I always thought it would be hard to upgrade my iMac’s hard drive. It was unbearably slow. I watched your video and you made it look like wouldn’t be a huge mountain to climb. I followed your video and replaced my old HDD with an SSD and it’s like night and day. Just wanted to say thanks for making the videos you make.
At my job, we have 6 employees that each use a 2012 iMac. Running 40+ hours a week, 25 weeks a year, and we have never once and a problem with any of them.
Just replaced the hard drive in my wife's (late 2015) 21.5 inch iMac with a Samsung 860 EVO 500G SSD because it was, as you say, abysmally slow! Wow! Is all I can say! It is as fast as may 27 inch iMac now. Thank you Luke!
@Leo Fitch I used the adhesive strip kit from Ifixit. Had all the tools, and went together mostly perfectly. One piece caught on something and I just tore it off. But, the display is still firmly in place, and computer still roaring along. I'd do it again. I'm sure it would be easier the second time.
I work in computer recycling and pull drives from these machines often. This model went from my most worrisome to the easiest. I use the corner of a flat razor to cut the adhesive as the pizza cutter thing gets weak after only a few uses. But I'd really like to warn against leaning out the screen before cutting the bottom adhesive as I've seen them crack using this method. I lay it on it's back and pick up the screen a small amount, using the pizza cutter to cut the adhesive from the front as I firmly but gently pull up and away. Breaking the front glass is bitch since it's adhered to the lcd panel like a phone.
Luke, it would be a good idea to warn people working on some i-Macs that the power unit is left uncovered with a high risk of shock from capacitors. This typically happens when cutting the adhesive on the bottom of the screen.
Did a similar process to mine from an iMac from the recycling center. I got an SSD for it and it’s blazing fast on macOS Sonoma. Intel macs still have life in them
Btw, you can also upgrade it by using an external SSD so that you don’t have to open it up. What I did was just tape the external to the back of the stand. Then go into boot switcher mode and select the external
God bless you Luke. Just did this today with a 1TB SSD and my formerly slow, spinning beachball imac that I was *this* close to recycling for a new one is SMOKING FAST now. Everything is faster. Initial start up. App launches. Switching between apps. Web browsing. SATA to USB cable for the pre-cloning made things super easy.
We've got a late 2013 21.5" iMac with exactly the same specs and had the same hard drive issue, it just got slower and slower up to the point where it was unusable, I took a slightly different approach to fixing it, I used an SSD in an enclosure connected by USB and set that as my drive disk, it works perfectly now, the reason I didn't take the screen off is because mine has a small crack on one corner, it doesn't affect the viewing area but my worry was making it bigger, a new screen is in the region of £300.
@@willm5032 If I had an iMac like that, then I wouldn't mind about the access to the motherboard and other parts. Of course there was a program that I had from school, where you would get points for your parents to shop. The points rewards was actually giving away those all in one iMacs. This was years ago.
This dude is the reason I bought a late 2013 27" iMac in 2020, and I use it more than my 4K TV. It still runs so well, I haven't even upgraded it yet. But it's nice to know it's not too hard to do so, if I want to.
Nicely done. I have a late 2012 21.5 inch with 8GB of RAM that I decided to retire because I wanted something newer and much faster. But this information is great because I can actually do a couple of upgrades to it and give it to my teenager, who needs a new computer as well and wants a Mac. Thanks for an informative video!
Alex jones I’ve been in others to flip older ones mostly newest was a 2013 like Luke’s. I just get funny when its actually my personal machine and the logic board costs as much as an older iMac does whole lol. I’ll build up the courage eventually.
I just finished restoring this exact model. All spent was time. I already have a buyer for $450. I reformatted the HD, installed Catalina, and it's running great. Alternately, you can skip opening the machine up, and just run the OS from an external SSD, plugged into the USB port.
It is great that you are helping people to save money, while keeping the earth clean. There are so many people tossing out stuff that still has life left. This is in many facets of life.
If you want to skip the introduction and explanation, go to 3:45 to get straight into the tutorial! I've also seen a good amount of comments asking about hard drive thermal sensors so I'll answer that here: In 27" iMacs (which use 3.5" drives) You need a special thermal sensor cable or the fan will run at full speed; you can also use Macs fan control to manually override this if you don't want to spend $40 on the cable. The 21.5" iMacs use 2.5" laptop drives and do not need that cable, you can just plug n' play
Solder a 1K ohm resistor to the thermal sensor ports is a cheaper alternative to purchasing a new thermal sensor. Just solder it and put a heat shrinking tube over and the fans will be at lowest possible speed when the Mac's in idle. It works great for me!
I took the liberty of a quick Google search and I believe I found that brush on Amazon. Search for “OXO Good Grips Electronics Cleaning Brush”. It’s $5 US.
Luke Miani I bought a mid 2010 27”iMac it has the i3 3.2ghz processor 12 gigs of ram, I need to put new glass on it, I’m running High Sierra and everything works fine however I was wondering how hard is it to put in a SSD hard drive in it before I put the glass back on thank you for your help
Big thanks man, I got a 21.5 imac, it's a late 2015, picked it up used last year for $600, it was getting super slow, replaced the drive for an SSD and hold shyt man it is ten times faster!!! Big thanks!
@Leo Fitch My display works and looks great, zero issues. I ordered the adhesive off amazon, the one that Luke put in the description, worked great. That adhesive kit is good because the strips are numbered, so you just start on one side of the unit with strip number 1 and then just go 2 3 4 5 until the end so you are putting the right on in the right spot.
Install it on a hard drive that you put inside a mac, install macos that way, take the drive out, clone the drive to a machine with enough storage, and use a usb to sata adapter, everytime you get a new machine you want to upgrade, plug the new ssd into the usb to sata dongle, clone the image back to the new ssd and you are good to go, and you can restore the same image millions of times! Thats how i do it
Collin Berke That is a very simple procedure if you have a SATA drive dock. There are many dozens of them available, they are fairly inexpensive, and you will find so many uses for one you should really own one. It allows you to physically attach and mount, typically via USB, a bare drive such as a new SSD to your computer. This empty drive now appears on your desktop and a macOS installer can be downloaded to your computer and installed onto that bare drive. Just launch the macOS installer and select the new empty drive instead of your computer’s internal drive as the install location. The Apple installer will guide you and you will find it very straightforward. Then, once installed, you can restart your computer using the new drive, still mounted in the external dock, and migrate your settings and data from the internal drive. Your new SSD will be ready to put into your computer and will require almost nothing to run. Your Mac will tell you how to ‘migrate’ your old drive’s data using an app already installed by the OS. If you have any questions, just do an Apple help searches for “install macOS on external drive” and “system migration”. All the info for this exists right in your Mac’s help system.
Put the SSD in the iMac, go grab a free copy of Carbon copy cloner. Turn the iMac on holding down the letter T key, this makes your iMac a slave drive. Use whatever Mac you wish to clone from, hook-up your firewire cable between both machines, run carbon copy cloner, set your preferences, select the drives, click copy, now go grab something to eat. If both drives are SSD it’ll be pretty quick depending on their storage size. When you’re done if you have similar machines, eg iMac to iMac etc then it’ll boot with mostly no issues. However, say you use a 2011 MBP to 2012 iMac in that scenario upon completion, power down everything, then on the iMac run Recovery and do another install of the OS from that, DO NOT WIPE THE HDD, just re-install the supporting OS and when that’s done you should be good to go.
I did a 2009 iMac about 5 years ago. Installed SSD and maxed out the ram. I have been running Linux Mint. A lot faster than the standard HD. The screen was magnetic which made it easier to remove the screen. With each newer version of Mint less hardware issues. The issues I had early on was a few keys on the keyboard were inoperative. Now the with the latest Mint the only key that was not working was the eject key for the DVD player. Did a one line script for eject and have that in an icon on the action bar. Everything else works great. A good used iMac is a bargain for a nice looking desktop.
I installed an SSD in my 8 GB 2013 iMac. It took me multiple tries to install the OS and download the iCloud backup, but once it was done the machine came alive and now works like a new one. I upgraded to Catalina, which I never hoped to be able to do. Booting up used to take so long I would usually go make a coffee in the meantime. Now it is so quick I hardly have time to adjust my seat. Applications open super fast. Great advice, thanks!
Fantastic! For $30 it’s totally worth the risk of screwing it up to get a Mac you can use for several more years. I did an ssd upgrade to my 2009 27” iMac a few years ago. It’s a secondary computer now but still going strong. It had magnets to hold the screen on which made it even easier.We need to give more tech a second life instead of throwing it in landfills. Good job 👍
WillThePlank that’s a bummer, haha yup the ssd upgrade was harrowing enough (at the time it was my main mac) I don’t think I’d have the chops to upgrade the graphics, probably hard/impossible to find the parts now anyway. Pity for you, when the screen and everything else is still good.
@@WillThePlank You can replace the GPUs in those iMacs if you wanted to. I recommend a GTX 765M since you can keep the boot screen if you flash the right VBIOS.
I have a late 2013 iMac, 27 inch still in perfect condition. It has the max specs and I put an SSD into it. In 2020, this thing is still great for me for schoolwork and overall usage! When I first opened it up, it was so dusty so I spent 30 minutes taking the dust out and that overall made it feel brand new
I love your restoration videos! I've passed these onto educators I know who want to get more life out of their devices. I always get good comments back, so kudos for all your hard work!
This machine can run bootcamp and play a bunch of games from the 2000 - 2010 era and the play fine. Also is a very good machine for developing and moderate photo editing. I use it for edit video but I use an external ssd. If you're light on FX the machine behaves nice :) Thanks for the video, Luke!
Can confirm on my 2012 iMac with an upgraded SSD, runs much much snappier and faster. Feels like a new computer. Anyone on the fence about doing and has a slow iMac, definitely do it!
Your recommendation is spot on. I have one of these machines which started out to be a great iMac but within a very few months it bogged down to the point where it was taking 80% of my time either booting up or opening apps. The HDD was not full at all, so I still have no idea why it slowed to a horrible grind. I was frustrated and wanted to trash the entire machine (which was in, otherwise, perfect condition) but then got the idea to convert it from an HDD to an SSD. I wrestled with that for a while but was concerned about "how" to take it apart. So I took it to a local Mac reseller and they did it for me. I might have done it myself had I had this video...but the endgame was the same...the iMac came alive and now boots in less than a minute and all apps are operating normally. For the tasks I perform, I expect this machine to continue to work indefinitely...I even have Catalina loaded on it now with no degradation in performance. I've had many Macs and still to this day do not understand why this one became unusable so quickly (with the HDD only being about 1/3 full). But all is now well and I can't recommend this SSD swap highly enough.
I bought an base Imac 2017 with a hard drive and it was sooo slow I had to open it and swap it for a ssd. After that it was perfect. 300% boost in speed,the only problem I copied my old hard drive with carbon copy cloner(software) and after that for some reason I couldn’t update Mac OS through settings because my drive wasn’t formatted in apfs. After a tone of researching I had to install Mac OS to a external drive then format the internal ssd to apfs and the clone again Mac OS from external hdd to internal ssd for some reason. And now finally I got a notification update for Mac OS 10.14.6
I have the same Imac from 2013 and works great. Of course was purchased for a house use not other duties such as gaming, video editing which I believe makes the computer last for long time. When I switch on the computer takes less than 5 minutes to have the Mac fully operative. Was a great great reliable purchase.
It's not "hostile". I've upgraded a few iMacs of several years and models. Like many electronics, it takes some skill. That's all. I can strip this same iMac down completely, and re-install everything in about an hour. It's not like you'll be replacing the hard drive every year. Chances are you'll never need to open it up again once you change it.
@@Gmon750 The problem is that gaining "some skill" takes practice. Most people don't do this stuff routinely and thus never gain the experience. Using a spudger, applying force, and separating an adhesive strip are not something that should have to be done on an expensive piece of equipment. Apple does this only partly for aesthetic reasons, the main reason is to stimulate churn. That said, it provides opportunities for repair folks and for people who want to dive into skilled repairs like yourself. I would not say it's "user hostile" but it is an obstacle for users. At a minimum, It should be easy to replace wearable items such as memory and storage, reseat heatsinks, clean out dust, and do simple upgrades.
So pleased for Google to show me this, now subscribed. I have a 2009 13" Macbook Pro I upgraded to El Capitan from Snow Leopard. Also added more RAM and a 320 HDD. Now use it with a 21" HD monitor. Have looked at 21.5" iMacs and sure there are quite a few up for sale. So I will now go with this idea, thanks.
That is exactly what i did, got a imac on a local secondhand website for dirt cheap, took the old, failing hard drive out of it, replaced it with a ssd i had lying around, and its now a snappy and useable machine for daily tasks! Many people throw these out because of those SLOOOW hard drives
I did it differently. I added an SSD drive over the USB3 connection on the back of the iMac. Made a copy of the internal HD and booted up from the external SSD. Now it is super fast, and I dont need to take it apart. And I just left the internal HD inside. It took me 30 minutes, and it is running great. And if I need to use some other iMac, I can just bring my SSD and boot up from it. USB3 is super fast.
2013 iMac (both sizes) i think is the best value Mac yet. even though it looks old (2013), but when using SSD, everything work like champ. Using a late 2013 iMac second hand for about $700 is one of my best thing to have yet... really happy with this machine. snappy and still running strong
Coming back to an oldie because i fished out a fully working 2015 iMac thats going to a friend after I do this once again. And just needed to be reminded the teardown real fast. :D Thanks Luke
@@zenmaster24 it totally depends on the drive you get. Currently, im getting about 500 MB/s read-write. Running MacOS off a Samsung t5. Im planning on upgrading to a thunderbolt blade drive to get about 2500 MB/s (Samsung X5 external ssd).
I’m still (in July 2020) running a mid-2010 27” iMac, which still performs extremely well, now running OS 10.13.6 High Sierra and only hardware upgrades have been: RAM - 32 GB, addition of a 1 TD SSD as boot drive with OS and apps only and all storage of the original 2 TB HD.
laujo Not really. That’s very cheap. A lot of people are still looking for pre-2016 MBP to avoid the keyboards and the troubles. 2015 Pros are still very popular and can be easily sold off for $1100.
That was also my experience, but today I purchased a 2011 21,5“ iMac with the i5 2400s, 4gb of RAM and 500gb HDD for 250€ which is relatively good i think - another 100€ for 8gb RAM and an SSD and I have Laying around an i7 2600k from my old retired PC - seems like a pretty good mashine for 350 Bucks here in Germany
Hi Luke, I'd watched a couple of these tutorials and had a spare 500gb SSD in an old laptop. Working from home meant I wanted to use my 2014 iMac as the screen size is better than my laptop. After watching yours I thought what the heck. The iMac was running like a dog so I ordered the kit from Amazon and completed the job this morning. Only took a couple of hours. Thanks again and stay safe :)
I managed to get a 500gb late 2013 iMac for free (with a cracked display). I installed an original 128gb apple flash drive on the motherboard (there is a slot there for it), and upgraded the ram to 16gb's while in there. Bought a new LCD including tape from Aliexpress and it ended up working perfectly! In total I spent less than 200$ in parts. By using the flash-drive slot on the motherboard I also ended up keeping the working 500gb HDD as mass storage :)
Can you make a video about the parts you just gloss over specifically about installing the OS on the new drive before putting it in the new computer. Like where do you get the OS, how do you get the OS, how do you install an OS on a drive you're about to transplant in another computer, the actual process. Thanks Luke.
You can download the OS by downloading 'install MacOS Mojave' and theres something you can type in terminal and it will start installing it to a Storage device plugged into the mac, then you just plug that device into your mac and it will install to a clean drive
@@yehan1 So, what do ;you type in the terminal to make it start installing...Does apply recognize the new drive since it's not their own? I have a 27 inch Mac, so your saying to do the up grade install, i need the thermal cable, right? You need to show us how to install the MacOS Mojave. Thanks for your help.
@@sharonmayhew4553 Exactly. Everyone just glosses over these parts like it's nothing tough. But a tutorial is for people that don't know, so this Yehan guy saying just do this, do that, use terminal, etc. isn't helpful. And Luke, can you do this one time in your amazing videos, don't skip this part because you think it's common knowledge for all Mac users, show everything please.
Haha nice. My local recycling center is an absolute GOLD MINE. Found a 2013 retina MacBook Pro, works great. Also found a 2014 21 inch iMac for free, wouldn’t boot so all I did was command+r boot up, wiped the drive, and redone loaded a copy of OS high sierra and it works GREAT!! Let’s see what else I can find in the future!
I can imagine you could mod it by glueing in magnets. Just like the previous gen. iMac 🖥 form factor. It had a glass cover over the lcd that’s attached by magnet that you remove via suction cups. Apple ditched the glass on newer gen. iMacs to save on production costs and also make it thinner by replacing it with adhesive strips.
The problem with that is that this is the entire screen assembly. On the 2011 and earlier 27" it is only the front glass that is held on with magnets, so it is much lighter, less fragile, and you don't have to deal with the display cables.
its not a bad idea for a product but you would have to engineer it to get the tolerances right and the magnets strong not to allow the weight of the screen to fallout? magnetic sticker sufficient?
Very good video. You seem to know what your doing as far as working with iMacs. I wouldn’t try fixing my iMac unless it totally stopped working as I haven been too lucky with computer repairs. I did attempt a battery change on a fire tablet and the tablet went in but it wouldn’t close all the way when I was done.
Omg i have a late 2012 iMac just like this and it just sat in my office because it was too slow to use. I literally bought everything you showed on this video ( it was closer to $40 ) and my older iMac is soooooooo much faster now. Thanks
Hey, Luke. I know you’d have to open it again. Could you do a full set of upgrade videos to an iMac like these? nVme SSD, RAM, etc... That would be appreciated brother.
Just got an Early 2013 21.5” iMac for $70. Bought on the spot because $70 for refurbished! Finding this channel after my impulse by has soothed my conscience! A little more difficult to add additional RAM on mine, but definitely got a STEAL for what I need it for!
Nice tutorial Luke! Just discovered this today! I have the earlier 21" iMac where the front is connected magnetically.....have you ever done a hard drive awap on that older model? Would love to attempt a DIY.....any advice on doing so or a tutorial? Thanks in advance man and keep bringing the awesomeness!
If you have a faulty Fusion drive, replace the HDD part with a SSD and then install the OS on the SSD part of the Fusion drive. I did this recently on a 2012 iMac and could not believe how much it improved it.
I found a free 21.5-inch mid-2010 iMac at an estate sale in perfect condition, except for a dead HDD. 3.2GHz i3. Only had 4GB ram. Upped it to 12GB ram and installed a 240GB Kingston SSD. Does everything I need it to do. Only spent about $50.
I have a 2009 Core Duo 2. It's one of my (alarmingly-growing) collection but I did exactly the same. The magnetic connectors on the screen made life easier than expected to upgrade.
A cheap SSD is as bad as a failing spinning drive. It may work good for awhile, but then it will very quickly not work at all. Spend a little bit more for a quality Samsung SSD. Less risk at removing and installing the screen with the iMac laying on it's back. You also want to clean the mating surfaces on the chassis and screen with alcohol before applying the adhesive. Any residue can cause the adhesive to come loose eventually and the screen falls off. Especially on the 27" models since the screens are heavier.
got a 2008 imac for 30,- display weird colours - thought I use it for a total conversion but ended up baking the gpu and it runs fine. Waiting for delivery of ssd and more RAM. Great videos dude!
From the POV of this video, MacOS appeared as if by magic on the SSD. That should have been covered here even if it was linking to another video. Also, you could perhaps (should?) have discussed putting a bigger SSD in, presumably a 500 instead of the 240 wouldnt have been much more?
Joe Cittern Right. I didn’t like that when he turned it on, although we heard the startup chime, nothing showed up on screen. Then he goes from that to a normal desktop, skipping possible troubleshooting in between, since I didn’t see an image, that’s what I’m guessing.
At work we have a later model 21" iMac with a fusion drive and it is bottle necked by the drive as well. It takes a while to boot and login to any account. Once up and running it's alright. SSD for life.
@@beingatliberty 500gb SSD is only 60 dollars right now in 2019. they should install 500gb ssd at minimum without extra cost and it still will be way to overpriced and shitty
Only thing I’d ad is that you should set up your tape kit and before removing the side that sticks to the display test the machine to make sure it works. Then unplug and pull your other tape liners off and close it up.
does this work with some of the "newer" iMacs? I have a 2017 or 2018 iMac that is slow as molasses and drives me crazy. I'd love to make it faster with more RAM and a faster hard drive
All you really need to do to take the screen off is use suction cups because the screen is held on by magnets! I mean, it’s a good idea to use the pizza cutter thingy. It’s also held together with adhesive so that’s good too.
mine have lasted me 8 years till this point, now is giving me a few headaches with usb recognition issues and aliitle slow, but i think it has done its job for the lasting time.
Luke, you did made a great job as usual! Thanks! I’ve have did the same with my 2012 iMac, but also i put into it a 16 Gb of ram and the i7 3770s processor. After that it became the rocket! ))))
I use a leaf-blower on all my computers, you will be thrilled when you see how much dust there is. I RECOMMEND DOING THIS! I have for decades...IT WORKS!
Great video...I just did the same upgrade to mine (500gb samsung ssd $74 on amazon) and upgraded to 16 megs of ram (slight pain in the ass but very doable). I would just add that people take some static precautions before digging into the computer. Great video. Thanks.
Couple of tips: if you have access to an air compressor, use that instead of a brush to clean out the dust. Also, make sure you test the computer before you glue the screen back in.
Luke, I’m actually doing this exact upgrade in my 2013 iMac! Can you do a tutorial on how to upgrade an iMac from HDD to SSD in terms of how to clone or get the drive to behave like your old one and have all of your old files/programs? There is a lot of information on the internet I’m just not really sure about any of it. Thanks
I have 2 IMacs at home, circa 2012 and did this on both. They both run so much faster, way more stable, and no crashing issues at all except the occasional rogue program or two. Maybe not as effective as putting it internal but for folks like me that don't have the tools, know-how, or time to do an internal swap it is a perfectly viable solution IMHO. The big "risk" if you want to call it that is the possibility that the USB cable can get knocked out. To avoid that I put them in a case and using velcro strapped them to the back of the IMAC frame.
This has a Metal accelerated GPU, which means it can very easily be patched to the latest version of macOS without any glitching. So basically it can become modern as heck!
@@gringoryabellogIt is very much possible and he should have done that while he had it open. Also repaste the GPU as well since they share the same heatsink.
I did this SSD upgrade in my late 2013 iMac. The difference is that I didn't want to open it, so I use it externally in USB 3.0 port. And that's totally fine because if I'm not wrong, a USB 3.0 in iMac can handle up to 5GB/s (maybe 10GB/s) of speed data transfer. It's a cheap upgrade that totally worth it! Now, 3 years later, I want to upgrade it again to a faster and larger SSD. So all I have to do is to unplug the old one and plug the new one, no need to open it.
It doesn't have a lot of play but you can back the drive into the cable for the most part. There is some plastic housing guides that surround the hard drive that made that last millimeter difficult. But then I used a tool (a smudger?) to help me get a little more leverage on the SATA cable for a tight connection.
I got a late 2013 27 inch with 32GB ram and 3 TB storage. I love it!
I always thought it would be hard to upgrade my iMac’s hard drive. It was unbearably slow. I watched your video and you made it look like wouldn’t be a huge mountain to climb. I followed your video and replaced my old HDD with an SSD and it’s like night and day.
Just wanted to say thanks for making the videos you make.
At my job, we have 6 employees that each use a 2012 iMac. Running 40+ hours a week, 25 weeks a year, and we have never once and a problem with any of them.
😊
Just replaced the hard drive in my wife's (late 2015) 21.5 inch iMac with a Samsung 860 EVO 500G SSD because it was, as you say, abysmally slow! Wow! Is all I can say! It is as fast as may 27 inch iMac now. Thank you Luke!
I thought those weren't upgradable?
@Leo Fitch I used the adhesive strip kit from Ifixit. Had all the tools, and went together mostly perfectly. One piece caught on something and I just tore it off. But, the display is still firmly in place, and computer still roaring along. I'd do it again. I'm sure it would be easier the second time.
I found an iMac in my grandma’s house and I repaired it following his steps
OMG NICE
@Gaming York my grandma has samsung s10 and macbook air 2017 lol 😂😂
@Gaming York bruh maybe it was my uncles could be anything
Your grandma is gonna want that back bruh!
Love your videos so helpful :)
I work in computer recycling and pull drives from these machines often. This model went from my most worrisome to the easiest. I use the corner of a flat razor to cut the adhesive as the pizza cutter thing gets weak after only a few uses.
But I'd really like to warn against leaning out the screen before cutting the bottom adhesive as I've seen them crack using this method. I lay it on it's back and pick up the screen a small amount, using the pizza cutter to cut the adhesive from the front as I firmly but gently pull up and away. Breaking the front glass is bitch since it's adhered to the lcd panel like a phone.
Thank you
Luke, it would be a good idea to warn people working on some i-Macs that the power unit is left uncovered with a high risk of shock from capacitors. This typically happens when cutting the adhesive on the bottom of the screen.
Did a similar process to mine from an iMac from the recycling center. I got an SSD for it and it’s blazing fast on macOS Sonoma. Intel macs still have life in them
Btw, you can also upgrade it by using an external SSD so that you don’t have to open it up. What I did was just tape the external to the back of the stand. Then go into boot switcher mode and select the external
That is pretty smart not gonna lie but if you don't want tape just simply put it in the table at the back which would be almost the same
though that would work if you really don't want to open it up, you are still limited by usb speeds.
I taped mine right to the screen so I don't have to keep reaching around the back. It works a treat.
@@Iwantthehandlesillydemon With the right adapter you could use TB 2, which is much faster.
Upgrade the ram and hard drive
God bless you Luke. Just did this today with a 1TB SSD and my formerly slow, spinning beachball imac that I was *this* close to recycling for a new one is SMOKING FAST now. Everything is faster. Initial start up. App launches. Switching between apps. Web browsing. SATA to USB cable for the pre-cloning made things super easy.
We've got a late 2013 21.5" iMac with exactly the same specs and had the same hard drive issue, it just got slower and slower up to the point where it was unusable, I took a slightly different approach to fixing it, I used an SSD in an enclosure connected by USB and set that as my drive disk, it works perfectly now, the reason I didn't take the screen off is because mine has a small crack on one corner, it doesn't affect the viewing area but my worry was making it bigger, a new screen is in the region of £300.
And people don't believe me when I found a 2011 iMac being thrown out 😅 Great find Luke 👌
At least yours is easier to replace the drives and give it a clean, even upgrade the ram.
@@killertruth186 I have a 2011 iMac and it was so easy to swap in an SSD. Think its got 32gb of ram too
@@willm5032 Yeah, all it is, was just simply take the glass panel off and swap the HDD.
@@killertruth186 Yep and the screen is held in with magnets instead of gross adhesive. Apple USED to be a decent tech company...
@@willm5032 If I had an iMac like that, then I wouldn't mind about the access to the motherboard and other parts.
Of course there was a program that I had from school, where you would get points for your parents to shop. The points rewards was actually giving away those all in one iMacs. This was years ago.
This dude is the reason I bought a late 2013 27" iMac in 2020, and I use it more than my 4K TV. It still runs so well, I haven't even upgraded it yet. But it's nice to know it's not too hard to do so, if I want to.
Nicely done. I have a late 2012 21.5 inch with 8GB of RAM that I decided to retire because I wanted something newer and much faster. But this information is great because I can actually do a couple of upgrades to it and give it to my teenager, who needs a new computer as well and wants a Mac. Thanks for an informative video!
I miss the magnetic screens on old iMacs...
Amen! Those adhesive strips terrify me
Bobby Brady You must be fun at parties.
@Bobby Brady I wish I could run into someone like you I want to upgrade to the 7700k in mine.
@@matt2m bro if I can do it you can too.
Alex jones I’ve been in others to flip older ones mostly newest was a 2013 like Luke’s. I just get funny when its actually my personal machine and the logic board costs as much as an older iMac does whole lol. I’ll build up the courage eventually.
I just finished restoring this exact model. All spent was time. I already have a buyer for $450.
I reformatted the HD, installed Catalina, and it's running great.
Alternately, you can skip opening the machine up, and just run the OS from an external SSD, plugged into the USB port.
Thanks Luke for all your Mac content. As a Mac guy myself I love your blend of old Mac and new Mac stuff. Well done on your channel.
It is great that you are helping people to save money, while keeping the earth clean. There are so many people tossing out stuff that still has life left. This is in many facets of life.
If you want to skip the introduction and explanation, go to 3:45 to get straight into the tutorial! I've also seen a good amount of comments asking about hard drive thermal sensors so I'll answer that here: In 27" iMacs (which use 3.5" drives) You need a special thermal sensor cable or the fan will run at full speed; you can also use Macs fan control to manually override this if you don't want to spend $40 on the cable. The 21.5" iMacs use 2.5" laptop drives and do not need that cable, you can just plug n' play
Luke Miani 25 mins omg my Mac takes about 25 seconds to start up 😳
What happened to the mid 2011 iMac project?
Solder a 1K ohm resistor to the thermal sensor ports is a cheaper alternative to purchasing a new thermal sensor. Just solder it and put a heat shrinking tube over and the fans will be at lowest possible speed when the Mac's in idle. It works great for me!
I took the liberty of a quick Google search and I believe I found that brush on Amazon. Search for “OXO Good Grips Electronics Cleaning Brush”. It’s $5 US.
Luke Miani I bought a mid 2010 27”iMac it has the i3 3.2ghz processor 12 gigs of ram, I need to put new glass on it, I’m running High Sierra and everything works fine however I was wondering how hard is it to put in a SSD hard drive in it before I put the glass back on thank you for your help
The dust in the bottom vent was like the Magicians Handkerchief Trick... it just kept on coming...
Brilliant! This is a freelance writer's Mac. That's all you need without all the heavy processing tasks. Very resourceful!
Big thanks man, I got a 21.5 imac, it's a late 2015, picked it up used last year for $600, it was getting super slow, replaced the drive for an SSD and hold shyt man it is ten times faster!!! Big thanks!
@Leo Fitch My display works and looks great, zero issues. I ordered the adhesive off amazon, the one that Luke put in the description, worked great. That adhesive kit is good because the strips are numbered, so you just start on one side of the unit with strip number 1 and then just go 2 3 4 5 until the end so you are putting the right on in the right spot.
You should do a video on pre installing macOS on the new ssd
Just install it on there. Plug it in on the mac of your choice with an adapter and install it.
Install it on a hard drive that you put inside a mac, install macos that way, take the drive out, clone the drive to a machine with enough storage, and use a usb to sata adapter, everytime you get a new machine you want to upgrade, plug the new ssd into the usb to sata dongle, clone the image back to the new ssd and you are good to go, and you can restore the same image millions of times! Thats how i do it
Collin Berke That is a very simple procedure if you have a SATA drive dock. There are many dozens of them available, they are fairly inexpensive, and you will find so many uses for one you should really own one. It allows you to physically attach and mount, typically via USB, a bare drive such as a new SSD to your computer. This empty drive now appears on your desktop and a macOS installer can be downloaded to your computer and installed onto that bare drive.
Just launch the macOS installer and select the new empty drive instead of your computer’s internal drive as the install location. The Apple installer will guide you and you will find it very straightforward. Then, once installed, you can restart your computer using the new drive, still mounted in the external dock, and migrate your settings and data from the internal drive. Your new SSD will be ready to put into your computer and will require almost nothing to run. Your Mac will tell you how to ‘migrate’ your old drive’s data using an app already installed by the OS.
If you have any questions, just do an Apple help searches for “install macOS on external drive” and “system migration”. All the info for this exists right in your Mac’s help system.
Just clone the drive using a usb to sata adapter
Put the SSD in the iMac, go grab a free copy of Carbon copy cloner. Turn the iMac on holding down the letter T key, this makes your iMac a slave drive. Use whatever Mac you wish to clone from, hook-up your firewire cable between both machines, run carbon copy cloner, set your preferences, select the drives, click copy, now go grab something to eat. If both drives are SSD it’ll be pretty quick depending on their storage size. When you’re done if you have similar machines, eg iMac to iMac etc then it’ll boot with mostly no issues. However, say you use a 2011 MBP to 2012 iMac in that scenario upon completion, power down everything, then on the iMac run Recovery and do another install of the OS from that, DO NOT WIPE THE HDD, just re-install the supporting OS and when that’s done you should be good to go.
I did a 2009 iMac about 5 years ago. Installed SSD and maxed out the ram. I have been running Linux Mint. A lot faster than the standard HD. The screen was magnetic which made it easier to remove the screen. With each newer version of Mint less hardware issues. The issues I had early on was a few keys on the keyboard were inoperative. Now the with the latest Mint the only key that was not working was the eject key for the DVD player. Did a one line script for eject and have that in an icon on the action bar. Everything else works great. A good used iMac is a bargain for a nice looking desktop.
Dude your killing it with the budget finds.
M4RV 1 your not wrong picked up a 5k 2017 with 24gb grade A with all the peripherals for 800. Craigslist is not dead.
You’re*
I installed an SSD in my 8 GB 2013 iMac. It took me multiple tries to install the OS and download the iCloud backup, but once it was done the machine came alive and now works like a new one. I upgraded to Catalina, which I never hoped to be able to do. Booting up used to take so long I would usually go make a coffee in the meantime. Now it is so quick I hardly have time to adjust my seat. Applications open super fast. Great advice, thanks!
Fantastic! For $30 it’s totally worth the risk of screwing it up to get a Mac you can use for several more years. I did an ssd upgrade to my 2009 27” iMac a few years ago. It’s a secondary computer now but still going strong. It had magnets to hold the screen on which made it even easier.We need to give more tech a second life instead of throwing it in landfills. Good job 👍
I really wish my old 27'' 09 iMac didn't suffer the GPU death that it did otherwise I would use it as a Linux machine these days :(
WillThePlank that’s a bummer, haha yup the ssd upgrade was harrowing enough (at the time it was my main mac) I don’t think I’d have the chops to upgrade the graphics, probably hard/impossible to find the parts now anyway. Pity for you, when the screen and everything else is still good.
@@brucekennedy5274 gph reflow will fix it . I put video cards in the oven
I have a 27 inch iMac from 2009 that I use almost every single day. Still going strong. Just gets a little hot after awhile.
@@WillThePlank You can replace the GPUs in those iMacs if you wanted to. I recommend a GTX 765M since you can keep the boot screen if you flash the right VBIOS.
I have a late 2013 iMac, 27 inch still in perfect condition. It has the max specs and I put an SSD into it. In 2020, this thing is still great for me for schoolwork and overall usage! When I first opened it up, it was so dusty so I spent 30 minutes taking the dust out and that overall made it feel brand new
this... THIS is why I subscribed
Also this.
Roger dat 👍
Apple sued you. Apple hates you. Apple asks you to stop please. Apple offers you child labor for your loyalty. Lol
Me two!
He’ll yeah
I love your restoration videos! I've passed these onto educators I know who want to get more life out of their devices. I always get good comments back, so kudos for all your hard work!
This machine can run bootcamp and play a bunch of games from the 2000 - 2010 era and the play fine. Also is a very good machine for developing and moderate photo editing. I use it for edit video but I use an external ssd. If you're light on FX the machine behaves nice :) Thanks for the video, Luke!
Can confirm on my 2012 iMac with an upgraded SSD, runs much much snappier and faster. Feels like a new computer. Anyone on the fence about doing and has a slow iMac, definitely do it!
I recognize the brush as I own one of them: It's a LensPen NLP-1 Camera Cleaning Brush.
or its on amazon oxo electronics cleaning brush
Your recommendation is spot on. I have one of these machines which started out to be a great iMac but within a very few months it bogged down to the point where it was taking 80% of my time either booting up or opening apps. The HDD was not full at all, so I still have no idea why it slowed to a horrible grind. I was frustrated and wanted to trash the entire machine (which was in, otherwise, perfect condition) but then got the idea to convert it from an HDD to an SSD. I wrestled with that for a while but was concerned about "how" to take it apart. So I took it to a local Mac reseller and they did it for me. I might have done it myself had I had this video...but the endgame was the same...the iMac came alive and now boots in less than a minute and all apps are operating normally. For the tasks I perform, I expect this machine to continue to work indefinitely...I even have Catalina loaded on it now with no degradation in performance. I've had many Macs and still to this day do not understand why this one became unusable so quickly (with the HDD only being about 1/3 full). But all is now well and I can't recommend this SSD swap highly enough.
Luke, this is your family member. I have saw your video and now that i know i don't have to buy a new computer, i want it back! :D
i live for these mac upgrade videos. so cool to see how usable old computers can still be.
I bought an base Imac 2017 with a hard drive and it was sooo slow I had to open it and swap it for a ssd. After that it was perfect. 300% boost in speed,the only problem I copied my old hard drive with carbon copy cloner(software) and after that for some reason I couldn’t update Mac OS through settings because my drive wasn’t formatted in apfs. After a tone of researching I had to install Mac OS to a external drive then format the internal ssd to apfs and the clone again Mac OS from external hdd to internal ssd for some reason. And now finally I got a notification update for Mac OS 10.14.6
I have the same Imac from 2013 and works great. Of course was purchased for a house use not other duties such as gaming, video editing which I believe makes the computer last for long time.
When I switch on the computer takes less than 5 minutes to have the Mac fully operative. Was a great great reliable purchase.
5 mins? My 2009 iMac boots in 40 seconds and hasn’t got an ssd.
Shame on Apple for making a machine this hostile to replacing a simple hard drive.
It's not "hostile". I've upgraded a few iMacs of several years and models. Like many electronics, it takes some skill. That's all. I can strip this same iMac down completely, and re-install everything in about an hour. It's not like you'll be replacing the hard drive every year. Chances are you'll never need to open it up again once you change it.
@david Ross have you seen the newer MacBooks? Unrepairable.
@@Gmon750 The problem is that gaining "some skill" takes practice. Most people don't do this stuff routinely and thus never gain the experience. Using a spudger, applying force, and separating an adhesive strip are not something that should have to be done on an expensive piece of equipment. Apple does this only partly for aesthetic reasons, the main reason is to stimulate churn. That said, it provides opportunities for repair folks and for people who want to dive into skilled repairs like yourself. I would not say it's "user hostile" but it is an obstacle for users. At a minimum, It should be easy to replace wearable items such as memory and storage, reseat heatsinks, clean out dust, and do simple upgrades.
SSDs arent that expensive and its easy to open the display
So pleased for Google to show me this, now subscribed. I have a 2009 13" Macbook Pro I upgraded to El Capitan from Snow Leopard. Also added more RAM and a 320 HDD. Now use it with a 21" HD monitor. Have looked at 21.5" iMacs and sure there are quite a few up for sale. So I will now go with this idea, thanks.
Glad I found your channel man! I am going to upgrade a couple of my older machines so I can wait a couple of years for the new ARM macs!
That is exactly what i did, got a imac on a local secondhand website for dirt cheap, took the old, failing hard drive out of it, replaced it with a ssd i had lying around, and its now a snappy and useable machine for daily tasks! Many people throw these out because of those SLOOOW hard drives
The fact the newest base models still use 5400rpm hard drives is just sad
Apple keep jumping the shark, and we keep coming back.
now it's updated
I did it differently. I added an SSD drive over the USB3 connection on the back of the iMac. Made a copy of the internal HD and booted up from the external SSD. Now it is super fast, and I dont need to take it apart. And I just left the internal HD inside. It took me 30 minutes, and it is running great. And if I need to use some other iMac, I can just bring my SSD and boot up from it. USB3 is super fast.
Amazing video! Do more please 🙏🏼. Btw you should take the fan out and clean it outside and see if the heatsink has dust too.
@@bitteroldman3151 i cleaned mine, had amost 7 years of dust inside.
2013 iMac (both sizes) i think is the best value Mac yet. even though it looks old (2013), but when using SSD, everything work like champ. Using a late 2013 iMac second hand for about $700 is one of my best thing to have yet... really happy with this machine. snappy and still running strong
That was the most natural ad that I have ever seen
Ikr
Coming back to an oldie because i fished out a fully working 2015 iMac thats going to a friend after I do this once again.
And just needed to be reminded the teardown real fast. :D Thanks Luke
You could also run mac os off an external ssd. Ive done it before with no issues
Ramiro Cubria Oh really?
No issues, but was it as fast as the sata connection?
@@WarriorsPhoto yes mate!
@@zenmaster24 it totally depends on the drive you get. Currently, im getting about 500 MB/s read-write. Running MacOS off a Samsung t5. Im planning on upgrading to a thunderbolt blade drive to get about 2500 MB/s (Samsung X5 external ssd).
Ramiro Cubria Holy Cow! Make a video about this bloke!
I’m still (in July 2020) running a mid-2010 27” iMac, which still performs extremely well, now running OS 10.13.6 High Sierra and only hardware upgrades have been: RAM - 32 GB, addition of a 1 TD SSD as boot drive with OS and apps only and all storage of the original 2 TB HD.
In Germany the prices for this iMacs are crazy. They are listed for about 400€.
Yes, the same goes for MacBooks. About 1000€ for a MacBook Pro 2015 13 inch is just insane...
laujo Not really. That’s very cheap. A lot of people are still looking for pre-2016 MBP to avoid the keyboards and the troubles. 2015 Pros are still very popular and can be easily sold off for $1100.
Matthew Lee i sold my late 2013 for 700 so believeable
That was also my experience, but today I purchased a 2011 21,5“ iMac with the i5 2400s, 4gb of RAM and 500gb HDD for 250€ which is relatively good i think - another 100€ for 8gb RAM and an SSD and I have Laying around an i7 2600k from my old retired PC - seems like a pretty good mashine for 350 Bucks here in Germany
What...
In Italy you have to pay at least 1.800€ for one of those
Hi Luke, I'd watched a couple of these tutorials and had a spare 500gb SSD in an old laptop. Working from home meant I wanted to use my 2014 iMac as the screen size is better than my laptop. After watching yours I thought what the heck. The iMac was running like a dog so I ordered the kit from Amazon and completed the job this morning. Only took a couple of hours. Thanks again and stay safe :)
I managed to get a 500gb late 2013 iMac for free (with a cracked display). I installed an original 128gb apple flash drive on the motherboard (there is a slot there for it), and upgraded the ram to 16gb's while in there. Bought a new LCD including tape from Aliexpress and it ended up working perfectly! In total I spent less than 200$ in parts. By using the flash-drive slot on the motherboard I also ended up keeping the working 500gb HDD as mass storage :)
Very informative video.
One thing that I heard, was that the screen comes off using suction.
That kind of gadget that they fix car dents with.
Can you make a video about the parts you just gloss over specifically about installing the OS on the new drive before putting it in the new computer. Like where do you get the OS, how do you get the OS, how do you install an OS on a drive you're about to transplant in another computer, the actual process. Thanks Luke.
You can download the OS by downloading 'install MacOS Mojave' and theres something you can type in terminal and it will start installing it to a Storage device plugged into the mac, then you just plug that device into your mac and it will install to a clean drive
@@yehan1 So, what do ;you type in the terminal to make it start installing...Does apply recognize the new drive since it's not their own? I have a 27 inch Mac, so your saying to do the up grade install, i need the thermal cable, right? You need to show us how to install the MacOS Mojave. Thanks for your help.
@@sharonmayhew4553 Exactly. Everyone just glosses over these parts like it's nothing tough. But a tutorial is for people that don't know, so this Yehan guy saying just do this, do that, use terminal, etc. isn't helpful. And Luke, can you do this one time in your amazing videos, don't skip this part because you think it's common knowledge for all Mac users, show everything please.
Haha nice. My local recycling center is an absolute GOLD MINE. Found a 2013 retina MacBook Pro, works great. Also found a 2014 21 inch iMac for free, wouldn’t boot so all I did was command+r boot up, wiped the drive, and redone loaded a copy of OS high sierra and it works GREAT!! Let’s see what else I can find in the future!
I just caught a glimpse of your sub count and I never noticed you were only at 60k I thought you had like 200k by now damn. You deserve 200k.
Hes there now lol
@@tristanbalogun5639 well deserved
Followed your steps Luke...everything went smooth as silk...machine is like new...thanks for the help (from Nova Scotia, Canada)
i wonder if there is a third party solution that makes the imac screen re-removable without adhesive, more like a clip mechanism or something.
I can imagine you could mod it by glueing in magnets.
Just like the previous gen. iMac 🖥 form factor. It had a glass cover over the lcd that’s attached by magnet that you remove via suction cups.
Apple ditched the glass on newer gen. iMacs to save on production costs and also make it thinner by replacing it with adhesive strips.
The problem with that is that this is the entire screen assembly. On the 2011 and earlier 27" it is only the front glass that is held on with magnets, so it is much lighter, less fragile, and you don't have to deal with the display cables.
It would create a gap or look ugly
its not a bad idea for a product but you would have to engineer it to get the tolerances right and the magnets strong not to allow the weight of the screen to fallout? magnetic sticker sufficient?
Magnetic strips I've worked with are pretty weak. They can hold postcards and bubble wrap in place - nothing heavier than that.
Very good video. You seem to know what your doing as far as working with iMacs. I wouldn’t try fixing my iMac unless it totally stopped working as I haven been too lucky with computer repairs. I did attempt a battery change on a fire tablet and the tablet went in but it wouldn’t close all the way when I was done.
A Dad would be proud to have a son such as you.
Omg i have a late 2012 iMac just like this and it just sat in my office because it was too slow to use. I literally bought everything you showed on this video ( it was closer to $40 ) and my older iMac is soooooooo much faster now. Thanks
What about installing the OS on the new drive? How do you do that? I’m currently using Catalina
Hey, Luke. I know you’d have to open it again. Could you do a full set of upgrade videos to an iMac like these? nVme SSD, RAM, etc...
That would be appreciated brother.
Loving these videos. Used to be a repair engineer many years ago. gonna see what cheap iMacs I can find and restore… 🙏🏿
4:58 cat's checking out what's up
Just got an Early 2013 21.5” iMac for $70. Bought on the spot because $70 for refurbished!
Finding this channel after my impulse by has soothed my conscience! A little more difficult to add additional RAM on mine, but definitely got a STEAL for what I need it for!
Nice tutorial Luke! Just discovered this today! I have the earlier 21" iMac where the front is connected magnetically.....have you ever done a hard drive awap on that older model? Would love to attempt a DIY.....any advice on doing so or a tutorial?
Thanks in advance man and keep bringing the awesomeness!
If you have a faulty Fusion drive, replace the HDD part with a SSD and then install the OS on the SSD part of the Fusion drive. I did this recently on a 2012 iMac and could not believe how much it improved it.
I found a free 21.5-inch mid-2010 iMac at an estate sale in perfect condition, except for a dead HDD. 3.2GHz i3.
Only had 4GB ram. Upped it to 12GB ram and installed a 240GB Kingston SSD. Does everything I need it to do. Only spent about $50.
I have a 2009 Core Duo 2. It's one of my (alarmingly-growing) collection but I did exactly the same. The magnetic connectors on the screen made life easier than expected to upgrade.
A cheap SSD is as bad as a failing spinning drive. It may work good for awhile, but then it will very quickly not work at all. Spend a little bit more for a quality Samsung SSD. Less risk at removing and installing the screen with the iMac laying on it's back. You also want to clean the mating surfaces on the chassis and screen with alcohol before applying the adhesive. Any residue can cause the adhesive to come loose eventually and the screen falls off. Especially on the 27" models since the screens are heavier.
It would be nice to see a video of you installing macOS on the new solid-state drive.
Especially for some of us who have never done it before.
got a 2008 imac for 30,- display weird colours - thought I use it for a total conversion but ended up baking the gpu and it runs fine. Waiting for delivery of ssd and more RAM. Great videos dude!
From the POV of this video, MacOS appeared as if by magic on the SSD. That should have been covered here even if it was linking to another video. Also, you could perhaps (should?) have discussed putting a bigger SSD in, presumably a 500 instead of the 240 wouldnt have been much more?
Joe Cittern Right. I didn’t like that when he turned it on, although we heard the startup chime, nothing showed up on screen. Then he goes from that to a normal desktop, skipping possible troubleshooting in between, since I didn’t see an image, that’s what I’m guessing.
At work we have a later model 21" iMac with a fusion drive and it is bottle necked by the drive as well. It takes a while to boot and login to any account. Once up and running it's alright. SSD for life.
..and the base model 21.5 inch iMac today still uses a 5400rpm drive.🤯😂
yes apple abusing its users spec wise imo the minimum should be a 256gb ssd model across the board
why would you need a ssd for checking your email?
@@lucuslopez6866 wow u never used an SSD before for asking that question
@@jamesscott3290 You dont need a ssd to check your email.
@@beingatliberty 500gb SSD is only 60 dollars right now in 2019. they should install 500gb ssd at minimum without extra cost and it still will be way to overpriced and shitty
Only thing I’d ad is that you should set up your tape kit and before removing the side that sticks to the display test the machine to make sure it works. Then unplug and pull your other tape liners off and close it up.
Nice of you to cut out trying to plug in the sata cable that is probably a pain in the ass to plug back in lol
SSD OR NOTHING!!!....Good job...just did mine, I upgraded the ram to 16gb and 500gb ssd....super super fast....unbelievable
does this work with some of the "newer" iMacs? I have a 2017 or 2018 iMac that is slow as molasses and drives me crazy. I'd love to make it faster with more RAM and a faster hard drive
All you really need to do to take the screen off is use suction cups because the screen is held on by magnets! I mean, it’s a good idea to use the pizza cutter thingy. It’s also held together with adhesive so that’s good too.
Damn.. In Europe this exact model is listed on eBay for 450+ euros ($550).
Didi Productions ye same its shit in europe costs too much and there is no way of us finding one
mine have lasted me 8 years till this point, now is giving me a few headaches with usb recognition issues and aliitle slow, but i think it has done its job for the lasting time.
Luke, you did made a great job as usual! Thanks! I’ve have did the same with my 2012 iMac, but also i put into it a 16 Gb of ram and the i7 3770s processor. After that it became the rocket! ))))
I don’t know that much about iMacs. So can you upgrade it to the latest iOS as you now have it configured??
I use a leaf-blower on all my computers, you will be thrilled when you see how much dust there is. I RECOMMEND DOING THIS! I have for decades...IT WORKS!
Older macs actually had the screen attached with magnets! Also, instead of custom cut adhesive strips, I've used just double sided scotch tape.
Ash White and if you did not do it right, those magnet pins would break.
Great video...I just did the same upgrade to mine (500gb samsung ssd $74 on amazon) and upgraded to 16 megs of ram (slight pain in the ass but very doable). I would just add that people take some static precautions before digging into the computer. Great video. Thanks.
Couple of tips: if you have access to an air compressor, use that instead of a brush to clean out the dust. Also, make sure you test the computer before you glue the screen back in.
Luke, I’m actually doing this exact upgrade in my 2013 iMac! Can you do a tutorial on how to upgrade an iMac from HDD to SSD in terms of how to clone or get the drive to behave like your old one and have all of your old files/programs? There is a lot of information on the internet I’m just not really sure about any of it. Thanks
Even easier solution. Buy an external SSD or internal SSD and a case and connect via USB3. Install OS and apps and boot from there. Bingo.
Don't do this people
Doable, NOT as good as running from SSD installed to motherboard
No
I have 2 IMacs at home, circa 2012 and did this on both. They both run so much faster, way more stable, and no crashing issues at all except the occasional rogue program or two. Maybe not as effective as putting it internal but for folks like me that don't have the tools, know-how, or time to do an internal swap it is a perfectly viable solution IMHO. The big "risk" if you want to call it that is the possibility that the USB cable can get knocked out. To avoid that I put them in a case and using velcro strapped them to the back of the IMAC frame.
This has a Metal accelerated GPU, which means it can very easily be patched to the latest version of macOS without any glitching.
So basically it can become modern as heck!
It would be better if you replace the thermal paste of the processor
Sebastian Fokken yes I agree if that is possible.
@@gringoryabellogIt is very much possible and he should have done that while he had it open. Also repaste the GPU as well since they share the same heatsink.
it's soldered on....
@@kaluimoku2467 The heat sink is not soldered onto the processor. Sorry but you have some bad info. The processor is only soldered to the logic board.
@@gregthompson7793 good counterpoint
I did this SSD upgrade in my late 2013 iMac. The difference is that I didn't want to open it, so I use it externally in USB 3.0 port. And that's totally fine because if I'm not wrong, a USB 3.0 in iMac can handle up to 5GB/s (maybe 10GB/s) of speed data transfer. It's a cheap upgrade that totally worth it! Now, 3 years later, I want to upgrade it again to a faster and larger SSD. So all I have to do is to unplug the old one and plug the new one, no need to open it.
And to think that this $30 upgrade costs $300 at Apple...
Good luck on finding a 30.00 SSD. lol
@@bobhofegartner1397 microcenter $25.99 240g
www.microcenter.com/product/616766/gigabyte-240-gb-v-nand-sata-60gb-s-25-internal-ssd
@@firesurfer lol
Excellent, clear demonstration - one of the best yet!
How difficult was it to reattach the Sata cable to the SSD?
It doesn't have a lot of play but you can back the drive into the cable for the most part. There is some plastic housing guides that surround the hard drive that made that last millimeter difficult. But then I used a tool (a smudger?) to help me get a little more leverage on the SATA cable for a tight connection.
I have a 2009 27 inch IMac that I still use everyday. It is just now starting to get hot. But I love the built in DVD player.
How did you install Mac OS on the hard drive and how much did that cost
@kirwi kirwinson How do you do that?
@@RAD284 Apple links their macOS updates to the Mac App Store. They're free & you can make a bootable disk using Terminal.
The dust cleaning part is just soooo satisfying, too bad u did not film it longer
I wish I could find deals like this 😭
God damn. I love upgrade and cleaning videos of old pc/Mac and return them to life again!