
Like Craig Federighi before us, today we’re opening up the new M1 MacBooks and seeing the light. Except… we opened them from the other side. Oops.
We’ll spill all the details below, but suffice to say, our curiosity has been rewarded in the most unintuitive way possible. While Apple touts its M1-powered Macs as nothing short of a revolution, internally, they could hardly be any more similar to their predecessors. The new 13” MacBook Pro looks so familiar inside, we had to double-check that we didn’t accidentally purchase the old model. Meanwhile, the new MacBook Air’s biggest move was to … eliminate the fan. Amazing, right? Well, in many ways, yes. Let’s dig into it.
MacBook Air—Now With Less Air(flow)
The biggest physical change to either of these machines is also the punniest: The Air no longer actively moves air. In what a pessimist might describe as pulling a Microsoft, Apple nixed the fan in favor of a simple aluminum heat spreader hanging off the left edge of the logic board.
If that move has you groaning slightly, we understand. Recent history arguably warrants a little pessimism here. The Air hasn’t had the best track record with thermals—it was starting to gain a reputation—and the cooling solutions in some other Apple notebooks are famously anemic. So you might worry that the fan is the new headphone jack, an inevitable victim of designers obsessed with slim, light slabs and minimaluminiumalism.
But there’s something to be said for the fanless simplicity of the iPad (Apple’s other computer). If this new thermal arrangement is truly enough to meet the M1’s needs—and early reviews indicate that for most workloads, it is—it means less maintenance and one less point of mechanical failure. Will anyone actually miss having to open their laptop to de-gunk or replace a dusty old fan? Maybe somebody will. Maybe even us. But let’s be real: the best repair is the one you never have to make in the first place.
There’s just not much to go wrong here. A thick cold plate over the M1 processor draws heat via conduction to its flatter, cooler end, where it can safely radiate away. Without a fan, this solution may take longer to cool off, and may cap out sooner, but by foregoing heatpipes or a vapor chamber, the sink also has more mass to saturate with thermal energy. There are no moving parts, and nothing to break. You’ll want new thermal paste occasionally, and that’s about it.
Apart from the new board and cooler, the rest of the Air remains all but identical to its predecessor. There’s a new battery model, with minimally different specs. The repair procedures will likely remain almost totally unchanged. As for the board and the M1 itself, more on that below.
MacBook Pro—Mostly the Same, Which Is Different
The MacBook Pro sees even fewer internal changes than the Air, and in a way, that is a surprise in itself. We’d expected—nay, hoped—to see some consolidation of MacBook parts and design. These machines are, after all, running the same chip, and the same OS, on nearly identical screens. Interchangeable parts (such as we found in some of this year’s iPhones) would significantly increase your odds of finding replacements down the line, since more of them get produced. In a pinch, you can even pilfer parts from devices that aren’t exactly the same as yours. And the repair procedures tend to be similar if not identical.
But the two-port MacBook Pro and the new MacBook Air still hail from completely different evolutionary lines. Nowhere is that more apparent than in the Pro’s familiar thermal design. The M1 MacBook Pro’s cooling setup is very similar to that of its Intel-based ancestors: nothing fancy, just a copper heat pipe carrying heat away from the processor toward a small heatsink, where the hot air is promptly shown the door grille by the fan.

Speaking of the fan, there has been some light speculation that these new machines run so impossibly quiet even under heavy load, they might be concealing some nigh-magical new cooling tech. It turns out, not so much: our M1 MacBook Pro’s single fan is identical to the fan in the two-port Intel MacBook Pro 2020 we picked up earlier this year. Not similar—identical.
In other words, what you’re not hearing there is the sound of an aggressive fan curve. This thing likely never spins at more than a fraction of its upper limit. Remember, this same M1 chip performs well in the fanless MacBook Air, so this fan likely doesn’t have all that much to do even under extended load. The M1 is, apparently, just that good.
Hello, World—Meet the M1
Speaking of which, here’s the thing you came here to see: the brand-new M1 package at the heart of both these notebooks.
Apple gave its M1 SoC a very thorough introduction during their keynote on the 10th. Here’s the short version: The M1 is built on a cutting-edge 5-nanometer process (5 nm = smaller transistors for more performance with less energy), like the A14 Bionic in the new iPhones. It packs eight CPU cores (four optimized for performance, and four more for efficiency), and an integrated GPU with either 7 cores or 8, depending on which config you order. (Both use the same M1 chip off the exact same production line, but Apple sorts them in a process known as “binning” where slightly lower-quality silicon results in one GPU core being disabled.)
Next to the shiny silver M1 chip on each board you’ll notice two small black rectangles. Those are the new “integrated” memory chips: 8 GB (2x 4 GB) of SK hynix LPDDR4X memory. Apple calls this UMA, or Unified Memory Architecture. If it looks familiar, it might be because you’ve seen one of our recent iPad teardowns. It’s no surprise that Apple copied some of its own homework here. By baking RAM into the M1 package, each part of M1 (CPU, GPU, Neural Engine, etc) can access the same memory pool without having to copy or cache the data in more than one place.
This design increases speed and efficiency, but we must admit it is slightly devastating for us, the people who watch Apple’s keynotes crossing our fingers and squinting for a glimpse of user-accessible memory or storage inside their newest devices. User-upgradable parts can significantly prolong the lifespan of any computer (especially entry-level models like the ones we have here). Applications and media files continue to balloon in size, operating systems gain more features, and restricting any computer to a permanently fixed amount of storage or memory is to sentence it to an inevitable early death. We have no doubt Apple could engineer this memory technology to be user-upgradeable (or even just user expandable, maybe?) but we’re not optimistic that it’s top of their priority list. Regardless, we’ll keep hoping ’til next year. Apple says this silicon transition will take two years, and there are no doubt even more performant chips on the way, aimed at professionals with even more demanding needs.
Here’s the complete roster of chips we found in both these machines:
- Apple M1 SoC (Main die + 2x Hynix 4GB LPDDR4X 4266 MHz ICs)
- Intel JHL8040R Thunderbolt 4 Retimer (x2) (basically a Thunderbolt 4 extender/repeater)
- (Western Digital/SanDisk?) SDRGJHI4 – 128GB Flash storage (x2)
- Apple 1096 & 1097 – Likely PMICs
- Texas Instruments CD3217B12 – USB and power delivery IC
- Apple USI 339S00758 – Wi-Fi 6/Bluetooth 5.0 module
- Winbond Q64JWUU10 – 64 Mb serial flash memory
- Renesas 501CR0B
- Intersil 9240H1 (also seen in 2019 MBP 13”)
- National Semiconductor 4881A07
- Siliconix 7655 – 40A battery MOSFET
In terms of differences between the two boards, we noted the Pro comes with a beefier power phase design and a couple extra I/O expander chips, as well as storage chips from Kioxia (formerly Toshiba):
- NXP PCAL6416AHF (marked L16A) – I2C/SMB I/O expander (x2)
- Kioxia KICM232 VD6303 CHNA1 2029 flash storage
Notably absent in this sea of silicon is the infamous T2 chip. For years building up to this 2020 M1 release, Apple has been offloading numerous tasks (especially security/encryption related things) from Intel’s processors to their own custom T2 chip.
Those functions have come home inside the M1, which has a Secure Enclave and a host of built-in security features, just like recent A-series chips. Now that Apple handles so much of the Mac’s silicon in-house, we should probably expect this kind of consolidation to continue.
Final Thoughts
What to make of our first peek at the future of the Mac? What may seem like superficial changes are really the expression of years of intense work, with hints of a lot more to come. These are the MacBooks Apple has wanted to ship for years, made on its own terms. They’re quiet, fast, and interesting. They’re also less accessible for upgrades and repairs, and are going to be difficult to repair outside Apple’s network for the foreseeable future. There should be a word for proud and disappointed—disaprouded?
Did we miss anything? Got any hot tips for us? Let us know in the social sphere, or in the comments below!

crwdns2944067:076crwdne2944067:0
is the wifi6 chip 2:2 or 3:3 this time on the Pro?
brian - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Look at the motherboard, it is 2t2r as only two antenna ports.
A side note: 2-port Intel models also only 2t2r, the 3t3r is exclusive to 4-port models, which is sad.
Orange Chen -
The MacBook Air/Pro logic boards only offer two antenna connections. Yet the new M1 Mac Mini offers three antennas!
Dan -
@Dan Is there a Mac mini teardown that shows they are using 3x3 antenna? And I am wondering if anyone could confirm Apple USI 339S00758 is indeed Broadcom.
K Sec -
I figured it was 2:2- but to be fair these are the entry level laptops. Entry level windows laptops often have 1:1 wifi, which is just gross. The pro/higher end M1 models will be coming out next year.
brian -
Does the M1 MacBook Air battery still use the stretch adhesive?
Guy - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I’m interested in this as well. If the new Pro has the stretch tape battery adhesive, I might buy that over the Air.
Sol Quint -
Could I ask what reasoning backs this comment? Is it just your confidence of Apple’s capabilities or something specific about SiP engineering that you are considering?
Daniel Nugent - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
LPDDR and HBM are not available in modules, so this claim is pretty bunk. DDR4 SODIMMs were an option, but the power, bandwidth, and size penalties make them a poor choice for these devices.
repoman27 -
It all feels very… modern. It was inevitable that more and more stuff would be jammed onto a single chip. In a way, it’s surprising that it took this long.
I do miss user expandable RAM and storage, but the heyday of quickly changing industry specs is long over.
Lance J - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
My PowerMac 7200 had so many problems because of RAM slots. All these computers with no slots, no cards, no fans, nothing fixable. It also means there is so much less to break. If it’s not DOA, or dead within a week - both under warranty, it’s probably never going to need service until you are down with it. It’s not a phone, so you probably won’t break the screen.
cameron3 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
But I’m already “down” with it.
brian -
I wonder ho much better the Macbook Air would handle heavy workloads once you connect the heatspreader to the aluminium chassis with a thermal pad?
Narfz - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Excellent question! I’m sure someone will try it.
barryjaylevine -
This was actually done on MacRumours forum - check it: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/m1-...
Performance achieved with M1 Air gets to M1 Pro level.
Pluto -
I think people are getting a bit confused which version of thunderbolt these devices have. The apple site only mentions USB 4 / thunderbolt. USB 4 adopts thunderbolt 3 into the spec. Thunderbolt 4 is an Intel certification process which just makes some of the optional features of thunderbolt 3 mandatory.
Adam Baker - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
While USB4 is largely based on Thunderbolt, there are material differences in regards to implementation. Thunderbolt 3 interoperability is optional, not required, for USB4 hosts and devices.
Thunderbolt 4 is USB4 with mandatory Thunderbolt 3 interoperability along with a bunch of other minimum requirements to achieve certification. The Thunderbolt/USB4 ports on the M1 Macs are Thunderbolt 4 as far as signaling and power delivery are concerned. They do not meet the minimum requirement for video output because the M1 can only provide the Thunderbolt/USB4 host router with a single display stream. So aside from not supporting at least 2 displays, the USB Type-C ports on M1 Macs are otherwise Thunderbolt 4 compliant.
repoman27 -
Emphasis mine… People are wrongly under the impression that the memory is integrated into the M1 Silicon. Calling these LPDDR packages Silicon is only feeding that disinformation. The LPDDR4x BGA Packages are reflow-soldered to the SOC. The memory controller is integrated to the CPU silicon. The memory is not. But it is integrated, via solder, to the SOC.
William Barath - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
So the Pro and Air have the same battery?
Andreas Nordberg - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
No, 49.9 Wh for the Air and 58.2 Wh for the Pro, and different shapes. The side-by-side photos are M1 vs. Intel for each model.
repoman27 -
It looks like Apple is multi-sourcing NAND and Wi-Fi + Bluetooth modules. I see both Kioxia KIC-M232-VD6303 and Sandisk/Western Digital SDREGJHI4-128G NAND flash packages in those photos, as well as USI and (probably) Murata wireless modules.
repoman27 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Which DAC chipset is being used ?
Tal Barenboim - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
What is the chip (not package) size of this new Apple M1 ?
Noko - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Why the sudden interest in upgrading RAM? Every single macbook air has had RAM soldered to the board, as well as every macbook pro with retina screens. I’d be more concerned about the SSD being soldered to the board, if it stops working for some reason your data is trapped into it until you get a specialized motherboard fix, which is getting every day more complicated.
Rodrigo Maero - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
the pathetic memory capacity (8GB get real, 16GB, nope not enough) will prevent me from upgrading to the M1 for some time.
jckelly - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
“National Semiconductor 4881A07” Umm… National Semiconductor is not a company anymore, it was bought by Texas Instruments in 2011. Is this a typo? or is it a very old part? Where is it in the pictures?
Michael Walker - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
It the camera using the same sensor/optics?
Sergey Udaltsov - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Can anyone confirm if there is one or two thunderbolt controllers? The Mac Mini M1 has two controllers. I’d love to to think at least the MacBook Pro has two controllers so 80Gbps of bandwidth.
Matthew Schwartz - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
There are two Thunderbolt controllers on the 2020 Macbook Air.
CChin -
Would love to see what’s under the metal lid of the M1 SOC. Any chance of a delid?
Hugo Knapp - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
@Ifixit you guys should make an aftermarket cooler for the Macbook air so we can get pro performance from it. A vapor chamber might be enough but if there was a swapable solution to install the fan from an older macbook air it would be epic. Or if someone can come up with a way to overclock the M1 macbook pro and Macmini to make the performance gap greater it would be awsome like make the fan work to keep it cool and maybe the benchmarks would astonish us more than it already has.
Kyle Norris - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Hello, I would like to ask if it is possible to insert and use the motherboard from the MacBook Air ARM M1 in the MacBook Air x86 Intel and vice versa.
Andrej Pracovný účet - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
we missed something HUGE, are there 2 pins on the logic board that can power on the macbook with a screwdriver?
by the way, great article and very informative, I was wondering how or why Western Digital was concluded or provided the ssd drive?
[deleted] - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Such a great review. Just one thing, how did you make sure that the ram used in these MacBooks are LPDDR4X? In the system specs it listed merely as LPDDR4
T-Dog - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Including an eSIM with 5G would be a nice iteration next year
Steve Kish - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Hi, is it possible to add a thermopad and another small radiator on top of air's SoC? Is there any space between the case and original radiator? I wonder if we could make temperatures even better
Gracjan Bednarski - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
This was actually done on MacRumours forum - check it: ++https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/m1-...
Performance achieved with M1 Air gets to M1 Pro level.
Pluto -
More built in storage and memory? We’ve had working Intel Macbook Airs that couldn’t be used any more because of pathetic 2gb and 4gb soldered RAM. SSDs fail, and it’s when not if. That means disposal of perfectly usable machines due to memory limitations and/or failed storage and buying a new one when these things could have been fixed. It’s an awful industry trend, and that’s after all the effort developing standards like SODIMMs and M2 NVMEs to maximize the useful life of these machines.
Performance and convenience is good, but it shouldn’t be at the cost of more e-waste and the environmental issues they come with.
Angelo Jacinto - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Here! Here! Amen! I totally agree!
Luposian -
Can I buy a M1 mini and swap the case with my 2018 Mini? I really like how the Space Grey case looks on my desk with matching accessories.
Antonius Biggers - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Sorry, I totally missed the part where you uncover the SSD soldered. Where are they? Can they be upgraded somehow? thank you and such a great work as always from you guys over there.
george - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Who makes the wifi 6 wireless chip? Still Broadcom, or built in?
tipoo - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Is the SSD user replaceable?
James Tincher - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Not likely; they are soldered on the board so harder for people to replace.
CChin -
2020 Macbook Air IC Identification: https://electronicsprojectsandmore.wordp...
CChin - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Looking at the repairability of these two fantastic Macs, I’d give them at least an 8 since there’s really nothing to repair except for replacing the battery. Repairability has nothing to do with upgradeability, which is at zero internally but at least 6-7 externally via the USB4 ports. I know iFixit’s business is selling repair parts along with giving away instructions on how to repair things but in many ways I’d rather have a device that just doesn’t have any parts that will need repair. This two Macs are also entry level devices. Once the next Macs to convert are announced, we’ll see what Apple has up their sleeve on providing upgradeable/replaceable RAM, storage, GPUs and maybe even SoCs. The Geekbench results of these entry level Macs are amazing so double/triple the GPU cores, speed up the CPUs/add more cores and figure out how to easily add slots for RAM and NVMe storage and the simple iMac will blow everything else away. No need for a Mac Pro unless wants to build their own 1000-2000 core GPU.
plink53 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
bs, repairability IS repairability and not being a fanboi or paid shill for apples greenwashing campaign. hard drive fails - throw the mac away, great for the environment and ur budget huh? computer broken, cant access the SSD because u cant even eject it. what a usability nightmare. 256 gb ssd as a base model for that price in 2020 is ridiculous. this thing will get a 1/10 repairability rating and deservedly so. if you like to carry ur external drives around in 2020 that is great. i would rather have 1 TB SSD as a base model, the only reason there is even 256 still in 2020 build in is pure greed.
Dr Dillio -
are these boards drop-in replacements? say: can I get an intel macbook air and put the m1 board in? or even the thouchbar-less pro and drop the new m1 board into it? I know it’s kind of irrelevant now but in the future, when m1 macs with broken screens or other problems start showing up, retrofitting the by-then worthless intel machines with these boards might give them a new lease on life!
Francesco Barbieri - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Great question! I would also like to find this out
Alex -
With every model they ever made there were even the tiniest changes that would not allow for swapping out parts between models, so, what do you think the answer will be? ;-)
E-Surgeon -
2020 Macbook Pro IC Identification: https://electronicsprojectsandmore.wordp...
CChin - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
judging by IC Identifications of Air and Pro
it seems like Air lack audio codec over pro, and some microcontrollers pro has a pair of Air only has one, what else do you guys find Air missing over pro?
Ethan Ming - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Can we change the intel logic board with an apple silicone one?
Hakan Aydogan - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Ti CD3217B12, Intersil 9240H1
They are almost there, killing the repair industry and denying many businesses an income only for their own greed (or your security as they call it). If you are, like us, in the repair business working on Apple logicboards, do not wait and start exploring other routes. You will be out of business otherwise. Mark my words.
Repair score: 0
E-Surgeon - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
what is the exact voltage and current absorption from the usb-c port of the Macbook Pro M1 while charging and while on?
Fabrizio Virtuani - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
It will be interesting to see what complexity Apple has had to use in their Motherboards to support this M1 chip. Also x-ray of the M1 pitch will be interesting as well.
Mitty - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I broke my m1 Touch Bar is there a replacement ?
jevod - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
if only there were an m.2 ssd in there…
Peter Jaques - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Hi There
Although, the display assembly part numbers are different are the displays M1 Vs 2020 interchangeable?
Thanks
John Westhrop - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Yes, for the bloated price of this, get a Microsoft Surface or a Dell XPS 13 inch.
Nelson Lopez - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Hey, how good is M1 MacBook Air in terms of reparability? What would be the cost of Logic Board Replacement?
Sourav Mukherjee - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
The base cost 500 dollars - MacBook Air 13" (A2337, Late 2020) 8-Core 3.2 GHz CPU 7-Core GPU Logic Board with Paired Touch ID Sensor
Kevin Zhang -
Possible to add a 2nd SSD? Looks pretty tight.
Richard McGown - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Probably no.
Kevin Zhang -
make old style teardown. this new way of teardown is so ugly and uninformative
Peter Ben Jumanne - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Yes sure. This information lacks a lot in specific.
Kevin Zhang -
Have they addressed the flexgate issue with the m1 MBP?
mc tasty - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
is it possible to get the M1 logic board on my MacBook Pro 13 2020 ( i5 1,4 GHz )?
Khaled O - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Yes - Can I swap a2289 with a2338 motherboard?
Kevin Zhang -
Do we know, what kind of Type of SSD are soldered to the motherboard? It’s TLC or MLC?
Kamil W - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations!
adaodj - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Just Curious, Is it possible to replace an old intel version macbook pro with the M1 logic board? As in.. are the battery/display/IO connectors the same?
Hari - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Only works when swapping 2020 intel. Can I swap a2289 with a2338 motherboard?
Kevin Zhang -
Is there a “secret” connector to get data off the onboard SSD in cases when the motherboard dies?
rockjapan - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Could I put a fan into my fanless MacBook Air?
I have an A2337 model.
Lachlan MacLean - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
The 2:2 WiFi on the M1 Air works great for me. Picking up and holding a stable signal always which my last laptop struggled with here.
Mark Moore - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0