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MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) Ram Upgrade

Hi,


On March I purchased the new MacBook Pro with the 4GB Ram standard by Hynix, in September I upgrade to 8GB and now it's works faster. Today I like to upgrade on 16GB of memory for go more fast, but in the Apple support page ( http://goo.gl/ZSXGi ) the maximum are 8GB. Do you think that I'm crazy or it's possible for real upgrade the MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) to 16 GB of Ram? If yes could you tell me some good memories?


thank you

Stefano

MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.7.2)

Posted on Dec 1, 2011 2:10 PM

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Posted on Dec 1, 2011 2:13 PM

16 gb upgrade is possible, but I only have 8gb in mine.


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12 replies

Sep 30, 2015 5:09 AM in response to Stefano Sargentini

Here’s something to think about: In mid 2011 my 2009 MBP became terribly slow (an OS and software upgrade did it) but my wife’s 2011 MBA didn’t even break into a sweat with the same changes. Both had 4GB but hers had an SSD and granted, it was 2 years newer but I didn’t think the specs were that much better. I borrowed an SSD from work and installed it. Wow, it was like getting a new computer! I also borrowed RAM and checked out a RAM upgrade to 8GB. That also improved things but the SSD seemed to provide the biggest improvement. I performed the same experiment when I received a Mac mini at work and saw similar results.


It seems to me that Apple is fine tuning OS X for SSDs and computers that have a mechanical hard drive are at a disadvantage today.

Dec 13, 2015 10:54 PM in response to faisal80

I am running 16 GB. OWC/macsales.com sells good quality RAM that is compatible with macs (and macs act quirky with incorrect RAM). All you need is a #00 phillips screwdriver and macsales has installation guides.


SSD is notably faster than HD (OWC sells a Mercury series model that many swear by). HD cost is less (you can get 1 TB for $100) while SSD can be $0.50 per GB). Installation is not too hard (macsales.com has those guides and tools as well). But if you have $$ burning a hole in your pocket and you do not have enough backups I would invest in an external enclosure like this one http://eshop.macsales.com/item/OWC/MSTG800U3K/ that can take any 2.5 in bare drive and 1 or 2 spare HD (like this one http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Western%20Digital/WD7500BPKX/). CarbonCopyClone (bombich.com, $40) and a spare clone drive, one for the new El Capitan and one for the the old Snow Leopard disk. I actually advise making a full clone of SL on a separate external disk and upgrade *that* disk first leaving your internal intact while learning about El Capitan.

Feb 21, 2016 4:26 PM in response to ray.mora

I just bought two 8GB RAM modules from OWC/MacSales for my early 2011 MacBook Pro 15-inch laptop, and for the life of me haven't been able to get them to seat right in the motherboard, and that's in 2 motherboards, one that Apple replaced due to failing video display circuitry, and in the new replacement motherboard

The little latching tabs just won't hold the OWC chips in place, not really sure why, but Apple RAM seats easily and works flawlessly. I'll be returning the OWC RAM, sadly, everything I've eve bought from them has worked great.

MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) Ram Upgrade

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