To all MacBook Pro 2011 Users, I may have found a solution... Some of you may not like it. It worked for me, and I want to contribute to the possibly handful of solutions already (of which most are somewhat expensive)
Some Useful Info:
Before Discrete GPU FAIL:
MacBook Pro 2011 17-Inch
Intel Core i7 2.4Ghz
AMD Radeon 6770m 1GB
OS X 10.9.3
This failure consisted of basically all of the signs and symptoms seen on this thread. Graphical Anomalies of all types started appearing until the machine eventually failed to boot at all, being replaced by a machine which showed a grey screen and ran it's fans on overdrive for the duration of it's startup (lack thereof)
I talked with apple support for a time and determined with their help that it was a hardware fail. After concluding that discussion, the next day, i proceeded for 8 hours to an apple store (I live a LONG ways away front the city). They replaced the logic board gratuit (would've been $575.00) and it worked after.
... Until it started experiencing the VERY SAME graphical glitches, up to point where the computer stopped functioning entirely, AGAIN. This was only after 4 days of receiving it back from Apple. It was at this point where I did a lot of thinking as to what would make the GPU Fail. I do run high graphics capacity games, Graphics editing apps, Virtualization software... a plethora of high-quality layout and graphical rendering. But I had (stupidly) overlooked the fact that this only started happening after updating to 10.9.3.
I repeated the expensive (yet not as expensive as it would've been) process of getting the Logic board (or motherboard) replaced a second time, also gratuit courtesy of 3-year apple care. When I received it back Wiping and reinstalling OS X happened in very short order (technically over the span of 3 days... bad internet connection... anyways, you get the point, back on topic). Everything has been working well, and I have been using it for two weeks without any problems.
After Second Discrete GPU FAIL:
MacBook Pro 2011 17-Inch
Intel Core i7 2.4Ghz
AMD Radeon 6770m 1GB
OS X 10.9 (Later Upgraded to 10.9.1, then 10.9.2)
Using any OS below 10.9.3 seemed to fix the problem. My theory (though possibly completely unfounded) is that 10.9.3 installed new Discrete GPU drivers that put the cards in an constantly active and high-powered state (which would possibly crack or melt the solder depending on what was happening during the time card spent overheating) I was hesitant to go to 10.9.2 for fear of the same issues but I did so since several of my apps required it. I'm going to see how users of 2011 MBP's (who were so lucky as to not have the problems we on this particular thread now face) fair if they upgrade to 10.9.4... perhaps apple very discretely (oh, the irony) fixed the driver issues.
be all that as it may, I hope this solution helps a few of you suffering MBP users out there with dead machines. Simple answer (though not an absolute solution) is to do the following:
- Be sure to have some type of backup (Time Machine or other backup program)
- Restart your Mac while holding "option" to show boot partitions
- Select the recovery partition (in my case it was named "Recovery 10.9")
- Select "Disk Utility" and choose erase
- select your main hard drive as the one to erase and hit "Erase"
- Wait for Disk Utility to complete the process
- Once it is done red-dot the Disk Utility window and click "Reinstall OS X" in the main recovery window
- Make sure you have an internet connection
- proceed through the reinstall process (the program will guide you through it)
- Now comes the waiting (could be an hour, multiple hours, or multiple days depending on your internet connection)
- Once the process has been completed, you can now boot into a fresh copy of OS X.
If you need to update to a Higher version of OS X, and you've used my method, do the following:
- Select one of the OS X Updates 10.9.1/10.9.2
I would strongly recommend that MBP 2011 (specifically 17" MacBook users) User not upgrade to 10.9.3, as this is where problems started for me. Yes, I know that some of you experience this problem in mountain lion or earlier, or don't have the same precise situation, and if so I cannot help you, I'm stating what worked for me so that others may try to salvage their systems and not have to go through more logic board replacements.
As for Apple's part, I'm absolutely disappointed. I've been getting quality support from apple for years now. Every problem that I couldn't seem to fix, support seemed to respond and answer my questions and resolve the problems I had. That Apple would simply ignore a HUGE problem (seriously, 300+ pages and 6000+ replies) that is CLEARLY NOT a problem resulting from heavy usage but in fact CLEARLY a hardware and/or software defect (Most likely hardware) is the move typically made by (to use italian) strontzi.