i would mostly want to clean the insides from dust, so I‘m wondering on what you guys think.
I thought the same, even went to the Apple spec page to search for the word “Kensington”, but no mention. It would have been an odd location for the lock anyway.I thought that was a Kensington lock slot...
But to be honest, judging by the few animated shots of the internals when they showed the fan blower airflow, I can tell the boards and protruding ports are quite crammed together, to the point I doubt if that “sandwich” of internals can even be slid out straightly when the bottom lid is opened. Since the fans and heatsink chamber that would need cleaning the most is the furthest into the chassis “bowl“, I do think it won’t be easy, to answer your original question.Yeah, that's exactly what I was thinking when I saw that little hole. On the Mac Mini you are supposed to remove the "black disk" on the bottom part, it just kinda clips off, and then you can unscrew it.
Hopefully, a similar system will be available in the Mac Studio. I can't even imagine a reason why they wouldn't make it at least accessible-ish to the average consumer.
If the top of the case is a separate part can that come off, then their product shots are hiding the seam really well. To me the entire chassis looks like a bowl of aluminum with only the very bottom side having an opening.Maybe it’s a hole to push up the top part of the case? I can’t imagine trying to go through the psu to do any work.
Yeah, I'm hoping that this is the case, but since the PSU is exposed (?), wouldn't that make it dangerous which would then mean that Apple doesn't want us to open it at all?Maybe it’s a hole to push up the top part of the case? I can’t imagine trying to go through the psu to do any work.
Maybe I’m thinking of the renders, so I could be wrong.If the top of the case is a separate part can that come off, then their product shots are hiding the seam really well. To me the entire chassis looks like a bowl of aluminum with only the very bottom side having an opening.
That’s also what I’m concerned with. I would think having an exposed PSU would be a bad hazard, let alone having to go through it to do any maintenance.Yeah, I'm hoping that this is the case, but since the PSU is exposed (?), wouldn't that make it dangerous which would then mean that Apple doesn't want us to open it at all?
Let’s wait and see, it’d be silly to make a literal sealed box when their other products are openable (some with more difficulty than others).Well if it's a desktop that can't be opened, I literally will not be buying it... And maybe I'll just wait for the Mac Pro, which we will probably be able to open?
Seriously, to think that Apple would design a desktop Mac that can't be opened, based on the Mac Mini (which can be opened), in 2022, even to dust out the fans just a little, is ludicrous.
I need to dust my desk on basically a daily basis, since a lot of dust gathers there even though I vacuum a lot, and that's the one thing I hate about Macs. I've used my iMac Pro in the studio and there's a lot of people there, which makes more dust, and the insides kinda get clogged from it and then the iMac Pro becomes more audible, which is horrible in a studio environment. There's also isolation foam and various carpets etc., in music studios, and this can get full of dust as well.
So to think they would actually design a Mac Studio that can't be opened and CLEANED just a little is mind-boggling.
Sorry for the huge rant lol, and HOPEFULLY I'm wrong and we will be able to access just a little.
Yeah, I'm kinda getting angry in advance, but it's mostly due to my experience with the iMac Pro, which is a fantastic device, except when it gets clogged with dust, and you have to take it to a specialized store to clean, or risk breaking the screen and other components if you want to dissasemble it on your own.Let’s wait and see, it’d be silly to make a literal sealed box when their other products are openable (some with more difficulty than others).
I wouldn’t know how they would assemble such a thing.
Actually taking assembly and the size of components into account, I’m certain the bottom comes off somehow. The PSU and fans look too big to fit through the circular part.
View attachment 1970795
From this image of the bottom side of the Studio, the top left pill-shaped hole looks like a place for a plying tool to yank the whole plate down out. There are no screw holes, or the round shaped areas don't seem to have seams, so it is a mystery as to how this whole mechanism works.
At least this "bottom opening" must be there for assembly, the question is how user accessible this is.
I remember trying to upgrade the RAM in my G4 mini gen 1, couldn’t do it myself and brought it to a shop. The guy used one of those disposable plastic knives you get from a lunch box to pry it, he obviously knew what he was doing but it still took him more than 10 minutes just to get the bottom off.The first Mac mini was designed in a way that you‘d need a Putty knife to open it up. Studio may well be history repeating …
I did the same - and it was terrifying - I had two putty knives, one on each side, and they were bent to 90 degrees and the casing still didn't move. It felt like either the casing was going to give, the knife blades were going to snap and the shrapnel would embed in the ceiling!I remember trying to upgrade the RAM in my G4 mini gen 1
Well, yes, you could do that, but it wouldn't be advisable. If you don't hold the fan blades in place it can cause static electricity issues and basically make your new Mac Studio useless.The easiest way to clean dust will be to take it outside and give it a good blow through. If you have compressed air cans, use those, otherwise a good few solid puffs will probably do it.
I use compressed air from divers tanks, a couple of 300bar squirts of that generally blows dust out from everywhere!
I've been blowing dust out of equipment with fans using air from a diving tank for nearly forty years* without any problems.Well, yes, you could do that, but it wouldn't be advisable. If you don't hold the fan blades in place it can cause static electricity issues and basically make your new Mac Studio useless.
Anecdotal and doesn’t apply here, i.e. you were lucky.I've been blowing dust out of equipment with fans using air from a diving tank for nearly forty years* without any problems.
*Not non stop, I do other things in my life as well
So I've been lucky on the [literally] thousands of computers I've cleaned with compressed air?you were lucky.