Alterações no passo nº 6
Edição por Sam Goldheart —
Edição aprovada por Sam Goldheart
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Linhas do passo
- | [* black] Our 2.5 mm nut driver makes a rare appearance (you may remember its role in the [guide|48170|stepid=107879|new_window=true])— |
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- | [* icon_reminder] |
- | [* black] The |
- | [* black] Unlike the one in the MacBook Air, this M1 is actively cooled by a pair of fans. [link|https://youtu.be/JdBYVNuky1M?t=1420|Each fan blows inward across the logic board|new_window=true], where the heatsink |
- | [* black] We'll circle back later for a closer look at those fans |
+ | [* black] Our 2.5 mm nut driver makes a rare appearance (you may remember its role in the [guide|48170|stepid=107879|new_window=true])—removing logic board standoff screws. Thanks to our [product|IF145-452-2|iPhone Marlin kit|new_window=true], we're covered! |
+ | [* icon_reminder] Good to see incredibly-thin computers opting for screws over glues. Hey, [guide|115457|iPad team|stepid=222044|new_window=true], take note |
+ | [* black] The [link|https://www.ifixit.com/News/46884/m1-macbook-teardowns-something-old-something-new|fanless M1 MacBook Air|new_window=true]-sized logic board is housed in the artificial "chin" of the iMac. |
+ | [* black] Unlike the one in the MacBook Air, this M1 is actively cooled by a pair of fans. [link|https://youtu.be/JdBYVNuky1M?t=1420|Each fan blows inward across the logic board|new_window=true], where the heatsink draws heat away from the M1 with a copper heat pipe and two short heatsinks. |
+ | [* black] We'll circle back later for a closer look at those fans, but we can't resist a bare logic board! |