HT4044: About LCD display pixel anomalies for Apple products released in 2010 and later
Learn about About LCD display pixel anomalies for Apple products released in 2010 and later
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Feb 28, 2014 7:26 AM in response to harrisnyby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,harrisny wrote:
Look what happen this morning. This is all new this blue screen. So I left it on last night in sleep mode. I come back in the morning and pixels come out. So I restart and get flickering blue screens. Restarted the computer a few times seems to be working fine for now. Time to call apple and bring back the computer and see whats going on since they just gave me a new video card. Hassle....
Message was edited by: harrisny
yep...you have to leave it on 24/7 keep it warm or those symptoms are exacerbated when it runs cold. Disable your sleep and energy saving modes.
On a side note, my Chrome broswer is linked to hard freezes now. Thought I had it isolated by not using Safari. Now, I reset my iMac probably 10-15x per day. Out of sheer laziness and stubborn hard-headed expactation for these machines to run well, I haven't done anything about it yet, because going down that road chews up a full day of my time and no guarantees to curb the symptoms at most.
Next venture is swapping the hard drive. Could, might help we'll see.
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Feb 28, 2014 7:35 AM in response to SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVEby harrisny,They replaced my HD for free a year ago because they had a recall program for the mid-10s.
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Feb 28, 2014 7:39 AM in response to harrisnyby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,hmm. Intresting. But my OS drive is a 512gb flash storage form a custom built CTO they rejected my serial #
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Feb 28, 2014 9:03 AM in response to TerrellPDXby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,after reading the latest entires here, while I still believe this is mostly hardware related, I'm skeptical about firmware and OS, hear me out: I'm *mostly* glitch-free when I don't open a web browser app. What browsers is everyone running on the Mavericks platform right now?
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Feb 28, 2014 9:04 AM in response to SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVEby .dude,I did a complete erase and reinstall and was having the issue when I'd open a Finder window. As soon as I booted to Mountain Lion on an external I didn't have any issues in the Finder or using Safari. My next test will be installing Chrome and iPhoto on the external to see if those cause the pixel anomalies, since I noticed it in Mavericks the most with those two applications.
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Feb 28, 2014 9:13 AM in response to .dudeby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,dude, I just transfered my Chrome and iphoto .apps over to my secondary internal storage drive. Couldn't move Safari, the OS wouldn't let me. Repaired disk permissions and restarted...
So far so good, and when I say that I mean no hard freezing/major glitches. Some light intermitent yellow pixels flashing, but nothing like what it's been. More to report later... rotten apples in 2010...
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Feb 28, 2014 3:09 PM in response to Alejandto TLby Alejandto TL,So the uninstall Chrome fix only last 1 day, on the second day after 4 hours working with final cut pro 7 the problem came back, I restart and was able to work for 2 more hours, since then it only takes about 3 to 5 minutes to hard freez again, it's so anoying and here in Mexico we don't have Apple Stores only apple authorized service providers and for what I see there is absolute no warranty that changing the video card will solve the problem, so basically my imac is an iPaperweight now.
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Feb 28, 2014 3:14 PM in response to Alejandto TLby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,Uh, yeah, I second what Alejandro is saying. Doesn't matter what drive your apps are on, the problem persists. My freezing came back after 20 minutes of migrating problematic apps to other drives.
Never buying an iMac again, why have one custom built for 8-15 years of high-end use when it fails you in 4.
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Mar 1, 2014 7:48 AM in response to TerrellPDXby .dude,Yeah, just like Soul said, running the OS on an external drive doesn't help. The green pixels don't appear as much using Mountain Lion on the external drive compared to running Mavericks on the internal. With the internal drive the green pixels stay on the screen for days of uptime, where as on the external they only appear for the first few minutes of the iMac being turned on.
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Mar 1, 2014 7:47 PM in response to .dudeby .dude,I'm thinking the issue does have something to do with the Radeon 5750 starting to go out. I took my iMac apart today and did the oven baking trick to reflow the card, along with adding new thermal paste to the GPU and have been running smooth all afternoon with no issues. I'm hoping that I caught the card early enough and won't have any further issues, but I'll update if the pixel issues come back.
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Mar 2, 2014 5:01 PM in response to .dudeby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,...uh, dude. so where is the oven bake trick described in detail?
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Mar 6, 2014 4:24 PM in response to SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVEby MerMc,I agree that this will most likely be the last iMac I own. This is my second one in 5 years. This one being a replacement for the one I bought in 2009, no one could figure what was wrong with that one either. I had a cheap Dell laptop that I dropped a couple of times and it lasted longer than these have. :\ What bothers me the most is that there doesn't seem to be a clear fix, not yet anyway.
I should note that I was previously running Snow Leopard, and I recently upgraded to Mavericks... my problems are 10x worse now. I'm not sure why upgrading to Mavericks made it worse, but it did. The flashing blocks are much more frequent, and now my iMac has decided to randomly start freezing and restarting. All this after the Apple store told me "their programs couldn't replicate their issue".
Cool.
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Mar 7, 2014 4:37 AM in response to TerrellPDXby harrisny,Today I go back the Apple store to look at it again after they put in a new graphics card a month ago. They just can't accept that they Apple messed up the mid 2010 iMacs. My 2011 has no issues what so ever. Apple really needs to be held accountable for faulty system which has no answers. I still have a MacBook 13 inch from 2002 with no issues.
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Mar 7, 2014 11:45 AM in response to SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVEby K Shaffer,The topic of baking in some goodness by oven cooking the graphics card
had been discussed, & searchable via google or other online method....
Essentially the card is placed on a cookie sheet held above the metal flat
with small balls of aluminum foil holding the corners of the graphic card
so it does not contact direct to the cookie sheet and air, about solder melt
temperature (325°F +/-) can circulate around it. There are pictures on some
of the better uploaded topic discussions.
•iMac bake graphics card in oven - search results:
https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=iMac+bake+graphics+card+in+oven
{When I replied earlier, someone didn't like my suggestion to double
the joy by putting in a cookie sheet with actual cookies on it, so
that post was deleted. After you've done the search and see what I
mean, then come back and bake your graphics processing card.}
Baking Apples has been an answer, especially some iBook G4s.
However a qualified specialist with modern workstation could do
it for less than the cost of a new graphic card, if you ship it away.
I've done micro repairs in the past, both electrical & metalsmithy.
But don't waste the heat, if you've got nothing to eat; you are in the kitchen.
Good luck & happy computing!
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Mar 7, 2014 1:24 PM in response to K Shafferby SOULNATIONAL ARCHIVE,K Shaffer wrote:
The topic of baking in some goodness by oven cooking the graphics card
had been discussed, & searchable via google or other online method....
Good luck & happy computing!
niiiice. Maybe this summer I'll bake my GPU see if it helps.
But before I break out the easy bake oven, what if my GPU works fine when in TDM? Should I bake my logic board then?