![]() ![]() I'm likely going to get a 16" model next year. But my needs and usage is not the same as others. I would rather personally keep my 15" MacBook Pro Unibody then give up the screen size. You also need to do it at time of purchase as you can't alter it later (unlike the 13/15" Unibody MacBook Pro's. Its common with 2011 MacBooks and its a manufacturing fault. The newer retina 2016 (butterfly) or older 2015 (scissor) I think that's getting closer in the comparison.Īs far as costs most of the 2012 13/15" Unibody logic boards are in the $450~650 where the buying the newest 2020 13" MacBook Air is $1000 ~1300 range at the base and adding RAM & storage gets expensive! And the 2016 ~ 2019 MacBook Pro retinas they are still more expensive and they also force you into USB-C. Whereas the 2012 has a better GPU and not as badly CPU throttled. If the external display is fine but your MBP display gets fuzzy, the MBPdisplay panel is probably at fault. If the problem also occurs on the external display, the gpu is probably at fault. The new air has a very nice screen, but it doesn't have the GPU power and is thermally limited. Graphics card failures: This is THE MOST COMMON failure of any MacBook Pro ever made. Quick way to tell if the problem is with the gpu (graphics card) or the display panel itself - connect an external display to your MBP. I think you need to reword what you wrote as your first statement, doesn't jive with what you say at the end.Īs far as the pro's and con's of refitting a 2012 logic board into a 2011 system Vs buying a MacBook Air 2020. ![]()
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