Featured

Featured Guide

Difficulty

Moderate

Steps

5

Time Required

                          20 minutes            

Sections

3

  • Lower Case
  • 2 steps
  • Battery Connector
  • 1 step
  • Solid-State Drive
  • 2 steps

Flags

1

This guide has been found to be exceptionally cool by the iFixit staff.

  • BackMacBook Air 13" Mid 2011

  • Full Screen

  • Options

  • History

  • Save to Favorites

  • Download PDF

  • Edit

  • Translate

  • Get Shareable Link

  • Embed This Guide

  • Notify Me of Changes

  • Stop Notifications

Introduction

Before you perform this repair, if at all possible, back up your existing SSD. Then, either familiarize yourself with internet recovery or create a bootable external drive so you’ll be ready to install macOS onto your new drive and migrate your data to the new SSD.

Finally, we strongly recommend installing macOS 10.13 High Sierra (or a later macOS) before replacing the original SSD from your MacBook Air. Most new SSDs require updated storage drivers not found in versions of macOS prior to High Sierra.

What you need

Step 1

              Lower Case               
  • Before proceeding, power down your MacBook. Close the display and lay it on a soft surface, top-side down.
  • Use a P5 Pentalobe driver to remove ten screws securing the lower case, of the following lengths:
  • Two 9 mm screws
  • Eight 2.6 mm screws

Before proceeding, power down your MacBook. Close the display and lay it on a soft surface, top-side down.

Use a P5 Pentalobe driver to remove ten screws securing the lower case, of the following lengths:

Two 9 mm screws

Eight 2.6 mm screws

1024

Step 2

  • Wedge your fingers between the display and the lower case and pull upward to pop the lower case off the Air.
  • Remove the lower case and set it aside.

Wedge your fingers between the display and the lower case and pull upward to pop the lower case off the Air.

Remove the lower case and set it aside.

Step 3

              Battery Connector               
  • As a precaution against accidental discharge or shock, disconnect the battery connector from the logic board.
  • Grab the clear plastic pull tab attached to the battery connector and pull it toward the front edge of the Air to disconnect the battery from the logic board.
  • Be sure to pull the connector horizontally toward the battery, and not straight up from the Air, or you may damage the socket on the logic board.

As a precaution against accidental discharge or shock, disconnect the battery connector from the logic board.

Grab the clear plastic pull tab attached to the battery connector and pull it toward the front edge of the Air to disconnect the battery from the logic board.

Be sure to pull the connector horizontally toward the battery, and not straight up from the Air, or you may damage the socket on the logic board.

Step 4

              Solid-State Drive               
  • Remove the single 2.9 mm T5 Torx screw securing the SSD to the logic board.

Remove the single 2.9 mm T5 Torx screw securing the SSD to the logic board.

Step 5

  • To avoid damaging its socket, do not lift the end of the SSD excessively.
  • Slightly lift up the end of the SSD and pull it straight out of its socket on the logic board.
  • When reinstalling the SSD, be sure it is properly seated before reinstalling its retaining screw.

To avoid damaging its socket, do not lift the end of the SSD excessively.

Slightly lift up the end of the SSD and pull it straight out of its socket on the logic board.

When reinstalling the SSD, be sure it is properly seated before reinstalling its retaining screw.

Cancel: I did not complete this guide.

                                                                                      83 other people completed this guide.                                             

Author

                                      with 6 other contributors 

                    Andrew Bookholt                     

575,478 Reputation

                                      618 Guides authored                  



                       Badges:
                       47







                                                        +44 more badges                           

flux1968 - Jun 1, 2016

Reply

If I replace the SSD with another one purchased from iFixit, will it appear as an external or internal drive?

At my job, it’s standard to encrypt drives. I purchased an SSD from another vendor and because it showed as external, couldn’t be encrypted. I just want to avoid this problem before purchasing one from here.

ahdesiqueira - Jan 18, 2017

Reply

Muito bom o roteiro, deu certinho.

Tyler Berry - Feb 4, 2017

Reply

This should really be rated as easy. Took less than 5 minutes thanks to this excellent guide.

Ben Godwin - Jul 20, 2017

Reply

Absolutely spot on. Thanks Andrew! The only potential pitfall in this job is getting the right replacement SSD (or, if you’re extracting the SSD to use elsewhere, getting the right caddy.)

smoker_man2004 - Nov 3, 2017

Reply

anybody knows if exist any hdd to replace the ssd?

I have a mb air 13 mid 2011 in my hands and it has behaviour a mac(/pc) with a hdd damaged? same noise, same latencies, same way to damage files…

and over the top “informations about this mac” says it is a macbook pro 13

never seen in my life…