scp566 wrote:
OWD did send a replacement but the same thing is happening, so I'm assuming it's probably not that.
Unlikely to be the SSD.
The disk is not visible in disk utility, and when I try installing OS on the new SSD w/ the bootable drive it freezes showing only the bar for selecting a wireless network, but no disks.
What was the last version of macOS actually installed on this laptop?
What was the highest version of macOS ever installed on this laptop?
I'm trying to figure out why you would be presented with selecting a WiFi network if you are booting from a macOS USB installer. The only reason I can think of is whether macOS 12.x Monterey may be requiring it for some reason....I have not tried reinstalling macOS using a USB installer in a while for a Mac which may have had Monterey installed previously....I seem to recall Monterey may have required authentication to boot from USB which may be necessary even on a T1 Mac.
Are you saying if you select a WiFi network, that you cannot finish booting into anything (not sure if you will be presented with some sort of macOS authentication screen, or you will boot to into Recovery Mode, or it you will boot to some other type of tool menu or interface maybe regarding booting from USB. But it should finish doding something as long as you have a good WiFi & network.
Do you think I need to install an earlier MacOS with the original SSD in and try the replacement again?
May be interesting to test the installer with the original SSD, but if you do so and it fails, then you lose your only SSD which can still boot this laptop.
The Logic Board was replaced earlier this month, along with the battery...
Any other suggestions are very much appreciated!
Was this an official Apple repair? If so, then you have a 90 day part warranty (or possibly repair warranty depending if the laptop was mailed to an Apple mail-in repair depot for the actual repair...an Apple Store or AASP may do this...hard to say if they did). If there is a 90 day repair warranty, then Apple will even replace the bad SSD (if they can confirm it is bad...make sure to tell them it fails at power on and waking from sleep so they can reproduce the failure). The downside is if it is only a 90 day part warranty and they decide the SSD is bad, then they will want you to pay for the replacement and may not look any further into a possible Logic Board issue (Apple is all or nothing when it comes to repairs).
An Apple Authorized Service Provider (AASP) may be more likely to consider testing the laptop with an OWC SSD since they may be familiar with OWC themselves (hard to say...Apple definitely won't do anything
If the only issue with this laptop is with reinstalling macOS, then you will need to try reinstalling macOS on the original Apple OEM SSD to confirm it has the same issue because you will need to have some reproducible issue with all original Apple parts installed. If you have the same issue as the OWC SSD, then Apple should take notice, but remember what I mentioned about the two types of 90 day warranty repairs that may be involved and the limitation of the part only version.