Virtually forever, unless something happens to it.how long the logic board of an MBP should last?
For an MBP that shows no sign of damage, and hasn't be damaged, does anyone know how long the logic board of an MBP should last?
Thanks!
Many thanks Juicy Box. Mine lasted 4 years on my MBP. Never damaged, never dropped. Found it strange that to gave up the ghost.
They must’ve missed mine!Apple precision-engineers every part of a product to last forever.
Haha, according to the authorised Apple repairer I haven’t either.
Better than my local Apple Store on all accounts. They failed to diagnose anything. Twice. 🤨The authorised repair shops are unfortunately not always the best.
Better than my local Apple Store on all accounts. They failed to diagnose anything. Twice. 🤨
Just a quick thought.Apple Store geniuses are generally best-in-class experts. What did the authorised repair shop diagnose as the problem?
Just a quick thought.
After 35 years as a senior level biomedical engineering tech I applied for an in-store Genius and online support tech position. Apple interviewed me but they didn't take me. I often wondered why. I thought it might be the NIH (not invented here) syndrome where they want people they can train instead of experienced people. Any thoughts?
Yeah, I went over it for a while. And then dropped it. I understand Apple's side but I figured getting someone who had demonstrated technical abilities would be a no brainer. I went for the in-store position first (Apple Genius) and it's possible my physical qualities weren't in line with the "image" they were looking for. OK by me. I understood. They did send me a rejection email so I credit them for that. But the online one was the one I couldn't figure. The process of solving a technical problem is pretty much universal so there wasn't much question about my being qualified. Never heard back.I'd honestly lean towards your conclusion being broadly right. I don't think NIH applies, but Apple wants people who have a willingness to learn and quickly adapt to Apple's best practices that heighten customer experience. Perhaps you signalled something in your application (or interview, if you got one?) that didn't align with exacting requirements and standards.
I use an old one to keep my jeep from rolling down the driveway. I suspect it'll hold that Jeep for 10 years, at least.For an MBP that shows no sign of damage, and hasn't be damaged, does anyone know how long the logic board of an MBP should last?
Thanks!
Most often it is over heating. Placing flat on couch, bed linen, that blocks the vents and slowly kills it.Haha, according to the authorised Apple repairer I haven’t either.
DecadesFor an MBP that shows no sign of damage, and hasn't be damaged, does anyone know how long the logic board of an MBP should last?
Thanks!
You were probably perceived as over qualified.Just a quick thought.
After 35 years as a senior level biomedical engineering tech I applied for an in-store Genius and online support tech position. Apple interviewed me but they didn't take me. I often wondered why. I thought it might be the NIH (not invented here) syndrome where they want people they can train instead of experienced people. Any thoughts?
Or under-compliant. I've dealt with Apple Geniuses and while they were competent (they solved my problem) the "genius" vibe wasn't there. Online, it's mostly the rep doing decision trees and escalations. I didn't get the impression that they were particularly well versed in the technical aspects of Apple products. I often knew more than they did. That's partly what made me hope Apple would take me on.You were probably perceived as over qualified.
Power supplies sometimes do not age well. That's why I always preferred devices with a discrete PS. My oldest piece of electronics is my Heathkit digital clock. It's going to be 52 next year. Running pretty much continuously. With circuit traces a whole lot wider than they are now, older chips last virtually forever.Things happen and individual components may fail in any piece of technology. I have a 2003 PowerBook that is still going strong but my last Intel MacBook Pro, a 2020 model, suffered a logic board failure after only two years. I suspect that it was something with the charging circuitry as it ran well until it suddenly would not accept a charge. It finally quit when the battery was depleted, never to start again.
Other than the mentioned GPU failures I can’t think of any widespread flaws plaguing these systems.
Lol. No. However, with good cooling, quality voltage regulation, and quality chips, capacitors, etc it shouldn’t have a specific expiration date. I assume you said that tongue in cheek, because electronic parts do in fact wear outApple precision-engineers every part of a product to last forever.