but I was curious what make (mfg) and size HDD did you eventually install? Or did you just replace it with another 250GB? Needless to say, this will be the last iMac of this vintage I work on.Ĭwa107, Sorry if I missed it. At the very least, they could have used a heavier gauge material and less glue. There are better ways to do RF shielding without resorting to tin foil. For the premium prices Apple gets for these things, the design is inferior (at least for this generation). Clearly it was designed to be disposable (not service friendly at all). I have to say I was a bit disappointed in the construction of this machine. Thankfully, I have some left over foil tape from an HVAC job, so I should be able to put it back together again. Once you get into the main assembly, the service manual has you peeling back tin foil tape, which just doesn't work, it must be cut in certain places.
They must be released with a special tool (roughly the same shape and thickness as a credit card, but bent at the top). I watched a tutorial online which completely misses the latches that are at the top of the machine.
Fortunately, I had the service manuals (although the person who wrote them must have a bad crack habit).
Well, finally cracked the case on this thing - what a job. I only want to have to open this beast once, since it's not exactly the easiest case to open. Thanks in advance for any opinions or thoughts you might have.
If yes to the previous question, any particular model you recommend? I was thinking of going with another WD, but a Blue edition - primarily to keep the temps down. Do you agree with my assessment that I'm dealing with a bad HDD (the machine is only 2 years old and the drive is a Western Digital 250GB).Ģ. Although it was fairly slow to do so, it did successfully backup (I let it sit overnight).ġ. I booted the machine in Target Disk Mode and made a SuperDuper backup. Discouraged and thinking I had a bad hard drive, I closed the Installer, which warned me against doing so, but I had no choice since I was leaving work and the machine had to come with me.Īt this point, I'm fairly certain I'm dealing with a bad or failing hard disk. It got about 2 hours into it and was reporting that it would take another 28 hours to complete! So, I let it sit another 2 hours and the status remained virtually unchanged. So, I attempted to do an Archive & Install. Ran the AHT in extended mode, but it found no problems. Ran diagnostics, but the program kept quitting during the surface scan. I booted up using a Tech Tool Pro 5 disc.
Verify/Repair Disk and Permissions reported no errors, but the machine still wouldn't boot (also wouldn't boot in Safe mode). I booted into single user mode, ran an fsck and later booted off the System Discs and ran Disk Utility.
A day later, the customer brought it into me - when he tried to boot it up to download/run Onyx, the machine would simply sit on the blue screen just before the Mac OS X splash screen would normally pop up. The customer originally complained that it was extremely slow, I advised them to run Onyx and do the maintenance tasks. It's a 2.16GHz, 1GB Intel Core 2 Duo machine running Tiger. So, I'm working on an iMac for a customer that is exhibiting some rather odd behavior.