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Eugen Mezei

Suspended
Original poster
Mar 21, 2015
152
11
In an attac of rage :( I just smashed the glass of my iMac mid 2011.
After calming down: Which models have the same glass?
 
In an attac of rage :( I just smashed the glass of my iMac mid 2011.
After calming down: Which models have the same glass?

iMac 27" Late 2009, mid 2010, mid 2011 share the same glass. (model number: A1312).
I bought the glass (new OEM part) from a local shop for 40$. It was perfectly fit to my iMac 2009.
The glass itself is cheap, but the shipping cost is quite high comparing to the price of the item, because it's bulky and fragile. Extreme packing is required to ship this thing internationally.
The shops will have advantage here as they can buy per lot of 50pcs and save shipping cost.
 
I (temporarily) put the glass from my 2009 on it. It fits but it bulges a bit at the low part. What can it be?
 
Unfortunately when it broke the glass also chipped and scratched the LCD.
Is there any method to make those invisible?
The chip is big, so not much hope, but at least for the scratches?

I think of two methods:
1. How is the LCD built? Can I replace the upper sheet? (Did that with other LCDs, but those were not 27".)
2. Some liquid that fills the scratch and hast a light breaking index similar/near to the foil?
 
Unfortunately when it broke the glass also chipped and scratched the LCD.
Is there any method to make those invisible?
The chip is big, so not much hope, but at least for the scratches?

I think of two methods:
1. How is the LCD built? Can I replace the upper sheet? (Did that with other LCDs, but those were not 27".)
2. Some liquid that fills the scratch and hast a light breaking index similar/near to the foil?

Yes, you can replace the polarized film on the surface of the LCD. It's built just like any other LCD panel.
But considering that you can buy another 27" iMac (GPU broken) for 50~60$ and re-use its LCD panel, the option of replacing the polarized film is not quite viable to me.
Replacing the glued polarized film is troublesome.
 
Yes, you can replace the polarized film on the surface of the LCD. It's built just like any other LCD panel.
But considering that you can buy another 27" iMac (GPU broken) for 50~60$ and re-use its LCD panel, the option of replacing the polarized film is not quite viable to me.
Replacing the glued polarized film is troublesome.
Are the panels all the same in the late 2009 to mid 2011 (and maybe later) models? I read different opinions on the internet.

You speak easily, but where I live these iMacs are still expensive.
 
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