MacBook – solder more memory into the MacBook Air

macbook promemoryupgrade

I love everything about my Macook Air except its very low maximum memory (and yes I bought it with the maximum available at the time).

So I'm thinking "I know how to solder… how hard can it be?". It's not that unusual for the theoretic limit at the time a computer is manufactured to be surpassable later when modules with more memory become available.

Is the claim that the memory can't be upgraded based solely on the assumption that no one knows how to solder? Or is it massively more difficult to solder new memory into a laptop than it is to solder some simple electronics project? Are there any big difficulties other than just the need to solder the memory in place (and unsolder the old memory)?

Best Answer

Yes, it is possible, and REWA Technology has done it and demonstrates how they did it in this video: https://youtu.be/CTsEJ49LLsQ

After taking the laptop apart, you must:

  • Heat up the sealing adhesive around the two camera chips
  • Remove sealing adhesive with tweezers
  • Apply some BGA paste flux around the RAM chip
  • Blow it with a hot air gun for 30 seconds
  • Take off the RAM chips
  • Solder the tin to the soldering iron and flat the bonding pads
  • Clean with an anti-static wipe
  • RAM chips cannot be mixed
  • Blow the bonding pad with a hot air gun
  • Apply some BGA paste flux to the bonding pad
  • Align the RAM chip to the bonding pad
  • Blow it with a hot air gun
  • Solder the rest of the RAM chips to the bonding pad
  • Remove the 10k resistance R2051
  • Detach a 100k resistance from a broken motherboard
  • Solder the detached 100k resistance to R1636
  • Test both ends of the resistance for a short circuit or missing solder
  • Put the pieces of the laptop back together