US Mac Book Pro, Living in Ireland (Same UK Plugs)

Hi, I bought my macbook pro in the US and I am now back in Ireland, my macbook just has the US power adaptor....in Ireland we use the same plugs (sockets) as those in the UK...

I have plugged my mac book into a US to UK plug adaptor and into the socket, the macbook charges for around ten minutes that stops (100% charge still not reached)....do I need a special convertor that will change the voltage to the correct setting? Anyone had/have the same problem..

Thanks in advance

Imac G5 20'' & Mac Book Pro, Mac OS X (10.3.8)

Posted on Aug 31, 2006 4:15 PM

Reply
16 replies

Aug 31, 2006 4:23 PM in response to Michael Kiernan1

The MagSafe is rated 110-240 volts and will work in any country with the appropriate lead/plug. I bought mine in the USA and use it mainly in Australia (110 vs 240 volts) and the MagSafe has worked fine. (Had to get Apple's World Adapter kit for the Aussie 'home' plug bit)

Try resetting resetting the PMU (Power Management Unit) and re-calibrate the battery

Sep 1, 2006 1:23 AM in response to Michael Kiernan1

Well the thing is I can see the orange light on the cable come on, it goes on for around ten minutes then stops.....In this time it is recharging, as I can see the percentage goes up....so the cable is tight enough, I have two adaptors, one is a UK automatic adaptor the other is your standard 5 Euro generic one, both with the same result....it is only a new laptop...

The adaptor does get very hot in this time, almost like it is too hot and needs to cool down, then I put it back in after ten minutes and it recharges for another ten?

Sep 1, 2006 1:51 AM in response to Michael Kiernan1

Just one of these - take the "corner plug" off the Apple adapter if you haven't already and this below will just push into the gap (you may already be using one of these)

http://svp.co.uk/products-solo.php?pid=476

If it is not charging and you've reset the PMU (remove battery, unplug machine and press the power button for 10 seconds) then the next step is a call to Apple. There is no reason it shouldn't work.

Best of luck.

Sep 1, 2006 3:34 AM in response to Michael Kiernan1

Now you've confused me.

If what you have done is plugged the MacBook Pro power adapter (magsafe) into a converter that changes the 220v to 120v, then take it out - change the cable to the one I mentioned and plug it into the wall directly.

You want this
Wall socket<----figure of 8 cable---->apple power adapter (white one)--->computer.

NOT

Wall socket<----220 to 120v converter---->apple power adapter (white one)--->computer.

It is an autoswitching power adapter - plugs straight in.

http://www.universitycomputers.com/ePOS/thiscategory=67&store=210&itemnumber=510E-44-MA357&form=shared3/gm/detail.html&design=210

If you have the same problem then you have to call Apple. Could be the power adapter - could be the computer.

Hope this helps. Don't want to come across as patronising - just making sure we are clear about what we are talking about.

Hope it works out. Luckily Apple is based in Ireland if I remember correctly so you might get some good service.

Cheers

Sep 1, 2006 11:55 AM in response to Michael Kiernan1

So you have two automatic convertors going on this? That is the problem. When I was in the Philippines (220v) my power brick was also hot but I never had a problem. I did make sure it was able to ventilate itself. I stood it upright on a hard surface.

I don't think you can run two convertors at the same time. Let the Apple brick do the converting and find a suitable adaptor for the plug.

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US Mac Book Pro, Living in Ireland (Same UK Plugs)

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