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Macbook Pro screen glitches, 3 beeps, NOT THE RAM

My Macbook pro has been having screen glitches randomly with lines appearing on the screen and then it suddenly shuts down. Sometimes It beeps 3 times (what everyone claims is a ram issue) and sometimes it does not beep and will just start right back up again. I'm currently using it right now and it seems to be okay but this is always the case. It works fine and then all the sudden it glitches and shuts down. I


I have had the Ram replaced TWICE and have had the ram readjusted in case it has fallen out of place. my computer has passed every hardware test imaginable. Sometimes when I scroll on safari, chrome or anywhere (when its working) the screen glitches and lags really bad. MY computer is literally unusable. I am in nursing school and my computer is vital PLEASE someone help me!!!!


Here is just some details and extra info about what I've tried and researched:

I am currently using it in "safe boot" mode and I turned the SMS (sudden motion sensor) off.

I have done so much research on this issue here is what I have found thus far, obviously the ram issue, A GPU issue, A logic board issue (lets pray its not), a battery issue or a issue with Mavericks. Could it be something I downloaded?


Mac details:

13 Inch MacBook Pro Mid 2012

Processor: 2.5 GHz Intel Core i5

Memory: 4GB 1600 MHz DDR3

Version: 10.9.1

Graphics Intel HD Graphics 4000 1024 MB


This is what it says under SYSTEM INFORMATION Hardware>Memory.Memory Slots:


ECC: Disabled

BANK 0 / DIMM0

Size:2GB

Type:DDR3

Speed:1600MHz

Status:OK

Manufacturer: 0X02FE

Part Number:0x45424A3230554638424455302D474E2D4620


then it has BANK 1/DIMM0 and basically says the same thing

MacBook Pro, OS X Mavericks (10.9.1), SOMEONE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE HELP

Posted on Aug 5, 2014 3:32 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Feb 14, 2018 3:41 PM

I have a MBP 15" early 2011, had the logic board replaced in the apple program for the video chip, after that, i started to get kernel errors once in a while, all was pointing to RAM, but never could actually find the defective stick tried many, after a while of seating and reseating the sticks and a fresh install os the macOs it stopped for almost a year with no problems i thought i was done; only to begin crashing, powering off and beeping this week.

i've been reading forums and watching this video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpagfXra...

and having exactly the same problem as this.

So I took it apart again, and what did i find... apparently, as i said, and for everyones happines it migh not be the soldering at all!!

It seem the CLIPS that hold the stick closest to the keyboard are worn and do not have enough pressure so they do not hold the ram in place all the time, a little bump and the stick spings up like half a milimeter and the problem appears.

What did i do? Got a 1.5mm (.60 cal) piece of flat styrene about 3mm wide and 7 or 8 mm tall, put BOTH RAM sticks in place and with a little plastic tip/spudger push down the stick closest to the keyboard so the clip can make its full travel inward and insert the styrene pieces one in each side in the slots between the clip and where the screws for the backet are and then push them towards the RAM contacts to make pressure inward so the clips are pressed firmly agasint the sticks (you wont be able to remove the sticks without removing this styrene pieces).

User uploaded file

I did this, the MBP started with no problems, i can now shake it and won't freeze and/or beep at all.

I'll try to make a video or at least a photo guide showing and post the link (it will be my first YT video so be nice hahaha) so it shows the fault and fix clearly

174 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Feb 14, 2018 3:41 PM in response to ashlyn7371

I have a MBP 15" early 2011, had the logic board replaced in the apple program for the video chip, after that, i started to get kernel errors once in a while, all was pointing to RAM, but never could actually find the defective stick tried many, after a while of seating and reseating the sticks and a fresh install os the macOs it stopped for almost a year with no problems i thought i was done; only to begin crashing, powering off and beeping this week.

i've been reading forums and watching this video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpagfXra...

and having exactly the same problem as this.

So I took it apart again, and what did i find... apparently, as i said, and for everyones happines it migh not be the soldering at all!!

It seem the CLIPS that hold the stick closest to the keyboard are worn and do not have enough pressure so they do not hold the ram in place all the time, a little bump and the stick spings up like half a milimeter and the problem appears.

What did i do? Got a 1.5mm (.60 cal) piece of flat styrene about 3mm wide and 7 or 8 mm tall, put BOTH RAM sticks in place and with a little plastic tip/spudger push down the stick closest to the keyboard so the clip can make its full travel inward and insert the styrene pieces one in each side in the slots between the clip and where the screws for the backet are and then push them towards the RAM contacts to make pressure inward so the clips are pressed firmly agasint the sticks (you wont be able to remove the sticks without removing this styrene pieces).

User uploaded file

I did this, the MBP started with no problems, i can now shake it and won't freeze and/or beep at all.

I'll try to make a video or at least a photo guide showing and post the link (it will be my first YT video so be nice hahaha) so it shows the fault and fix clearly

Jul 26, 2017 1:09 AM in response to Pokeaang

I'm using a mid 2012 13" Macbook Pro which I bought in April 2016 after my 2009 model finally died.
I immediately upgraded the 4GB memory to 8GB with two sticks from the 2009 & added the 250GB SSD, making sure to reinstall the system. Everything was great until literally two weeks after it was out of warranty I was getting the 'barcode' & three beep crashes. I'd find myself opening up my Macbook & reseating the RAM several times a day!

User uploaded file
A visit to the Genius bar could find nothing wrong with the computer, but the crashes persisted despite numerous RAM reseats SMC & PRAM resets. Finally I tried the very simple advice about just using one RAM stick in bank 0 & since then there have been no crashes when using a single 4GB module. After reading that the Macbook could accept an 8GB module I upgraded though it's slightly annoying to have to spend $80 & discard two perfectly good 4GB modules. I'm a long term user of Apple products, with a Macintosh LCII & iMac DV that still work & G4 & 2009 MacBooks that don't. Yet it does seem a little odd that the Genius bar staff were completely unaware of the barcode RAM issue or how simple the fix is. It's also strange to me that this computer can support 16GB of RAM but the technical documentation only says 8GB. I do like Apple products, but I feel they should be doing more about this issue which seems quite common.

Jul 26, 2017 8:37 AM in response to amorto

You have the correct info on the 2012; here are the specs for the 2009 which clearly show a different speed:


https://support.apple.com/kb/sp649?locale=en_US


As for the RAM, here is the information that it does allow more than 8 GB RAM as do quite a few Macs:


User uploaded file


from here:


http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/macbook_pro/specs/macbook-pro-core-i5-2.5- 13-mid-2012-unibody-usb3-specs.html

Jul 28, 2017 11:49 AM in response to Pokeaang

Thanks for the tip Pokeaang - after multiple crashes & having to open up my Mac & reseat the RAM several times a day, I followed your advice, bought an 8GB RAM module & my Macbook is running better than ever!
It would be nice to able to put 16GB in, but as Apple say 8GB is the limit, I'm not complaining!

User uploaded file

Thanks again!

Dec 31, 2017 8:38 AM in response to ashlyn7371

I had the same problem (3 beeps, horizontal colored lines) with my 13" MacBook Pro (A1278 mid-2012) and it manifested itself a few minutes, sometimes an hour, after the computer was turned on. Then, after it happened once, it would restart, and then happen again right away.


I tried replacing the RAM, I tried switching the RAM around in the different slots in various combinations. Then, it came down to me replacing the logic board. I ordered the right part online (661-6159), I followed all the instructions step-by-step (MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Mid 2012 Logic Board Replacement - iFixit). Meanwhile, I noticed a ton of dust in the fan vent and under the logic board, so I cleaned all of that up. Also, I noticed that on the original part, there was basically no thermal paste left between the copper heat sink and the processor. When I tried to turn on the MacBook, nothing happened. I think the part was DOA, so I am sending that back for a refund now. Then, it occurred to me that the issue might actually be due to the MacBook overheating. I cleaned up all the crusted thermal paste, removed all the caked-on dust from underneath the logic board, in the fan and in the heat sink venting slots. I put everything back together with a fresh layer of thermal paste, closed everything up, and.... like magic, everything works now.User uploaded file

Feb 27, 2017 4:17 AM in response to Qwertyuiopajmagl

If you read the whole exchange, you may learn that many users have found that if you take out the RAM from the slot closest to the keyboard (the "bottom slot" when you open the unit upside down) and ONLY use the "top slot" (furthest from the keyboard), the problem goes away. It means that the max ram you can have in the computer is 8G, in a single DIMM.

Mar 18, 2017 8:29 AM in response to ashlyn7371

Well, I just had the screen glitches / 3 beeps happen to me 2 days ago, out of nowhere..

Luckily, thanks to this thread, I was able to figure out that by removing the RAM closest to the keyboard, it seems to fix the problem, as it hasn't happened since in the last 2 days..


However, I had just upgraded my total RAM to 8GB via 2x4GB a few months ago, and now find myself back to 4GB, with one 4GB stick that I paid for but can't use.. It seems I would have to buy another 8GB single stick in order to get back to 8GB, which seems unfair as this is clearly a design flaw by Apple considering the consistency of the issue with so many other users. I also have a Mid-2012 MBP, as reported by many others.


As far as I'm concerned, it feels like having bought an expensive two seater sports car, and then learning a few years later that having someone sit on your passenger seat will now suddenly start to crash your engine..

Mar 18, 2017 8:41 AM in response to Peacecrafter

Or you could look at it this way. It's coming up on a five-year old machine. Probably way out of warranty. And instead of having to toss it, you can simply buy an 8G module and put it in there and keep using it for a few years longer.


Apple will often do a recall or free repair if there are a lot of problems, but it sounds like there aren't enough for it to be necessary for them, PR-wise.


You COULD go to an Apple Store, show how it messes up, then remove the DIMM in their presence and show how it doesn't and see what they do.

Mar 20, 2017 6:36 PM in response to ashlyn7371

I found this thread only 2 days too late... I took my laptop to the Genius Bar 2 days ago. I just got a call from them telling me that they didn't find any solid issues so I decided to put more effort into researching for myself. I wish I never brought it in so I can start working on fixing it right now!

Mid 2012 13 inch, just started having 100% the same problem about a month ago -- random screen glitch followed by reboots, sometimes 3 beeps that can only be solved by tapping the machine, and overheats. I noticed the correlation between the occurrence of the issue and moving the machine so I suspected it would be some sort of a connectivity issue. I'm so glad I found this thread! Can't wait to try the solutions that have been proposed. As a reference, I'm a student who uses my laptop pretty heavily and I don't really take the best care of it either. I have replaced a power cable (2 years ago), a battery (last year), and a hard drive cable (did it myself last year) during the 4.5 years that I've owned my laptop.

Mar 21, 2017 4:01 AM in response to azurelezz

No, you are good. If you have a DIMM in ONLY the slot furthest from the keyboard, it seems your MBP will work great.


And I am living proof that having only one 8G DIMM in that slot works perfectly even though Apple says you have to have both filled. Also, in my experience, it doesn't slow anything down in performance versus 2 4G DIMMs, contrary to the info I've seen.

Macbook Pro screen glitches, 3 beeps, NOT THE RAM

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