Alterações no passo nº 17
Edição por Ben Capehart —
Edição recusada por Kyle Smith
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- | [* black] The new power supply (plus integrated ethernet jack) may live on the outside now, but it won’t escape our tools! We had to bust out the heavy |
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- | [* black] Repairability benefits: If the iMac's power supply dies, you can easily replace it. Plus, the lack of large exposed capacitors inside the iMac itself (like we've seen in previous generations) means you'll have a safer time poking around in there. |
+ | [* black] The new power supply (plus integrated ethernet jack) may live on the outside now, but it won’t escape our tools! We had to bust out the heavy-duty stuff but it’s worth it. |
+ | [* black] Repairability benefits: If the iMac's power supply dies, you can easily replace it. Plus, the lack of large exposed capacitors inside the iMac itself (like we've seen in [guide|136943|previous generations]) means you'll have a safer time poking around in there. |
[* black] On the other hand, no more capacitor swaps—you’re not getting inside this thing without destroying it. | |
[* black] The innards look similar to a standard [guide|111384|Apple MacBook power supply|stepid=213337|new_window=true], albeit with a network cable passing through. | |
[* black] The tiny ethernet board is likely strengthening and piping the internets through the black wire bunch. | |
- | [* black] Red wires feed power into the '' |
+ | [* black] Red wires feed power into the ''Not-Magsafe'' magnetic umbilical cord. |
[* icon_note] The power supply can pump out a healthy 143 watts, but in our testing, the iMac only draws about 60 watts at most. That's a ''lot'' of extra headroom for power-hungry USB-C peripherals. |