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titamerello

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Aug 4, 2021
4
0
Hello.
I have a Macbook Pro 2010 running High Sierra. I changed the HD for a SSD and upgraded RAM a few months ago and it was working fine.
Today I turned it on and it chimes shows the apple logo and loading bar then it turns off, then it turns on and does the same.
I've tried:
- Apple recovery.
- Reset VRAM/PRAM/SMC
- Boot from old HD
- Reinstall from original DVD
Nothing worked.
What is the next step?
Help please.
 

Amethyst1

macrumors G3
Oct 28, 2015
9,584
11,846
Boot in verbose mode by holding Cmd-V after powering on and try to see what it says (perhaps by recording a video of it) just before rebooting.
 

titamerello

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Aug 4, 2021
4
0
This is booting in verbose mode. See attached video.

 

DeltaMac

macrumors G5
Jul 30, 2003
13,692
4,533
Delaware
This is most likely a graphics card failure. The GPU is on the logic board, and is not separately replaceable.
The Fix - is replacing the logic board. (At least you don't have a 2011 - with the radeon GPU. Not that it makes a difference now...
 

OnAir

macrumors newbie
Apr 9, 2021
2
0
Hello.
I have a Macbook Pro 2010 running High Sierra. I changed the HD for a SSD and upgraded RAM a few months ago and it was working fine.
Today I turned it on and it chimes shows the apple logo and loading bar then it turns off, then it turns on and does the same.
I've tried:
- Apple recovery.
- Reset VRAM/PRAM/SMC
- Boot from old HD
- Reinstall from original DVD
Nothing worked.
What is the next step?
Help please.
You mention that you upgraded the RAM. Have you tried removing and re-seating the RAM in case of a bad contact.
Also try with a single RAM board installed, try both, installed alone just to rule out a failed RAM board.
Can you start in Single-User mode (Press Command + S after pressing the power button)?
If so try this command line solution: as shown here

Or again in Single User mode try this command which will disable switching to DGPU:
sudo pmset -a gpuswitch 0
 
Last edited:

titamerello

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Aug 4, 2021
4
0
This is most likely a graphics card failure. The GPU is on the logic board, and is not separately replaceable.
The Fix - is replacing the logic board. (At least you don't have a 2011 - with the radeon GPU. Not that it makes a difference now...
I think I do have radeon GPU!
I saved the following info from before the computer stopped working:
Processor 2GHz Intel Core i7
Memory 4G 13333 MHz DDR3
Startup disk HD
Graphics AMD Radeon HD 6490M 256 MB. Intel HD Graphics 3000
Does this mean my computer is a 2011 and not a 2010 like I thought?
How does this change things?
Thank you for your help.
 

Audit13

macrumors 604
Apr 19, 2017
6,863
1,834
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
I think I do have radeon GPU!
I saved the following info from before the computer stopped working:
Processor 2GHz Intel Core i7
Memory 4G 13333 MHz DDR3
Startup disk HD
Graphics AMD Radeon HD 6490M 256 MB. Intel HD Graphics 3000
Does this mean my computer is a 2011 and not a 2010 like I thought?
How does this change things?
Thank you for your help.
Your MacBook would have to be a 2011 to have a Radeon GPU.

I had a 15" 2010 and it had an nVidia dGPU.

Once the Radeon onboard dGPU has failed, you will need to permanently disable the Radeon or replace the logic board. The far better option is to disable the Radeon and look for a replacement MacBook.
 
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titamerello

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Aug 4, 2021
4
0
So, it turned out that I was confused and my mac is 2011.
I disabled the Radeon and it works now. We'll see how long it lasts.
 
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