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MacBook dead from liquid damage - that turned on once. Any hope?

Hello

I have a 2017 MacBook that died from the liquid damage. It never powered after a few days in a rice bag and I was ready to declare it a lost cause, but it powered up by itself when I plugged it to power adapter. It looked like the logicboard was still alive, however after that one time it never came back on again.


I think damaged power button on the keyboard is preventing it from powering up, and one time resurrection was the combination of multiple conditions such as drained battery, a/c power, and previous abnormal shutdown that prompted it to boot. Which makes me think that perhaps a new keyboard plate may revive it but I wanted to seek the wisdom of the crowd if it would be worth spending $100 on a remote chance of reviving it. Any input would be greatly appreciated.


Thank you.

MacBook, macOS 10.13

Posted on Jan 4, 2020 1:55 AM

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Posted on Jan 4, 2020 11:38 AM

Using rice or any other form of desiccant will NOT work. That is because, after the liquid has evaporated, it will still leave trace elements behind that can short out electric circuits inside your Mac notebook. If you power up the Mac, there is a good chance that these short circuits can further damage it. The only potential way to "fix" this would be to open the notebook and remove any of these trace elements BEFORE you apply power to it again. This is definitely not a DIY endeavor for the average notebook user.


Without removing those traces any, further power being applied, will make any hope of recovery even less likely. Sorry.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jan 4, 2020 11:38 AM in response to Euisung Lee

Using rice or any other form of desiccant will NOT work. That is because, after the liquid has evaporated, it will still leave trace elements behind that can short out electric circuits inside your Mac notebook. If you power up the Mac, there is a good chance that these short circuits can further damage it. The only potential way to "fix" this would be to open the notebook and remove any of these trace elements BEFORE you apply power to it again. This is definitely not a DIY endeavor for the average notebook user.


Without removing those traces any, further power being applied, will make any hope of recovery even less likely. Sorry.

Jan 6, 2020 2:25 PM in response to Tesserax

Thank you Tesserax for your insightful reply.

My question is, would the circuit short immediately and never power up or is it possible for the circuit to run for a while and short later? I would guess it is former but I wonder if latter is also possible. My MacBook did power on and was running with some sticky keyboard keys and I couldn't get it to boot again after powering down. Do you think, in this case, the board may be still intact?


Thank you.

Jan 6, 2020 9:58 PM in response to Euisung Lee

As another comment stated, rice will unfortunately not help in resolving liquid damage from your Mac. Because the damage has likely already been done to the internal circuitry of the machine, my best advice to you would be to put that money into a new system. I know this is certainly not the ideal outcome but it sounds like your Mac is beyond reasonable cost or effort to repair.

MacBook dead from liquid damage - that turned on once. Any hope?

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