The fact that he gave them all away was surprisingly uplifting. Like at the end of this 20 minute video, there was some actual human connection that benefited people.
Hey Luke, just wanted to let you know that I love your videos. I actually started to do some of my own repairs and fixes. Lately I have been given a few older 21.5 iMacs and also a mid2012 MacBook Pro i7. I have managed to put 2 iMacs out of 3 together, upgraded the ram and just gave one to a 12 year old student who really needed one. Another laptop went to a very deserving lady and lastly I kept the MacBook Pro. It didn’t work at first but all it took was a new hard drive. I chose a Samsung 500 G SSD and while I had it open, I also upgraded the RAM from 8 to 16 G. I should tell you, I’m a woman in my sixties and never had any kind of computer tech training. Your videos have taught me lots and have given me the confidence to at least try to fix something. Thanks for doing a great job!
Just read your post Monika and I’m in awe.... you’re fantastic. Hope your well, and ok with the for once non computer virus running amok. Take care, and keep repairing stuff!
@Luke Miani You can remove the EFI lock by removing a chip on the logic board, reprogramming it with the TL866II Plus EEPROM Programmer, and soldering it back on. There are instructional videos on YT explaining the procedure.
Luke, if you would have sold them I would have thought what a cool business move. But you gave em away??? That's just straight classy Luke. You have more of my respect now.
This video was A+, truly outstanding from start to finish. Have been learning how to upgrade and repair some of the vintage apple desktops in my collection which, include an all-in-one G3 5500, G5 20 inch imac, white Intel 24 inch imac, and 2010 mac mini (the last model with a built-in DVD super-drive).
I'm a PC guy that started working for a school district. I have little to no experience with Macs. I was tasked with going through the district's stock of iMacs that were sitting unused in a storage building. I have been watching your videos to get some ideas on how to get these refurbished for sale to district employees. They are mostly 27" 2009-2011 iMacs with a few 21.5 inch black back and aluminum back models in the mix. The EFI password lock was a problem until the IT director found his password stash from when he was a tech and I am now able to get into those and load High Sierra on them. A few of the 27" iMacs are newer (2012??) and thinner than the CD/DVD versions, Catalina is installing just fine on those. It has been a great learning experience and I decided to set a couple of the 27" models aside for myself (Core i5 model). I just want to say thanks for all your videos, it has made my job just a little bit easier and I can appreciate going through so many computers trying to get them to a usable state.
Can you contact the university you bought them from? Somewhere the IT department probably has a spreadsheet with the serial numbers and their respective EFI passwords
@@NoahRubinCoding Ah I'm very sorry to hear that. Depending on distance you might be able to talk to them in person? As from experience sometimes the person on the phone is not actually connected to the person with the information! It's how I got so many things sorted with my department
EdgyShooter unfortunately, they were too far away to see in-person. Luke and I actually briefly considered taking a road trip down there, but it just wasn’t worth it.
good on you Noah and Luke for donating the iMac's you restored to charity. You could of made a profit but instead you gave to others, noble of you two.
Luke, this was an awesome video. I loved that you showed you can buy these macs, and get a good portion of them in working order. Then the fact that you decided to donate them to people who could really use them was very cool. Plus the interaction with your fans. Nice job man 👌
“Scary fan(s)”. I’m glad you diagnosed so quickly as a fan problem. I would have been concerned it was about to blow up. So glad that these Macs found new use in a second life to teach young people about building and repairing computers. The return on investment was higher than the bottom line $$. Congratulations on a successful exercise.
Nice video! I had a 2009 24" iMac for a long time, then my dad had it for years, and currently my aunt is using it. It's been great! I upgraded the RAM to 6GB from the highest amount, which was supposed to be 4GB, but it turns out that RAM technology keeps going after a computer has been produced, so this is a thing that can happen. The hard drive died about halfway through my use of the machine, but thanks to Time Machine, it was an easy fix (with a new hard drive). What a great value, even though I paid full price for the thing! I'm familiar with the connector that they didn't put back into place from when I had to replace the hard drive. It's amazing how the screen comes off with just a few suction cups, what a great design! Currently I'm on my second Mac Mini since the iMac, but I'm using three 30" Apple Cinema Displays, the same one you did a video on, and they work great, although once in a while I have to jiggle the connection to the white brick. Anyway, I enjoyed your video, keep up the good work!
I purchased a 2015 i5 Imac on ebay. It arrived in a box that was way too big with a corner of the machine poking through the box with the display panel chipped. It was also EFI locked. I paid close to $800 for this machine and the quotes for repairing the display were close to $450 and I would still have an EFI locked Mac. I was about to return it but I had an idea. What if I could just repair the machine myself? I contacted the seller and he was willing to cover the $450 display repair cost so I took that money and bought the tools and parts I would need to repair the display, remove the EFI chip, re-write the EFI chip and upgrade the hard drive to a larger drive that was SSD. I found a laptop motherboard at a thrift store and started practicing removing and re-installing chips using my new re-flow station. It was fun and now if I ever run across a smoking deal on a decent Mac that has this issue, I have all the tools and the experience to handle it.
The EFI Lock is usually removed by holding down the power button with the iMac unplugged and then removing all Ram and reinstalling them one at a time. Has worked every time for me with iMac's.
Take the motherboard out and change the fan. Its not hard to do and its easier if there are 2 of you. Just be aware of the power supply as there is no cover on the front of it. Just ensure that the big capacitors have discharged before you attempt to remove it.
You can "save" a loud/ceasing fan by injecting a drop or two (just fil that MoFo up;-) of oil into bearing, if it has soft/rubber cover and you can reach it with hypodermic needle and injection, just use regular light oil for bicycles/powertools/sewing machines/workshop tool sleeve bearings, or ANY engine oil if else is not available. It will run for another year or two.
for those EFI locked, you could replace the chip, or reprogram them. But maybe that's outsidde your skill range? If you learned that, the yield from this would be much higher. And totally doable as well
Buying in lots is the best way to refurbish iMacs. As long as you could get them cheaply. You could salvage parts from several broken iMacs to build a working iMac.
Nice that 14 I-Mac's are refurbished again, they look great,. There is also one standing in the social workplace where I worked, Perhaps now there are more, kind regards.
Nice work, Luke! From a guy who used to run a Mac hardware interest group in college (Anyone want to work on a G3, G4 or G5?) I really appreciate what you're doing. Now you just have to meet another UA-camr like Louis Rossman who actually likes doing Mac hardware repair (he gets more than he'd like it seems) and you got a 3rd leg to this creative team!
EFI locks didn't seem to be disclosed in the listing. Unless the seller told you that some may have EFI locks, I'd ask for a partial refund from the seller. Escalate to eBay if they don't offer any compensation. Also, anyone who got an iMac can look into seeing if the DosDude1 patch works to bump those up to a newer OS.
Once upon a time I bought a retina MacBook Pro with a an EFI Lock, I returned back and then bought another one without any problems. However, I started to do my research and somewhere in the internet I found that using an Arduino board and some basic electronics, the Arduino can be used as a keyboard for trial and error in order to unlock the EFI, sure, it will take around a couple of weeks, but, in theory it can be done. The other workaround was to unsolder and reprogram a surface mounted chip, and without the expertise I felt that it was too risky, however I think that the hack with the Arduino may work. Nice video as always, I´ll be looking forward for your "I bought 50 Mac pros' video =). Regards from México ! Happy New Year!
Great video! I know you've already given most of the machines away but here's a tip for future purchases: I suggest you getting a BIOS-flashing tool, there are really cheap ones like the CH341 (which costs like $10) that work very well to remove BIOS passwords with. You don't even need to solder off the chip If you also buy either cables that plug into the JTAG connector (only works on Retina MBP/Air/MacBook 12 seeing as older models don't have soldered on JTAG connector) There are also cables that you clip onto the BIOS-chip legs which works for most iMac & older MacBook Pro's) The process of removing the password is extremely simple aswell, all you need is a software to read the BIOS-file (CH341 does ship with the software) and a HEX-editor such as HxD :-)
You are on your way to being an Apple reseller. I can relate to the difficulty of plugging those display cables back in. They are a pain in the ass. I am too old for that
You're the reason I have a MacBook. I watched your video on how to get one on eBay in the for parts section and got mine for $160. Your videos have been so inspiring to me, much love all the way from Jamaica.
HELP! My iMac mid-2011 SSD upgrade took a LEFT turn ... what went WRONG? Background: - I used can air to blow the dust off the inside. The can was new and cause a little frosting on the metal parts. - I did NOT use a grounding strap. I live in Florida with HIGH humidity. I also touched the case many times and should have been at the same electrical potential. - I used a USB/Drive adapter and pre-installed High Sierra (your suggestion) on the SSD and booted off the external drive for operational test - The iMac booted off the internal HDD in 54 seconds I followed OWC's and YOUR videos for removing the HDD and installing the SSD. With the SSD installed the iMac ends with a BLACK screen: 0:02 Audio chime 1:18 WHITE screen 1:54 Apple Logo appears (sometime with the status bar ONLY going to ~50%) 2:05 BLACK screen and nothing else appears on the screen With NO Drive installed the iMac finishes with a question mark (?) inside the icon folder: 0:02 Audio chime 1:48 WHITE screen 2:24 FLASHING folder with (?) question mark Troubleshooting: - Replaced the SSD with the original HDD ... same results :( - Attached HDD via USB/HDD adapter and enabled the boot OPTION screen ... same result even with recovery selected I am NEW to iMac repair. With that said, the following is deduced: - 4 cables/connectors must be connected otherwise the monitor would NOT function - iMac system see the HDD and/or SSD (based on booting from optional source) - The system is SLOWED way down based on boot time data YOUR THOUGHTS are HIGHLY APPRECIATED!
Detailed answers to your questions are available on the Apple website. Here is a brief solution : 1. The new drives must be correctly partitioned and formatted into a format that Apple uses ( Ex. Mac OS Extended Journaled) 2. You need installation media, the installer can help with easily formatting. I would suggest making one, you can Google for instructions on how to do this. 3. Question marks means that a Hard Drive has not been selected. : With Mac's you can resolve most issues in recovery mode. Recovery Mode includes all of the tools that you will need to solve problems such as yours. However, You must own at least one licensed copy of Mac OS to be able to install free OS upgrades. For this you can buy a Installation CD or official USB installer, you will also need to create an Apple iCloud ID, and be sure that you memorize the password, or you could end up with a whole new headache. Finally, everything you need is available on support.apple.com/ Once you learn the basics of Mac OS you will grow to love it. While I love the value of inexpensive hardware with PC's, nothing can compare to the software experience provided by a Mac.
I have a late 2012 iMac that's in amazing condition and fully specced out. I was debating selling it and use the funds to put towards a new computer in the works. How much do you think I could sell it for? A lot of those websites quote me as $400-550 for them to buy it, however, I know they just plan to resell it after they inspect it, despite it already being in a like new condition (literally, no scratches, cracks,no performance issues, nothing whatsoever negatively impacting it). Was planning to use the funds for either a new mac, or for a custom built PC. Kind want it for some gaming now, so leaning towards the custom built PC.
Louis Rossmann cant fix connecting a cable ? what kind of joke even is this. Louis Rossman microsoders the tiniest connectors with a microscope, with full diagnosis. if he cant fix it, shit is really fucked. and not just efi locked or with disconnected display cable xD
It’s sooooo easy to remove a firmware password Press command-option/alt and R and P before turning on. Keep holding till you hear the chime 5 times. Hold power button to turn off... Boot back into internet recovery or your recovery drive I really hope this helps anyone. Jay.
I can’t part with my mid 2007 iMac that still runs. Can’t upgrade past 10.6.8 but it still connects to most internet sites and is functional. The original hard drive died 10 years ago and it has been running on externals ever since. One power replacement last year and this past week i installed a replacement LCD panel from eBay. At this point for me it’s all about how much longer I can keep it running.
This used to be my job, you did not buy virgin returns, I used to sell my rubbish on ebay too ... one of the first to break and sell them in parts for more than a new imac :)
I live in Chicago. I saw right when you posted on Twitter about the meet & greet, I really wanted to go but unfortunately couldn’t make it work out. I don’t even want an imac, I already have too many macs/macbooks because of your videos, I just really wanna meet you some day.
hey luke, i’m very curious to know how exactly a EFI lock happens on a macbook and if it’s preventable? a long while ago i bought a macbook pro from 2012 and it gave me a flashing folder with a question mark on it and i had no idea what to do so i bought another one. however i later learned it had to do with the hdd(i don’t know much about computer hardware just how to properly use one) so i’m curious if you(or someone in the comments) could let me know how you get EFI locked and what to do to prevent it, if you can. thanks in advance.
It's moderately easy to remove EFI lock. Buy a CH341A+CLIP find the bios chip underneath the audio flex cable. Connect the clip onto the EEPROM, dump the firmware using CH341a Black edition. By NSC. Open with a Hex editor and search for "$SVS" and if you are unsure about replacing the exact amount. You can copy and paste the area from an unlocked Bios. Dosdude1 has a video on this.
Luke, I love your channel and your videos. I got into Mac’s because of my job. I love what you do with these. How do you begin? How do you even come across the great deals you find?
Try to Reset or Disable with Firmware Password Utility. Reboot the Mac and hold down Command+R to enter recovery mode. At the Utilities screen, go to the Utilities menu bar item and choose “Firmware Password Utility” Select to turn the Firmware Password to OFF.
with the net boot one take all ram out plug it in power it on let it beep a shit ton then pull the cord pluig ion 1 stick of ram and an official apple keyboard and hold pram
This isnt really the place to ask but you would probably know so that’s why I’m asking. When you completely reset a 2009-2011 iMac does it update and re install a fresh version of it?
Just garbage picked a working iMac 27" (2011) i7 2600 [3.4GHz], 8GB, 2TB and AMD Radeon 6970m 2GB. No scratches, minor scuffs on keyboard and mouse. My first Apple in a long time.
Loved the guy with the Powerbook, such a creative idea to take a photo with content creators you like.
it was in so vanilla condition... amazing
He looks like young Jack Black 🤪
I thought that part was so awesome too.
Awww he was a sweetheart
Those bezels have really slimmed down over the years 😂
The fact that he gave them all away was surprisingly uplifting. Like at the end of this 20 minute video, there was some actual human connection that benefited people.
Good comment!
broo you spoiled me
Hey Luke, just wanted to let you know that I love your videos. I actually started to do some of my own repairs and fixes. Lately I have been given a few older 21.5 iMacs and also a mid2012 MacBook Pro i7. I have managed to put 2 iMacs out of 3 together, upgraded the ram and just gave one to a 12 year old student who really needed one. Another laptop went to a very deserving lady and lastly I kept the MacBook Pro. It didn’t work at first but all it took was a new hard drive. I chose a Samsung 500 G SSD and while I had it open, I also upgraded the RAM from 8 to 16 G.
I should tell you, I’m a woman in my sixties and never had any kind of computer tech training. Your videos have taught me lots and have given me the confidence to at least try to fix something. Thanks for doing a great job!
Just read your post Monika and I’m in awe.... you’re fantastic.
Hope your well, and ok with the for once non computer virus running amok.
Take care, and keep repairing stuff!
Well done! I’m so glad that some older people are willing to try and learn about technology!
@Luke Miani You can remove the EFI lock by removing a chip on the logic board, reprogramming it with the TL866II Plus EEPROM Programmer, and soldering it back on. There are instructional videos on YT explaining the procedure.
Next time: „I bought 16 Mac Pros“
No the entire Ebay website
I’m expecting the Trashcan Pros would be flooding the market soon. Once everyone gets the new cheese grater Pros
@Andi LP Just upgrade a 2012 mac pro with 5690s and a rx5700. you'll have the same amount of power XD. In a better overall machine.
Check out my series :) 12 Faulty Macs | Repair | Diagnostics | Testing | Can i Make a Profit? | Part 1 ua-cam.com/video/wpLYmpm5L2Y/v-deo.html
F*cking heavy then😂 especially for the old tower ones
Luke, if you would have sold them I would have thought what a cool business move. But you gave em away??? That's just straight classy Luke. You have more of my respect now.
This video was A+, truly outstanding from start to finish. Have been learning how to upgrade and repair some of the vintage apple desktops in my collection which, include an all-in-one G3 5500, G5 20 inch imac, white Intel 24 inch imac, and 2010 mac mini (the last model with a built-in DVD super-drive).
when you say "This video is A+" are you referring to CompTIA?🤔
I'm a PC guy that started working for a school district. I have little to no experience with Macs. I was tasked with going through the district's stock of iMacs that were sitting unused in a storage building. I have been watching your videos to get some ideas on how to get these refurbished for sale to district employees. They are mostly 27" 2009-2011 iMacs with a few 21.5 inch black back and aluminum back models in the mix. The EFI password lock was a problem until the IT director found his password stash from when he was a tech and I am now able to get into those and load High Sierra on them. A few of the 27" iMacs are newer (2012??) and thinner than the CD/DVD versions, Catalina is installing just fine on those. It has been a great learning experience and I decided to set a couple of the 27" models aside for myself (Core i5 model). I just want to say thanks for all your videos, it has made my job just a little bit easier and I can appreciate going through so many computers trying to get them to a usable state.
Can you contact the university you bought them from? Somewhere the IT department probably has a spreadsheet with the serial numbers and their respective EFI passwords
EdgyShooter we gave them a call but they were unwilling to help 😔
@@NoahRubinCoding Ah I'm very sorry to hear that. Depending on distance you might be able to talk to them in person? As from experience sometimes the person on the phone is not actually connected to the person with the information! It's how I got so many things sorted with my department
EdgyShooter unfortunately, they were too far away to see in-person. Luke and I actually briefly considered taking a road trip down there, but it just wasn’t worth it.
@@NoahRubinCoding That is a shame, but thanks for the additional details, hope it was a fun project!
That's a great suggestion, Thanks so much for commenting this...
good on you Noah and Luke for donating the iMac's you restored to charity. You could of made a profit but instead you gave to others, noble of you two.
Luke, this was an awesome video. I loved that you showed you can buy these macs, and get a good portion of them in working order. Then the fact that you decided to donate them to people who could really use them was very cool. Plus the interaction with your fans. Nice job man 👌
“Scary fan(s)”. I’m glad you diagnosed so quickly as a fan problem. I would have been concerned it was about to blow up. So glad that these Macs found new use in a second life to teach young people about building and repairing computers. The return on investment was higher than the bottom line $$. Congratulations on a successful exercise.
The firmware password is super simple to bypass on those newer iMacs, you just need the firmware password utility. Takes like two minutes to fix.
Years ago you had great Ideas but were a little naive, now i m actually learning from your video.
Congrats man for your improvements in tech!
Nice video! I had a 2009 24" iMac for a long time, then my dad had it for years, and currently my aunt is using it. It's been great! I upgraded the RAM to 6GB from the highest amount, which was supposed to be 4GB, but it turns out that RAM technology keeps going after a computer has been produced, so this is a thing that can happen. The hard drive died about halfway through my use of the machine, but thanks to Time Machine, it was an easy fix (with a new hard drive). What a great value, even though I paid full price for the thing! I'm familiar with the connector that they didn't put back into place from when I had to replace the hard drive. It's amazing how the screen comes off with just a few suction cups, what a great design! Currently I'm on my second Mac Mini since the iMac, but I'm using three 30" Apple Cinema Displays, the same one you did a video on, and they work great, although once in a while I have to jiggle the connection to the white brick. Anyway, I enjoyed your video, keep up the good work!
I purchased a 2015 i5 Imac on ebay. It arrived in a box that was way too big with a corner of the machine poking through the box with the display panel chipped. It was also EFI locked. I paid close to $800 for this machine and the quotes for repairing the display were close to $450 and I would still have an EFI locked Mac. I was about to return it but I had an idea. What if I could just repair the machine myself? I contacted the seller and he was willing to cover the $450 display repair cost so I took that money and bought the tools and parts I would need to repair the display, remove the EFI chip, re-write the EFI chip and upgrade the hard drive to a larger drive that was SSD. I found a laptop motherboard at a thrift store and started practicing removing and re-installing chips using my new re-flow station. It was fun and now if I ever run across a smoking deal on a decent Mac that has this issue, I have all the tools and the experience to handle it.
Subscribed. As an electrical engineering student I’m loving watching these videos.
This is so great man.
I’m glad you got so many of them working and wish I was closer so I could have come to hang out with you guys for the day.
I think that would be a great experience as well...
11:57 i don't know it's so meme-able
yes it looks like a sitcom intro
😂 so true
@@BehradDavoudi Now you said that I can't stop hearing the "too many cooks" song for some reason xD
Well you can certainly turn it into a GIF.
It became one on Reddit
The EFI Lock is usually removed by holding down the power button with the iMac unplugged and then removing all Ram and reinstalling them one at a time. Has worked every time for me with iMac's.
We addressed that in the video, that only works on pre-2011 Macs
Take the motherboard out and change the fan. Its not hard to do and its easier if there are 2 of you. Just be aware of the power supply as there is no cover on the front of it. Just ensure that the big capacitors have discharged before you attempt to remove it.
Can’t believe I got to meet THE Luke Miani in person 😮 too bad I didn’t get an iMac though...
Hey Noah
noah you are a cutie
James gae
@@pfpvita fr
@@eeeeeeeee9381 ya
Well done! Gave me a new appreciation for the couple of "old" iMacs we have stored in our apartment.
That was a fun video to watch! You did better with the deal than I initially thought you would...
Pretty easy to fix the locked ones. Re-install OS, if firmware is still locked then take RAM out try to boot, turn off, and put back in. ^^
You can "save" a loud/ceasing fan by injecting a drop or two (just fil that MoFo up;-) of oil into bearing, if it has soft/rubber cover and you can reach it with hypodermic needle and injection, just use regular light oil for bicycles/powertools/sewing machines/workshop tool sleeve bearings, or ANY engine oil if else is not available. It will run for another year or two.
for those EFI locked, you could replace the chip, or reprogram them. But maybe that's outsidde your skill range? If you learned that, the yield from this would be much higher. And totally doable as well
I did not expect that ending, so nice of you guys! Keep up the great work ;)
Buying in lots is the best way to refurbish iMacs. As long as you could get them cheaply. You could salvage parts from several broken iMacs to build a working iMac.
For the 2011s you can reprogram the EFI chip using a raspberry pi, flashrom and a SOIC-8 CLIP :)
Do you have a link to a guide for this?
@@jscorpio1987 search the web for: macbook efi bios programming flashrom
Very informative. Gives me the courage to buy a used iMac. Thanks.
So amazing that you gave them away. Especially glad the charity/non-profit guys got one.
Man, You're underrated, really! Why just 150.000 Subs?! You really deserve over a Million!
First pile of mackbook pros and now imac wonderful content you are superb luke keep it up...love from Nepal❤❤🗻🗻
I'm so happy you gave them away! What a wholesome end to a great video :)
Nice that 14 I-Mac's are refurbished again, they look great,. There is also one standing in the social workplace where I worked, Perhaps now there are more, kind regards.
Nice work, Luke! From a guy who used to run a Mac hardware interest group in college (Anyone want to work on a G3, G4 or G5?) I really appreciate what you're doing.
Now you just have to meet another UA-camr like Louis Rossman who actually likes doing Mac hardware repair (he gets more than he'd like it seems) and you got a 3rd leg to this creative team!
Nice job guys! Very good of you to give them away. Keep up the the great work.
Great video Luke! Your so genuine it definitely shines through on your content 😃
Love love love micro center. Good job Luke thank you for your service.
This is really sweet. Love that you chose to give back.
EFI locks didn't seem to be disclosed in the listing. Unless the seller told you that some may have EFI locks, I'd ask for a partial refund from the seller. Escalate to eBay if they don't offer any compensation.
Also, anyone who got an iMac can look into seeing if the DosDude1 patch works to bump those up to a newer OS.
The EFI trick worked for me with my old pre 2011 iMac! Thank you. Loved the video and would have loved to come out and meet you (:
Once upon a time I bought a retina MacBook Pro with a an EFI Lock, I returned back and then bought another one without any problems. However, I started to do my research and somewhere in the internet I found that using an Arduino board and some basic electronics, the Arduino can be used as a keyboard for trial and error in order to unlock the EFI, sure, it will take around a couple of weeks, but, in theory it can be done. The other workaround was to unsolder and reprogram a surface mounted chip, and without the expertise I felt that it was too risky, however I think that the hack with the Arduino may work.
Nice video as always, I´ll be looking forward for your "I bought 50 Mac pros' video =). Regards from México ! Happy New Year!
Great video!
I know you've already given most of the machines away but here's a tip for future purchases:
I suggest you getting a BIOS-flashing tool, there are really cheap ones like the CH341 (which costs like $10) that work very well to remove BIOS passwords with.
You don't even need to solder off the chip If you also buy either cables that plug into the JTAG connector (only works on Retina MBP/Air/MacBook 12 seeing as older models don't have soldered on JTAG connector)
There are also cables that you clip onto the BIOS-chip legs which works for most iMac & older MacBook Pro's)
The process of removing the password is extremely simple aswell, all you need is a software to read the BIOS-file (CH341 does ship with the software) and a HEX-editor such as HxD :-)
That was AWSOME Luke nice gesture mate
Crouch
"We got a screen! That's refreshing!" I see what you did there. 😂
You are on your way to being an Apple reseller. I can relate to the difficulty of plugging those display cables back in. They are a pain in the ass. I am too old for that
17:20 OMG those bezels!
You're the reason I have a MacBook. I watched your video on how to get one on eBay in the for parts section and got mine for $160. Your videos have been so inspiring to me, much love all the way from Jamaica.
Thanks for putting a chuckle in my day,
shout out to Noah. 😁
HELP! My iMac mid-2011 SSD upgrade took a LEFT turn ... what went WRONG?
Background:
- I used can air to blow the dust off the inside. The can was new and cause a little frosting on the metal parts.
- I did NOT use a grounding strap. I live in Florida with HIGH humidity. I also touched the case many times and should have been at the same electrical potential.
- I used a USB/Drive adapter and pre-installed High Sierra (your suggestion) on the SSD and booted off the external drive for operational test
- The iMac booted off the internal HDD in 54 seconds
I followed OWC's and YOUR videos for removing the HDD and installing the SSD.
With the SSD installed the iMac ends with a BLACK screen:
0:02 Audio chime
1:18 WHITE screen
1:54 Apple Logo appears (sometime with the status bar ONLY going to ~50%)
2:05 BLACK screen and nothing else appears on the screen
With NO Drive installed the iMac finishes with a question mark (?) inside the icon folder:
0:02 Audio chime
1:48 WHITE screen
2:24 FLASHING folder with (?) question mark
Troubleshooting:
- Replaced the SSD with the original HDD ... same results :(
- Attached HDD via USB/HDD adapter and enabled the boot OPTION screen ... same result even with recovery selected
I am NEW to iMac repair. With that said, the following is deduced:
- 4 cables/connectors must be connected otherwise the monitor would NOT function
- iMac system see the HDD and/or SSD (based on booting from optional source)
- The system is SLOWED way down based on boot time data
YOUR THOUGHTS are HIGHLY APPRECIATED!
Detailed answers to your questions are available on the Apple website. Here is a brief solution : 1. The new drives must be correctly partitioned and formatted into a format that Apple uses ( Ex. Mac OS Extended Journaled) 2. You need installation media, the installer can help with easily formatting. I would suggest making one, you can Google for instructions on how to do this. 3. Question marks means that a Hard Drive has not been selected. : With Mac's you can resolve most issues in recovery mode. Recovery Mode includes all of the tools that you will need to solve problems such as yours. However, You must own at least one licensed copy of Mac OS to be able to install free OS upgrades. For this you can buy a Installation CD or official USB installer, you will also need to create an Apple iCloud ID, and be sure that you memorize the password, or you could end up with a whole new headache. Finally, everything you need is available on support.apple.com/ Once you learn the basics of Mac OS you will grow to love it. While I love the value of inexpensive hardware with PC's, nothing can compare to the software experience provided by a Mac.
Nice to see Noah back again on the channel! Great video guys
I love these bulk mac videos 😩
I have a late 2012 iMac that's in amazing condition and fully specced out. I was debating selling it and use the funds to put towards a new computer in the works. How much do you think I could sell it for? A lot of those websites quote me as $400-550 for them to buy it, however, I know they just plan to resell it after they inspect it, despite it already being in a like new condition (literally, no scratches, cracks,no performance issues, nothing whatsoever negatively impacting it).
Was planning to use the funds for either a new mac, or for a custom built PC. Kind want it for some gaming now, so leaning towards the custom built PC.
Louis Rossmann got rid of his ancient stockpile of iMacs he couldn't fix.
Lol true
Louis Rossmann cant fix connecting a cable ? what kind of joke even is this. Louis Rossman microsoders the tiniest connectors with a microscope, with full diagnosis. if he cant fix it, shit is really fucked. and not just efi locked or with disconnected display cable xD
Ebay: Yo Luke, how many iMacs u want fam
Luke: YES!
I remember seeing that lot of iMac on eBay
that was awesome giving those imacs away like that well done mr. miani
The second guy is a natural presenter....so charismatic! haha
Awww it's really sweet seeing these computers go to good homes!
You could probably use the i7's on the EFI locked units for the working ones if they're socketed..
It’s sooooo easy to remove a firmware password
Press command-option/alt and R and P before turning on.
Keep holding till you hear the chime 5 times.
Hold power button to turn off...
Boot back into internet recovery or your recovery drive
I really hope this helps anyone.
Jay.
@D. A. I fix apple products and this has worked countless times.
Jay.
D. A. 🤔what Mac are you trying to fix.
Jay.
@D. A. so, your not trying to fix an imac or macbook firmware lock?
I can’t part with my mid 2007 iMac that still runs. Can’t upgrade past 10.6.8 but it still connects to most internet sites and is functional. The original hard drive died 10 years ago and it has been running on externals ever since. One power replacement last year and this past week i installed a replacement LCD panel from eBay. At this point for me it’s all about how much longer I can keep it running.
More power to you Anakin!
you guys should come visit Shenzhen. In some stores refurbished Mac computers pile up like mountains.
No big deal to pull the Atmel security chip if you're good with a soldering iron and a chip puller.
Zappin' the PRAM. Haven't seen that since I was a kid! Good times.
This used to be my job, you did not buy virgin returns, I used to sell my rubbish on ebay too ... one of the first to break and sell them in parts for more than a new imac :)
I live in Chicago. I saw right when you posted on Twitter about the meet & greet, I really wanted to go but unfortunately couldn’t make it work out. I don’t even want an imac, I already have too many macs/macbooks because of your videos, I just really wanna meet you some day.
Great Job Luke Thanks For Being So Generas
hey luke, i’m very curious to know how exactly a EFI lock happens on a macbook and if it’s preventable? a long while ago i bought a macbook pro from 2012 and it gave me a flashing folder with a question mark on it and i had no idea what to do so i bought another one. however i later learned it had to do with the hdd(i don’t know much about computer hardware just how to properly use one) so i’m curious if you(or someone in the comments) could let me know how you get EFI locked and what to do to prevent it, if you can. thanks in advance.
That was fun to watch i hope all those who came and pick a broken imac will be able to fix them 👍
the table in the beginning makes me so nervous
Lovely gesture fellas!
It's moderately easy to remove EFI lock. Buy a CH341A+CLIP find the bios chip underneath the audio flex cable. Connect the clip onto the EEPROM, dump the firmware using CH341a Black edition. By NSC. Open with a Hex editor and search for "$SVS" and if you are unsure about replacing the exact amount. You can copy and paste the area from an unlocked Bios. Dosdude1 has a video on this.
Faith restored in humanity (the last segment). Thank you!
Tbh the older iMacs make pretty decent external monitors, along with the Thunderbolt Display
Fantastic content Luke! 👍🏼 😎
Luke, I love your channel and your videos. I got into Mac’s because of my job. I love what you do with these. How do you begin? How do you even come across the great deals you find?
Try to Reset or Disable with Firmware Password Utility. Reboot the Mac and hold down Command+R to enter recovery mode. At the Utilities screen, go to the Utilities menu bar item and choose “Firmware Password Utility” Select to turn the Firmware Password to OFF.
WoW, I wish we Brits were as generous as you .. Hope all enjoyed their giveaways and it help them in some form. Stay Safe ..
I had the EFI problem.
You could get to internet recovery and use the firmware password utility.
Every time I hear November I get severe World War flashbacks
I love my 2011 iMac. I put an SSD in years ago and upgraded the ram. Sad it doesn’t get updates that I can get on my slower MacBook Air.
*You can use Dosdude1’s Mac OS Catalina Patcher to install Mac OS Catalina on unsupported macs*
I love Micro Center, I wish they were around
Awesome Video, Thanks so much... Please keep doing what you do...
A lady near me just sold a mix of 13 Mac Books, iMacs, and Power Macs for $300 a few them worked.
Its good you saved those...what a waste to recycle them...i still use imac early 2008 with catalana (patched) and im totally happy with it!
with the net boot one take all ram out plug it in power it on let it beep a shit ton then pull the cord pluig ion 1 stick of ram and an official apple keyboard and hold pram
This isnt really the place to ask but you would probably know so that’s why I’m asking. When you completely reset a 2009-2011 iMac does it update and re install a fresh version of it?
Just garbage picked a working iMac 27" (2011) i7 2600 [3.4GHz], 8GB, 2TB and AMD Radeon 6970m 2GB. No scratches, minor scuffs on keyboard and mouse. My first Apple in a long time.
Did that 6970m stay working?
seeing them being given away made me feel great inside! :) one day I'll get a Mac lol fingers crossed
Coming up: Luke Miani teaches UA-cam how to clean packing peanuts.
Next video: I bought a broken Amazon, can we fix it?
Nice little hip hop version of "Skylark". :)
Nicely done! Good job.
This is awesome! Loving the videos, keep it up!!!
For EFI lock, look for something call "SCBO" on google