You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

late 2011 MBP lifespan? is yours still running?

hello,

i have a late 2011 MBP, it had some components swapped out by apple during an extended warranty period. i think both the logic board and video board were replaced. i installed 16GB ram and an SSD, and it still works great. i use it for adobe CC stuff (photoshop, illustrator and indesign), sometimes those apps or some web pages will tax it and the fans come on. i needs its second battery replacement, but i use it plugged in all the time.


question: i keep TM backups, and icon and g-drive backups, but wonder if i'l have any warning before it dies? i installed a wacom driver a few months ago that almost killed it, it wold NOT boot and i had to boot from the rescue disk. scared me to death.


thank

MacBook Pro 15", macOS 10.13

Posted on May 12, 2020 1:18 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on May 12, 2020 7:18 PM

i’m pretty sure my last repair on the extended warranty was because i got some nice person who took care of me. i have lot of apple products under my name (my mac, 3 kids macs, several iphones and ipads) and the customer service guy remarked how loyal i was. the video card was going out, and i really lucked up with the late repair.


regarding the butterfly kb, i’d assumed apple was taking care of affected people. i did NOT know ram and ssd were not updateable, thanks.

Similar questions

10 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

May 12, 2020 7:18 PM in response to HWTech

i’m pretty sure my last repair on the extended warranty was because i got some nice person who took care of me. i have lot of apple products under my name (my mac, 3 kids macs, several iphones and ipads) and the customer service guy remarked how loyal i was. the video card was going out, and i really lucked up with the late repair.


regarding the butterfly kb, i’d assumed apple was taking care of affected people. i did NOT know ram and ssd were not updateable, thanks.

May 12, 2020 6:35 PM in response to marc cardwell

The 2012 non-Retina MBPros were the last really good Apple laptops in my opinion. While a few of the later Retina models are Ok, the later 2016+ laptops are not very nice and don't hold up very well. You definitely want to choose a laptop without the Butterfly keyboard mechanism as the butterfly keyboards have been extremely unreliable and many people (myself included) hate the feel of the keys. Plus the Trackpad is huge on the new laptops which I find awkward as I prefer a smaller trackpad used on the older laptops.


Currently the 16" model an a recently announced 13" MBPro 2020 are the only current laptops that I'm aware of which went back to the old style keyboards with the scissor mechanism. I've also seen a lot of user reports on these forums regarding a GPU and/or power related hardware issue with the 16" model.


Keep in mind the memory and SSDs are soldered onto the Logic Board of all new Apple laptops so you must make sure to buy a computer with enough memory & storage to last its full life since these cannot be upgraded after purchase. Definitely keep frequent regular backups since it is impossible to recover accidentally deleted data from an SSD. Plus an SSD can fail at anytime without any warning signs. Plus the new laptops use the T2 security chip so it makes data recovery during a repair nearly impossible.


The newer Apple laptops will run a bit hotter than the older laptops since they are even thinner and harder to cool since they use even more powerful CPUs. Don't be surprised if the laptop gets hot when working on it.


FYI, here is a current list of all the publicly acknowledged free repair programs for various Apple products. Some products especially the 2016-2017 laptops have multiple repair programs available. Apple is also known to have some secret undisclosed free repair programs as well.

https://support.apple.com/exchange_repair

May 12, 2020 5:39 PM in response to marc cardwell

As with all electronics and non-electronic items sometimes you may have some warning signs of an impending problem and other times things will just fail. That older laptop is a good model except for the known GPU issues. Even though your Logic Board was replaced you could still suffer the GPU issue again. An SSD can fail without any warning signs whatsoever and I've heard reports that the internal hard drive SATA cable can sometimes be problematic especially when using an SSD. I'm glad you are backing up your system.

May 12, 2020 8:06 PM in response to marc cardwell

marc cardwell wrote:

regarding the butterfly kb, i’d assumed apple was taking care of affected people. i did NOT know ram and ssd were not updateable, thanks.

Apple is replacing the keyboards, but the replacement keyboards are of the same terrible design so it is very likely the keyboard will fail again. There are multiple issues with the butterfly keyboards. Besides the terrible feel of the keys, the butterfly mechanism easily jams with the smallest spec of dirt and the mechanism can just jam on its own as well. Plus the electronic key switch becomes damaged as well because it is so thin & fragile. While the replacement keyboards feel a bit nicer than the original they still contain the same flaws as evidenced by the free repair program which covers all butterfly keyboards from 2016-present including the slightly redesigned keyboards for the 2018/9 MBPros which is supposed to help prevent dirt from jamming the mechanism.


Of course I've heard a few people do like the butterfly keyboards so there are always exceptions.

Jun 20, 2020 5:37 AM in response to marc cardwell

Well, my faithful Late 2011 15” MBP failed yesterday. It’s screen and the old 23” Cinema Display were scrambled, and the fan was really whirring. It was supposed to be asleep, which freaked me out. I rebooted and got a scrambled blue screen, and booting into safe mode or the recovery discs did not work. It booted, i saw the apple logo, but after that the screen went gray.


next up, explaining to the wife what’s happening. I’m pretty sure I’ll get a 16” refurb w/ the Apple Pay card, for interest free payments. And crazily enough, my old power Mac g4 and a core 2 duo from 2007 still boot.

Jun 20, 2020 7:58 AM in response to marc cardwell

The MacBook Pro 16-in model is the "muscle car" of laptop computers. It is extremely capable. But if you frequently use an external display, the 5300 and 5500 versions issued in 2019 use high power display RAM for the external display, and there are MANY complaints of high (but not maximum) fan noise under certain conditions when using many kinds of external displays.


At this writing, the new, improved 5600 graphics version has not been delivered, so no one knows whether it can be quieter.


In the meantime, the MacBook Pro 13-in models -- specifically the higher-end models with FOUR ThunderBolt ports are very capable computers, and if you regularly use an external display (but fall short of being a professional movie editor by trade) you may be happier with one of these models.

Jun 20, 2020 8:47 AM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

Hey, thanks for your thoughts. My situation is I’m an unemployed graphic designer. I’ve been using that 2011 MBP, and it’s fine for what I do, mainly the adobe cc apps, some web coding, general web stuff. It was only recently I bought a used 23” Cinema Display, so for almost 9 years, I did freelance work on the Mac by itself. My day job was graphic design, on the company Mac.


so, a big screen is nice, but I have an external monitor; any current Mac will be faster than the 2011, so maybe the 16” is overkill? I rarely used the 2011 as a portable, because the battery wouldn’t hold a charge, and and iPad Pro became the new portable device (and my iPhone); this leads me to consider a refurb Mini: less than $700, I have a monitor and keyboard. Maybe that’s the best move, having the iPad for some stuff and the Mini for sitting and working? ...maybe the 13” is the compromise Mac...


the cost of a refurb 16 is doable, pay it monthly, I’ll have a big freelance gig lasting 2 months starting September. I don’t want to spend $ without needing to, but I’ve had a MBP since 2007. My wife would enjoy me spending as little as possible too.

Jun 20, 2020 9:49 AM in response to marc cardwell

My Late 2011 17” MBP is still running just fine. I bought a new 16” MBP a couple weeks ago but haven’t yet set it up. The only repair the 2011 17” needed was Apple’s battery replacement program. At some point, I swapped out the HDD it came with for a 1 TB SSD.


But going back further, my wife’s 2008 MacBook (aluminum unibody) still runs fine, has never needed service.


Further back? My 17” MBP from 2006 (Core Duo model) still works. A few years ago the battery started swelling, I removed it so now it only works when connected to power, but it boots, runs an ancient version of Safari for web browsing, etc.

Jun 20, 2020 11:22 AM in response to neuroanatomist

Yep, my 2007 core 2 duo MBP works fine, but can’t run current stuff i need, and it feels a bit laggy, because I’m still used to the 2011 MBP, but not bad. Apps launch super quick. AND i still have my power Mac g4, it dual boots OS 9 and 10, now IT feels weird to use, with the slow screen re-draws.


8 years ago, or so i had that same 17” MBP as my work mac, they swapped it out for a unibody 15” and wouldn’t sell it to me, it was heavy like a tank, but i loved it... overall, I’m pleased with 9 years of continuous use from my late 2011, i just gotta figure the best option for a replacement (mini, or a refurb 13” or refurb 16”).

late 2011 MBP lifespan? is yours still running?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.