pizza wheel designed for the job as not only is it way quicker but it also sets the depth of cut. Couple of passes and voila. I'd refrain from the metal shim tool as it could scratch the back of the glass and that would show.
Surprising how many repair shops hate doing these, I prefer them to the older chunkier units.
Also slacken the hdd plastic tray screw and this allows more give on the cables for insertion. Only learnt this one the other week after countless swear words!!
Great video as always!
I just got a 27" iMac late 2015 from a second hand store and I'm excited to try this out.
17:10 -- It was cooler when Apple just used some magnets to secure the display. Made the older iMacs super easy to work on. You also used to have access to the RAM slots on the bottom of the iMac, so you didn't have to dismantle the whole thing. How times have changed.
The RAM slots are still easily accessible through a small hatch in the back panel.
@@hornplayer1228 Not on all models sadly, the retina models don't have any access
@@devinmillermedia iMac? I know they're accessible on the laptops but was sure they're not on the iMac
29:10 if you hold CMD + ALT + R you go to the internet recovery this way you dont need to make an USB boot stick
Excellent presentation, I just revamped my Mid 2011 iMAC with the Crucial SSD and 16 Gig of RAM. Tku Sir. P.S , I cloned my HD to the new SSD before the install.
Nice job Graham greetings from Australia..
Great video, nice to watch how you do repairs. I think the only thing different I do is not to peel the strips and fix screen until I have installed a new OS, I just tilt it back until i'm sure its 100%.
I converted the DVD drive drive on my 2009 iMac to an SSD boot drive a few years ago. Makes a big difference even with an ancient CPU. Mine has a Core i7 860; slow, but still works. That version was a thick boy with the magnet mount glass.
Super helpful video walkthrough. Thanks so much for these instructions! Subscribed and hit the bell :)
Great video! - I did a similar swap with my late 2015 27" iMac Retina - I installed a 1TB blade drive on the reverse of the logic board as it had the header for it (originally came with a fusion drive) and swapped out the HDD for a 1TB SDD.. I actually dual boot my iMac now as well - I run Fedora on the SSD and MacOS Monteray on the blade drive! - works great! :)
I have the same model, do you have video on how to do what you did?
The only thing I would say is be careful when cutting the adhesive strips and removing the LCD panel. I do it with iMac on it’s back supported by a cushion, this way gravity is on my side. If you do it with the iMac vertical & it slips out of your hand gravity takes over & you could do some serious damage to the LCD panel and/or connectors.
Thank you for this! Only thing I did different was Pre loaded my SSD by holding command r at at startup, disk utility, formatted my SSD, and restored from Macintosh HD (not Macintosh HD data, ignore that one it'll all load in under Macintosh HD when you restore). Then I selected my SSD in the external hard drive case I had as my startup disk and test drove it for a day. My fusion drive had lost over 100gb of data and was running really slow (it was clearly bad). After swapping for a SSD and ugrading from the 8gb of ram it had to 32gb its a new machine. Thanks for the walk through!
I agree. Had it done myself and my 2012 iMac was useable again.
Nice work.
I use to replace a lot of imac HDD with SSD at work.
I like the computer being horizontal when I take the screen out and when I put it back on.
MX500 are great SSDs, for those who would like to do the same, I don’t recommend using a cheap SSD because if it fails, you will have to start again the process and the new adhesive strips are much harder to cut than the original ones.
That's why you test the new SSD before sealing the screen. Even brand name SSD fail.
@@Bartetmedia
I was referring to the fact that cheap SSDs are prone to fail much faster.
Of course you can test the drive before sealing.
Long story short: use high quality drive because slim iMac are a pain in the a*s to open
I did something similar last year. 2015 27" 5k iMac.. had a fusion drive.. replaced that with an SSD from OWC, but realized there was a NVMe SSD.. so, bonus.. played with booting from both.. the new SSD was ultimately quicker, and better overall since most apps don't have the option to choose where to install.. but overall an easy process.
Excellent presentation and demonstration. You could probably use feeler gauges to part the adhesive tape just select the right size.
Really great video. Just done this but externally.
You are the best. Love your videos
Well done and best i seen .
Awesome video tutorial once again 🥰😇👍 Despite everyone moving to M.2 NVME drives ……. Upgrading from a HDD to a SATA SSD for the vast majority of users out there, will yield impressive boot / load times for everything from emails, office work, web browsing, gaming etc and the end user will be ecstatic over the speed improvement. This can feel like buying a new high end laptop or desktop device.
Our old 2010 iMac has failed and been replaced with a SSD and it’s like lighting.
I've done an HDD -> SSD upgrade on an iMac before, but it was before the screens were glued on! I had to use the suction cups to pull the screen off (it was held in with magnets, I think) and it wasn't that hard to then get to the drive 🙂
I had just used Carbon Copy Cloner to image the drive over, so the machine just booted up after I was done.
excellent tutorial
Inserting a wedge (foam?) between the leg and the back of the monitor would keep the monitor from tilting down and make it much easier to disassemble/reasembly.
The OWC install kits (contains everything) and video's are excellent
Thanks for posting such an informative video -- it will really help me with my process. Like many others, I too am getting parts together to upgrade the HDD in my 27" late 2012 iMac to a 2TB SSD. While I didn't hear you make specific reference to a thermal sensor -- for the SSD or HDD in your video, do you know if they are necessary when upgrading from the original (Apple) HDD? There is reference to a thermal sensor as part of a kit on both the OWC and iFixIt pages. It's a SATA interface cable with the sensor attached.
I want to say that I enjoy your videos and the way you do stuff. That said, macos? :) you got me puzzeled there hehe
If you iMac shipped with a Fusion Drive, you might consider replacing the tiny PCIe SSD drive (NVMe plus an Apple adapter) instead of the 2.5" SATA drive. This requires a lot more work (removing the speakers, main logic board, etc), but gets you a storage device running 4+ times faster than the SATA SSD. Certainly consider upgrading your memory (RAM) while you have the logic board out.
What I did with my 2017 iMac, is put in 2TB PCIe SSD and a 2TB SATA SSD. I even added a small $6.00 USD heat sync to my PCIe SSD, though that probably didn't ad much cooling capability. MacOS on the PCIe and Windows on the SATA., been installed for two years now, problem free.
I would also like to point out, when you go to blow out the dirt of any computer... do that outside, not inside the house... an iMac, or any computer, can dump a lot of dust you don't want inside..
This was excellent
watch out for the big capacitors in the power supply area, they can store high voltage for a pretty long time!
If you don't have one of the metal shims, maybe you can use hard plastic bottle. Just cut it with a point and you will have sharp material to cut with and it won't scratch the paint that much.
33:30 Doing a clean install of the OS will make the PC run faster, as it is with any computer, Mac, Windows, or Linux.
I thought you were going to image the MacOS drive and move it to the SSD, but apparently not.
Learned a bit again thnx.
nice video, thank you. any reason why I couldn't just boot off an external SSD vs replacing the 2017 27" IMAC HDD/Fusion with an internal SSD (with one in your video)? Would the performance be equivalent? Is the juice worth the squeeze?
This is a really great video, my only issue would be that it would be nice to see a clearer view of attaching and detached the monitor but apart from that this is well put
You can also buy opening kits for iMacs comes with the adhesive strips and a thin opening 'wheel'
really useful thank you very much
Thank you!! I’ll give it a go tomorrow when my ssd arrives! My hardrive’s failed in February and I took it to Apple Store and they kindly run a diagnostic program to check it for me! They didn’t have to! Such an Old machine in the middle of their beautiful shop!! 😂 but what can one do? it’s my baby! So I’ve decided to do it myself, only because I can’t afford paying for someone to do it. Otherwise, I would! I can’t wait! I’ve already removed the screen! And you were right, It had a lot of dust in there! Pretty dense! 10 years old iMac! By the way, It was scary to disconnect the ribbon connections from the screen, I didn’t want to damage it! but I got there!
Hmmm. You make it look so easy. I changed drives on my old Mac Pro (no problem at all, of course) and on my Macbook Pro, but I'm a bit reluctant to slice through things with delicate ribbon cables hanging about. Thank you.
Hi, thanks for the great video! I have a fusion drive and I was looking at the disk utility. It doesn't seem to split it into the small SSD and the large drive. It just says Macintosh HD and below it Macintosh HD-Data. Should everything just be erased ?
I use an electric air mattress inflator as a PC duster, works great and never had any issues with static.
I have two of these old imacs and was considering a RAM upgrade to boost performance but your video I think just saved me a huge amount of misery. I'll go SSD instead.
Good solid video but some advice for anyone new who is following this;
When removing the display - put the machine on its back, sometimes the screen/display can fall off once the adhesive is cut (faulty adhesive) and they're very expensive to replace, especially the 5k retina displays. also makes unplugging the cables easier.
A note, given the machine in this status was booting why not just image the drive from the HDD to an SSD? If using SATA to SATA should be relatively simple of course matching the capacity of the drive with a comparable SSD.
I had this done to my imac. £50 for the SSD and £200 to get it fitted. Well worth doing IMO.
I am surprised that you did not replace the CPU paste whilst you had this open, especially after saying it was a set and forget repalcement. Nice job over all though and a great video all the same.
Thank you for the detailed tutorial I Need to do this today after work but i dont have macOS on usb my current hard drive is failing and I totally need the upgrade
Excellent..
Hi I have a 27inch mac that I have not used for a while and now will not boot up. It switches on and the apple logo comes on but it stops loading when its 3/4 along the bar. It then shows a white no entry sign. I have used disk Utility and First Aid in recovery mode and It does not see the 3TB SSD. I have a 1TB windows partition on the drive and it boots up to that with no problems. I dont see the mac 2TB part of the drive when in windows. I wonder if the macos has lost its boot sequence or does not know where to find the boot sequence. I noticed that the disk utility information does not have in the mount box there is no info. ( I would have expected some sort of root like system/etc) I would appreciated your ideas on this and what would be the best way forward. I am competent in pc repair hardware, I just need some advice. Worst case is to change the ssd. Thanks. Great video BTW Russ
Another excellent video and explanation! Thank you. Can you pls do a similar video with Windows?
I shall consider this... I'm kinda still keeping an eye out for The Perfect Drive Imagine Software that's nice to use, free, and reliable. I currently use Drive Snapshot because it's got a lot of party tricks that are relevant to me for various reasons, but it also has a lot of quirks that make it hard to demonstrate.
I have a iMac (mid 2015) 5k 27inch, 32 gb 1600 mhz DDR3. Just wondering will this work on my system, mine runs very slow cause of the hard drive? Thanks
Hi, in what years did the 21.5" like that come out? Is that one a 27"? And, can the graphic card be fixed if there are Stripes in the picture, with hot air or something, or would it be senseless? And thanks for this video!
I would never open my iMac but it is interesring to see what’s inside, and a skilled technician at work. ☺️. ( I chose to add an external SSD. )
not sure what year the iMAC you are working on. When using the Monterey USB key to install, is it OpenCore with Patcher since you are going from HFS to APFS. Other than that , excellent video with migrating data back with Apple software. Let me know about the OSX software whether its new or OpenCore, or dosdude
Oh YIKES! Everything about this video was great except for a lulu of a mistake at one point! The memory modules are replaced by taking off the door on the back and slipping them in. Don’t remove the logic board! 🤣 Cheers and keep up the good work.
Thanks for that extremely helpful, as my iMac runs Big Sur should I download onto a flash drive this one, or let it download from the internet, regards mp
Hello! I really like your Videos they helped ne Out several times! But did you ever Made a ssd Upgrade on an MacBook Air 2019? The ssd is soldered on the Mainboard and i thought to buy a ssd Card and use These IC’s to replace the Original on the Mainboard! Have you any idea which ssd Card i can use to do this?
I’ve done a lot of hard drive upgrades but don’t do software upgrades as part of a hard drive upgrade; I simply use a drive cloner as it doesn’t involve me needing login credentials to copy data and I prefer to keep customers data private, especially being bonded as data security and integrity is a big thing. A hard drive upgrade is quite quick with a cloner and quite hands off, then I simply bag and return the old drive with the upgraded computer. I like older Macs as there quite professional and upgradable whereas new Macs are made to be near impossible for an owner to fix let alone upgrade. Apple even had to make their NVMe drives proprietary though thankfully adapters are made; those last models were the last Macs I’d personally use, though with upgrades it’s quite easy for most users to get away with Macs that are quite old. I run 3 MacBook Pros due to IT needs and their ability to work across platforms, like no Windows computer can do as well and this includes a legacy MacBook Pro from 2005 as in the commercial space systems can be quite old; I still fix a surprising number of machines that run XP which is OLD.
That shim tool looks so satisfying to use #ASMR
I read online that on the 27" you should install an nvme instead as the SSD upgrade sends the machine fan into hyperdrive and blows the main board??.. can I put an SSD in my 27" iMac late 2013??.
Great video , i have the same Imac , would it be possible to fit the ssd externally maybe plug into the rear ?
I did this to my mid-2010 iMac 27 after the HDD died. Hardest part was removing the screen and disconnecting the associated ribbon cables. Temp sensor for the HDD didn't work afterward, but I installed Macs Fan Control software and set the fans manually so no impact/issues. System is considerably faster with the SSD.
Hi I have a 2015 iMac 27" will it be the same procedure? as I find the computer to be getting slower as time goes on....