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appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
Hiya,

I need a bit of help. I am planning to go on vacation next month to Hong Kong and I'm thinking on buying an iMac while I'm there. But I was wondering if it's possible (not to mention safe) to take it back home with me? Has anyone tried this out before?

I'm not sure how this exactly works. If anyone can offer advice it would be greatly appreciated.

Many thanks.
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
Hey Wellander,

I live in Dubai (don't know if you've heard of it)... it's basically in the Middle East.

Cheers
 

EricNau

Moderator emeritus
Apr 27, 2005
10,730
287
San Francisco, CA
What is your reasoning for buying an iMac in Hong Kong?

Is there any other way you could obtain a Mac (online stores, phone, etc.)? If so, I would go with that.
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
A couple of reasons to be honest. For one, it's pretty difficult to find a Mac in the city and second, if you do manage to find one they cost about as double their average worth. I'll be saving about 40% if I buy overseas. And since I'm travelling to Hong Kong I thought it might be a good try if I get the iMac from there itself.

I'm afraid there are no online stores selling Macs in this country, let alone through phone.
 

Wellander

macrumors regular
Mar 24, 2006
157
0
Huntington Beach Ca
Hi,
Thanks for the reply.
Is the power the same?
Are the outlets that you plug items into the same?
And yuo might want to see what you are allowed to bring in to your country (as far sa laws).
Other then that I do not see a problem with it.
B.T.W. Is it cheaper for you to buy it there?
 

dmw007

macrumors G4
May 26, 2005
10,635
0
Working for MI-6
appletime said:
A couple of reasons to be honest. For one, it's pretty difficult to find a Mac in the city and second, if you do manage to find one they cost about as double their average worth. I'll be saving about 40% if I buy overseas. And since I'm travelling to Hong Kong I thought it might be a good try if I get the iMac from there itself.

I'm afraid there are no online stores selling Macs in this country, let alone through phone.


To save 40% it sounds like a good idea to buy an iMac in Hong Kong- as long as you will not have any problems getting it back home to Dubai. :)
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
Wellander said:
Hi,
Thanks for the reply.
Is the power the same?
Are the outlets that you plug items into the same?
And yuo might want to see what you are allowed to bring in to your country (as far sa laws).
Other then that I do not see a problem with it.
B.T.W. Is it cheaper for you to buy it there?


Heya,

I thought the iMacs were given a Universal power cord?

From www.apple.com/imac (under tech specs):

Electrical and environmental requirements

* Meets ENERGY STAR requirements
* Line voltage: 100-240V AC
* Power cable Frequency: 50Hz to 60Hz, single phase
* Maximum continuous power: 180W
* Operating temperature: 50° to 95° F (10° to 35° C)
* Storage temperature: -40° to 185° F (-40° to 85° C)
* Relative humidity: 5% to 95% noncondensing
* Maximum altitude: 10,000 feet

Dubai runs on 220 volts so I reckon that the machine will work fine?
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
dmw007 said:
To save 40% it sounds like a good idea to buy an iMac in Hong Kong- as long as you will not have any problems getting it back home to Dubai. :)


Hey there,

Yes, I do believe its a good idea, however I'm just not sure how to put it into action. Will I declare the iMac as a carry on when I arrive at the airport?
 

dmw007

macrumors G4
May 26, 2005
10,635
0
Working for MI-6
appletime said:
Hey there,

Yes, I do believe its a good idea, however I'm just not sure how to put it into action. Will I declare the iMac as a carry on when I arrive at the airport?

That sounds like that should work. I certainly would not want it stowed underneath the plane as it could easily become damaged (I know what they can do to suitcases, not to mention computers :eek: ). :)
 

skubish

macrumors 68030
Feb 2, 2005
2,663
0
Ann Arbor, Michigan
appletime said:
Heya,

I thought the iMacs were given a Universal power cord?

From www.apple.com/imac (under tech specs):

Electrical and environmental requirements

* Meets ENERGY STAR requirements
* Line voltage: 100-240V AC
* Power cable Frequency: 50Hz to 60Hz, single phase
* Maximum continuous power: 180W
* Operating temperature: 50° to 95° F (10° to 35° C)
* Storage temperature: -40° to 185° F (-40° to 85° C)
* Relative humidity: 5% to 95% noncondensing
* Maximum altitude: 10,000 feet

Dubai runs on 220 volts so I reckon that the machine will work fine?

Sounds like the power will be OK but you will probably have to buy an adapter for the plug if it is different from Hong Kong.
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
dmw007 said:
That sounds like that should work. I certainly would not want it stowed underneath the plane as it could easily become damaged (I know what they can do to suitcases, not to mention computers :eek: ). :)


Haha, yeah. Do airlines usually allow personal computers as a carry on? I know the 20 inch iMac weighs around 10kg and the 17 inch around 7kg.

And hey, you're from Lebanon. Not too far from Dubai. Ahlan! :)
 

dmw007

macrumors G4
May 26, 2005
10,635
0
Working for MI-6
appletime said:
Haha, yeah. Do airlines usually allow personal computers as a carry on? I know the 20 inch iMac weighs around 10kg and the 17 inch around 7kg.

I am pretty sure that you can bring it aboard as a carry on item (call the airline and check to see if this will be okay first). On my recent trip to Miami, Florida I brought two laptops with me (iBook G4 & MacBook Pro) so I am pretty sure you could bring one iMac onboard with you.

appletime said:
And hey, you're from Lebanon. Not too far from Dubai. Ahlan! :)

Yes, I am from Lebanon- Lebanon County, PA, USA. :D
 

Macky-Mac

macrumors 68040
May 18, 2004
3,704
2,796
if it meets the size requirements for the airline you're traveling then you can carry it on

one thing to consider though, what's the warranty coverage on an imac as far as where it's covered? I know portables have a worldwide warranty but I thought Apple's desktops were only covered in the country of purchase which would mean that you might have to send it back to HK for warranty service........better check that out
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
dmw007 said:
Yes, I am from Lebanon- Lebanon County, PA, USA. :D


Oops, sorry there buddy! :p Pretty cool to know that there's a place called Lebanon in PA.
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
Macky-Mac said:
one thing to consider though, what's the warranty coverage on an imac as far as where it's covered? I know portables have a worldwide warranty but I thought Apple's desktops were only covered in the country of purchase which would mean that you might have to send it back to HK for warranty service........better check that out


I'm not sure, exactly. Isn't Applecare's warranty worldwide?
 

dextertangocci

macrumors 68000
Apr 2, 2006
1,766
1
appletime said:
A couple of reasons to be honest. For one, it's pretty difficult to find a Mac in the city and second, if you do manage to find one they cost about as double their average worth. I'll be saving about 40% if I buy overseas. And since I'm travelling to Hong Kong I thought it might be a good try if I get the iMac from there itself.

I'm afraid there are no online stores selling Macs in this country, let alone through phone.

Don't they have a kind of generic Apple Store in Dubai (the Macstore I think it's called)?
 

appletime

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 15, 2005
50
0
dextertangocci said:
Don't they have a kind of generic Apple Store in Dubai (the Macstore I think it's called)?

Yeah, there's a Mac store in one of the malls here. But the prices are so much higher than what the original prices are it's somewhat frustrating to purchase from the shop.
 

mduser63

macrumors 68040
Nov 9, 2004
3,042
31
Salt Lake City, UT
appletime said:
I'm not sure, exactly. Isn't Applecare's warranty worldwide?

Yes, I believe AppleCare is worldwide. If you're going to take your iMac as carry-on, you're going to want to take it out of the box and put it in some kind of smaller case. The box is much too big for carry-on, but the iMac itself isn't too bad. There's a case called an iLugger that's specifically made for carrying iMacs, but I'm not sure if you'd be able to buy one of those.
 

dextertangocci

macrumors 68000
Apr 2, 2006
1,766
1
appletime said:
Yeah, there's a Mac store in one of the malls here. But the prices are so much higher than what the original prices are it's somewhat frustrating to purchase from the shop.

Yeah, same here in South Africa.
 

Eidorian

macrumors Penryn
Mar 23, 2005
29,190
386
Indianapolis
mduser63 said:
Yes, I believe AppleCare is worldwide. If you're going to take your iMac as carry-on, you're going to want to take it out of the box and put it in some kind of smaller case. The box is much too big for carry-on, but the iMac itself isn't too bad. There's a case called an iLugger that's specifically made for carrying iMacs, but I'm not sure if you'd be able to buy one of those.
I believe this comment has cropped up before but the 17" iMac somehow manages to meet carry on size. Still, your milage may vary.

AppleCare on laptops was the only one with worldwide coverage. They might have changed this to include desktops recently though.
 

generik

macrumors 601
Aug 5, 2005
4,116
1
Minitrue
mduser63 said:
Yes, I believe AppleCare is worldwide. If you're going to take your iMac as carry-on, you're going to want to take it out of the box and put it in some kind of smaller case. The box is much too big for carry-on, but the iMac itself isn't too bad. There's a case called an iLugger that's specifically made for carrying iMacs, but I'm not sure if you'd be able to buy one of those.

Hang on there a second, I was afraid someone would say just that.

Applecare is worldwide for laptops only, for desktops they are country specific. There was a previous poster on MR forums who brought his iMac from US to the UK and got hit by exactly this when he tried to send it in for servicing.

I am not too sure if the normal warranty coverage is country specific as well, but Applecare is definitely out (ie: you can't buy Applecare from Apple US and have it work in the UK for desktops)
 

mduser63

macrumors 68040
Nov 9, 2004
3,042
31
Salt Lake City, UT
generik said:
Hang on there a second, I was afraid someone would say just that.

Applecare is worldwide for laptops only, for desktops they are country specific. There was a previous poster on MR forums who brought his iMac from US to the UK and got hit by exactly this when he tried to send it in for servicing.

I am not too sure if the normal warranty coverage is country specific as well, but Applecare is definitely out (ie: you can't buy Applecare from Apple US and have it work in the UK for desktops)

Thanks for the correction. Personally I find this sort of stupid on Apple's part. Just sounds like a way to save money at the expense of their customers.
 
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