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Opening up the back of MacBook Air will invalidate my right for a replacement?

hi, does anyone know if I was to open up the back of my dead MacBook Air to take out the hard drive (in order to restore the data from it), before giving it in to apple for replacement, would that invalidate my right for a replacement MacBook?






[Re-Titled by Moderator]

Posted on Oct 15, 2021 3:54 PM

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6 replies

Oct 16, 2021 12:07 PM in response to oo259

woodmeister has the correct answer here.


That said, what could have happened is that something went wrong during a software update, and the T2 Security Chip failed to update. In that case, the T2 chip can't start up, and your Mac acts as if you never powered it on (semi-bricked).


If this is the case, you can revive the firmware on the T2 Security Chip, which should preserve your user data if successful. To revive the firmware, you'll need a second Mac, as described here: Revive or restore an Intel-based Mac with Apple Configurator 2 - Apple Support

Oct 15, 2021 5:45 PM in response to oo259

Hi oo259,


As far as I'm aware the internal storage for MacBook Air is soldered directly to the main logic board. It cannot be removed.


Just to confirm, what year was your MacBook Air made in? This might affect whether the data on it can be recovered.


Also, in what way is your MacBook Air dead? Does it not power on at all (the screen stays completely blank and no sound is played)?

Oct 15, 2021 11:38 PM in response to Encryptor5000

Hi

ohh, my MacBook Air is the 2019 version. And yeah essentially it’s refusing to power on at all, with a potential hardware problem

I’ve tried all the potential troubleshooting methods to try and get it to turn on such as resetting SMC etc. but nothing worked. I’m just concerned because I didn’t get a chance to back up my data before the MacBook died

Opening up the back of MacBook Air will invalidate my right for a replacement?

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