Featured

Featured Guide

Difficulty

Easy

Steps

8

Time Required

                          15 - 30 minutes            

Sections

4

  • Battery
  • 2 steps
  • Memory Cover
  • 2 steps
  • Hard Drive
  • 1 step
  • Hard Drive
  • 3 steps

Flags

1

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

  • BackMacBook Core 2 Duo

  • Full Screen

  • Options

  • History

  • Save to Favorites

  • Download PDF

  • Edit

  • Translate

  • Get Shareable Link

  • Embed This Guide

  • Notify Me of Changes

  • Stop Notifications

Introduction

What you need

Step 1

              Battery               
  • Use a coin or spudger to rotate the battery-locking screw 90 degrees clockwise.

Use a coin or spudger to rotate the battery-locking screw 90 degrees clockwise.

1024

Step 2

  • Lift the battery out of the computer.

Lift the battery out of the computer.

Step 3

              Memory Cover               
  • Unscrew the three evenly-spaced Phillips screws from along the rear wall of the battery compartment.
  • The screws are captive to the metal memory cover so you cannot lose them.
  • Using The Flexible Extension sold by iFixit will help with this step.

Unscrew the three evenly-spaced Phillips screws from along the rear wall of the battery compartment.

The screws are captive to the metal memory cover so you cannot lose them.

Using The Flexible Extension sold by iFixit will help with this step.

Step 4

  • Grasp the right end of the L-shaped memory cover, then pull it towards you so it clears the battery compartment opening.
  • Lift the memory cover up and out of the computer.

Grasp the right end of the L-shaped memory cover, then pull it towards you so it clears the battery compartment opening.

Lift the memory cover up and out of the computer.

Step 5

              Hard Drive               
  • Grasp the white plastic tab attached to the hard drive and pull it to the right, removing the hard drive from the computer.
  • The hard drive goes back into its compartment with the label facing down.

Grasp the white plastic tab attached to the hard drive and pull it to the right, removing the hard drive from the computer.

The hard drive goes back into its compartment with the label facing down.

Step 6

              Hard Drive               
  • Remove the two black T8 Torx screws securing the silver bracket to the hard drive.

Remove the two black T8 Torx screws securing the silver bracket to the hard drive.

Step 7

  • Rotate the hard drive and remove the two black T8 Torx screws on the other side of the drive.

Rotate the hard drive and remove the two black T8 Torx screws on the other side of the drive.

Step 8

  • Lift the silver metal hard drive bracket off the hard drive.
  • You’ll need to transfer this metal bracket to your new hard drive.
  • If you are installing a new hard drive, we have an OS X install guide to get you up and running.

Lift the silver metal hard drive bracket off the hard drive.

You’ll need to transfer this metal bracket to your new hard drive.

If you are installing a new hard drive, we have an OS X install guide to get you up and running.

To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.

Cancel: I did not complete this guide.

                                                                                      857 other people completed this guide.                                             

Author

                                      with 12 other contributors 

                    iRobot                     

Member since: 09/24/2009

1 Reputation

                                      646 Guides authored                  



                       Badges:
                       36







                                                        +33 more badges                           

suselfunk - Jul 24, 2010

Reply

This upgrade is so easy. Just do it. Even your dad could do this.

After the upgrade to a 320 GB 7200 rpm, the MacBook (1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo A1181, with 2 GB of ram) works like a new computer. However, the fan comes on so easy - and stays on forever. Is this due to the increased speed of the hard drive? Is there a way to turn down the hard drive speed when used on AC power?

MarkBookPro - Oct 26, 2010

Reply

The rubber guide came off on mine too. The mistake is that the screws without the flanges go on the outside edge of the Mac and the flange ones towards the inside. If you do it backwards it will pull the rubber guide off and then an otherwise effortless install will take a while longer to complete.

andreahull - Nov 20, 2011

Reply

it’s really easy to do this - there’s no need to pay someone else! thanks for this awesome tutorial.

rsimmons1980 - Nov 13, 2012

Reply

Very simple and easy! The biggest challenge was the walk to Radio Shack in cold weather to go get a !#!@ torx! The OSX installation guide was also a big help.

russcrandall - Dec 10, 2012

Reply

Bought a Crucial M4 CT128M4SSD2 (128 GB SSD), removal was quick and easy. This was my wife’s mac, I personally do not own Apple products. My challenge was that I had to erase the drive (which in the process re-formats the ssd) which got the install up and running.