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Confirming some suspicions

A project log for Macbook Pro RAM upgrade

Soldering in 16GB of RAM. Easy or buy a new Mac after the attempt? ;)

sebastiusSebastius 03/05/2019 at 22:471 Comment

Today i did some digging. Turns out the 'About my mac' menu can tell you the RAM manufacturer. 

The manufacturer code 0x80AD translates to SK Hynix, which is fortunate because it matches the brand i've ordered my chips from. For your record, a partial list:

Further digging on the ifixit.com website turns up their 8GB model also has Hynix memory and thanks to their awesome board-photo's i can determine the model RAM on their board (i will need to open my Macbook at some point still to confirm).

It's the H9CCNNNBLTALAR-NUD chip. The ones i ordered are hopefully of the same series, the H9CCNNNCLTMLAR-NUD version. There are two letters different, of which i think i've determined that the B-C stands for the 16->32gigabit upgrade and the A->M stands for the A revision->M revision. 

The nasty is that i'm unable to predict a working system because all my variables are unknown:

Discussions

Kevin Pawsey wrote 10/31/2020 at 00:30 point

ok... for those of you that don't want to open your Macs up to find the part number in "human" terms... I (kinda) stumbled on a way of finding it via the "Part number" ('Onderdeelnummer' above).

Copy the Part number from the System information

Go to a hex to ASCII conversion site, I used:

https://www.rapidtables.com/convert/number/ascii-hex-bin-dec-converter.html

pop it in the Hex box, tab out... voila!... I know... simple... saves "minutes" of time... excluding the time chasing those tiny screws around the floor! :)

I am (kind of) assuming that this will work with most manufacturers... but don't quote me on that.

You can also try Googling the "Manufacturer" ('Fabrikant' above) hex address, and that may also point you in the right direction too.

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