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Macbook Mod II

Posted by Tyler | Posted in E-Modding | Posted on 30-11-2009

65

And now the conclusion to the Macbook mod post. An inference can be drawn from the title of this post, and the previous post, as to the nature of the content. But let me continue the story of how the macbook came to be. From the initial idea of getting a macbook logic board and making it run again, my best friend and I had been toiling with several ways to display the *repaired* innards of an older macbook. If you would like to see the technical write up, please visit the next post: Macbook Mod III

My alter ego and I, always came back to one simple, yet amazing concept. Some of the possible ideas included: mounting the finished product like a billy the big mouth bass, trophy case style, another idea was to simply finish the plastic enclosure and have a plain, run of the mill, boring see through case, I also pondered mounting it on wood at one point, but it never really stuck. Our back and forth banter (discussions) always came back to enclosing it in an old linksys router case and so that is how this mod was finally finished. After a year of talking and discussing, it is finished and in working order.

snapping the back plate into place.

I started off this conquest with a parts run; I stalked ebay and trolled google for a few days weeks until I had figured out what I generally needed. I ended up using ‘buy it now’ from a place on ebay that turned out to only be a few hours away from where I live (what a small world). After the purchase, I emailed Hammerhead Technology and explained my plan for the mod and they sent me some cabling and a wifi card or bluetooth card (can’t remember which) and the fan/heatsink assembly as well as the logic board I had bought.

All the pieces of the pie.

I know there is a mess of sharpie on the plexiglas but let me explain. It was a pain to mark the mounting holes for the logic board. Besides holding the drill bit and hand turning it to mark where to drill, I couldn’t think of a better way to get the marks of where to drill. Plus the screws were a tad to big for the holes (i think they are like 1/32 and the threads made them just a fraction bigger. I circled the holes that were a hair off and then carefully edged them until everything was perfect.

The mounting base.

The severed power connector from the keyboard.

The picture below is of it turning on for the first time. Besides the end of the mod, this had to be the biggest build up; it actually turned on and was working. All I needed to do was load up OSX.  Thankfully I had a mac mini handy and a copy of leopard (an actual install disc) and a firewire cable. It took some googling to figure out how to push the install over (I had only been using OSX for a few weeks at this point), but it was all loaded and set.

The initial mounting and test start up.

Below are the two base’s and the front portion of the linksys cases. I took the original circuit boards out and was greeted with a set of two mounting holes on each base. The boards weren’t screwed in but they were ‘clicked’ into the base using a nib in each corner. The nib was attached to a riser (which by itself was the same height as the mounting holes in the middle of the plate), so all I had to do was cut off the nib. After I leveled out the risers, the plastic sheet fit firmly on the two base’s. After adding four holes for screws (and screws), it wasn’t going anywhere in a hurry.

The base plates lined up.

The mounting base on the case base.

The logic board mounted on the base.

I actually ended up drilling two sets of holes for the iSight/microphone. When I attempted to close the front of the case, the cabling was preventing it. The boardwalk property space in the front of the case is a hot commodity as the mounting base is jutted right up against both the front and back plates. Needless to say it was a close call in terms of space.

Drilling the mic and iSight holes.

Glueing the mic in place.

A nice top down view of the mod assembled.

A nice view of all the guts of the mod.

Below you can see the whole of the project. The little orange stick on the right is the bluetooth antenna, while the two white cables on the left are the wifi antennas.

The back with the bluetooth module installed

The back with the bluetooth module installed.

Assembled in the shop.

Assembled on the desk.

Another pic of me putting the front sticker back on

Another pic of me putting the front sticker back on.

Below the finishing touches are added to my hidden network admin cam. It should allow the boss to check on the network babysitter, unless they are BOFH, then its game over.

Glueing the face plate back on.

The only light that was handy was from the little LED on my phone. I am checking to see the reflection from the iSight lens. I saw the sparkle/reflection that I was looking for and called it as done.

Checking alignment for the mic/iSight holes.

The boot up before being sealed up.

Front profile of the finished mod.

Side profile shot.

All done and booting up

Below you can see an upside down iSight shot of my alter ego/best friend as he is taking a picture of the mod working. I think he was attempting the never ending picture paradox.

My alter ego caught by iSight

My alter ego caught by iSight

If you would like to see the technical write up, please visit the next post: Macbook Mod III

Comments (65)

That is awesome!!! You should post this on a modding website – you would get a bunch of traffic I bet! :)

Its on hackaday.com, thats how I found it :-P

wow, That really is the best looking mac I’ve ever seen! I like linksys cases :D

A lot of time, and some money saved. Its always nice to take time that could be used to graduate, get a job promotion and advance your plight in life.

That is a really awesome case mode. Check out hackaday.com/ they may like your stuff.

[...] Περισσότερες λεπτομέρειες μπορείτε να βρείτε στο site του δημιουργού του. Share and [...]

hackaday.com is the web blog should refer too

Great job !

Really cool and everything, but come on – why didn’t you use a Linksys wireless router shell and run your wireless antennae to the giant router antennae? Still think it’s great, though.

Can you post a list of the actual parts you used to create this beast? I’m interested in maybe doing the same thing myself.

When I get home from work, I will post a list of parts.

Besides the spelling and grammar mistakes, the fact you flat out stated that you pirated the OS and the lack of any technical information whatsoever I’d say you did a great job!

This is not my doctoral thesis; its a blog article. I was not doing the write-up as a how to, but if you’d like, I can write up the full step by step process.

the original system is a mac, so I don’t understand why yousay he pirated the OS. Any Mac has a license to run MacOs!

Amazing bit of work. How is the ventilation with this setup? Which particular macbook did this logic board come from?

So did the iSight camera get installed upside-down in the linksys casing?

Unfortunately it had to be installed upside-down. Once you open a chat client or photobooth, it auto rotates though (thanks to some software I found).

pretty sweet

lol
thats just awesome!

Step by step would be awesome!

Great post! I never thought it would be possible to put a fully functioning Mac into a linksys router case!

Oh my god why?!

It’s like taking the guts of a Ferarri and putting it in an Edsel body…

I can’t think of anything uglier in my house then the blue Linksys box… good thing it’s in the closet where nobody can see it.

Excellent Job! It is a small world. I purchased two MacBook 13″ logic boards from Hammerhead Tech as well for $100 each (one doesn’t charge the battery and the another no LCD video). I’ve been procrastinating my Frankentosh Mini mod for about 8 months now. It looks like I purchased the same part as you, except I purchased the bottom base. I used Carbon Copy from another MacBook to install the OSX via firewire on the hard drive. I’m still undecided about the mod case…I thought about putting 2 MAC Mini cases together (welding involved) or use my newly purchased MAC Pro G5 case. I have one request. Can you explain the wiring on the ON/OFF power ribbon cable?

A lot of people having be flaming me for “and it worked”. I should have added that I had to figure out how the power button on the keyboard actually sent the “turn on” pulse to the board. I am writing another post with how it all works, mainly the power button hack

Oh, I forgot. You can add an additional SATA hard drive using the DVD Super Drive interface. Search eBay for the following: “2nd SATA HDD Hard Drive caddy for Dell 9400″. This caddy looks like a DVD drive, but you can insert a hard drive into it. Now, get yourself two 500GB 2.5″ hard drives and you’ll have 1TB of storage or 500GB from RAID-1.

Thats neat. I’ll check in a bit to see what it looks like. Thanks for the tip

… because all of us have a stack of failed Linksys routers lying around. (I know I do.) It’s good to find a use for them.

Maybe someday we’ll learn to buy hackable routers from somebody else that don’t fail so quickly. But whose?

That’s what I was thinking. I had two linksys routers and most of my friends have a few as well.

Great job!!

I’m sure he used a MacBook 13″ logic board. Here are some tips for selecting parts for a poor man’s MAC Mini (minus enclosure/case).

1. The parts are based on the type of MacBook Logic board.
2. Select an older MacBook 13″ logic board with an Intel CPU (Core Duo or Core 2 Duo). This is your best bet for low cost. Find one with a defect (i.e. – Doesn’t charge battery or no LCD video, but the external video works). Also, Hammerhead Technology tests all their detected boards and they will list the defect.
3. 100% working MacBook Logic boards will cost you an arm and leg (You might as well purchase a MAC Mini).
4. When selecting a heatsink fan assy, where are two types: Horizontal & Vertical. The logic board has two connections for the sensor wires on the heatsink. This means the sensor connectors connect to the logic board from the top (Vertial) or connect parallel (horizontal) to the board.
5. eBay is the best chose for keeping the cost down, if you know the type of parts or call Hammerhead Tech.
6. iFixit.com has step by step instructions and photos for Dissembling or Assembling MacBooks and more.
7. You cannot install OSX using the MacBook external video port, because you cannot see the install on the external LCD monitor. You can install OSX using another MAC machine’s DVD drive via a hard drive adapter (external enclosure – USB or Firewaire) or Carbon Copy (make sure you have software license).
Note : I have two Macbook 13″ laptops connected to an external LCD monitor and they work perfectly. I’m using the top and bottom cases for now. My average cost per Macbook was $290.00 (DDR2 memory has doubled in price since I purchased mine)

Minimum Parts List:
MacBook 13″ Logic Board w/ Intel CPU
Hard Drive, SATA II 2.5″
Memory 1GB or 2GB, DDR2 667 (PC2 5300)
Top Case w/ Keyboard & Touchpad & Power Button
Hard Drive SATA Cable
MagSafe Power Adapter 60W
MagSafe DC-In Board
Heatsink and Fan Assy (Vertical or Horizontal)

Optional Parts List:
IR Sensor Board (for Remote)
DVD Super Drive
Optical Drive Flex Cable
Bluetooth, Antenna, and Cable Assy
Wireless Airport Card
Wireless Airport Antenna Cables
Hard Drive Caddy (usually sold with the SATA cable)
Note: You can buy a keyboard/Touchpad/Power ribbon cable separately instead buying the whole top case.

Why did you buy a mini Mac?

I didn’t buy a mac mini. A friend of mine let me borrow one of his.

Additional Minimum Parts List:
mini-DVI to DVI Adapter or mini-DVI to VGA Adapter

“The network is the computer”

rofl, I just made the first skynet

Muy buen trabajo. ¡¡¡Genial!!!

Particularmente, soy incapa de realizar ningún cachibache de estos. Soy un negado para la electrónica…

Good idea. I got some friends that cannot afford with a mac… that’s just they need.

Good article.

[...] does beat having several broken routers in the attic like I do. [Phantomdev via [...]

[...] does beat having several broken routers in the attic like I do. [ Phantomdev via [...]

[...] does beat having several broken routers in the attic like I do. [Phantomdev via [...]

[...] Phantom Dev via Gizmodo [...]

[...] not usually the type for PC case mods, but when we received the tip for the Macbook Mod of hiding a Macbook inside of two Linksys routers, we decided to make an exception on three [...]

[...] does beat having several broken routers in the attic like I do. [Phantomdev via [...]

[...] does beat having several broken routers in the attic like I do. [Phantomdev via [...]

Funny that you talk about your dead linksys routers. I have had the same one since 1998 and it still works just as well as the day I bought it. =P

[...] Phantom Dev via Gizmodo [...]

[...] not usually the type for PC case mods, but when we received the tip for the Macbook Mod of hiding a Macbook inside of two Linksys routers, we decided to make an exception on three [...]

Great job! If some burglars were gathering up all the tech gear in your place they would probably skip the cheap router… Next you need a router that is built into a mini computer case beside that unit. :)

[...] más de 200USD , mucho mejor que pagar los +1000USD de una nueva ¿no?. En su site, Tyler muestra paso a paso como fue realizando este Mod e incluso, incluye una lista de todos los componentes requeridos  y [...]

[...] cool, head one over to Tyler’s website for more details on this crazy Linkys MacBook [...]

[...] uses genuine Mac parts so that I may develop apps for the iPhone and iPod touch legally. Links: For Pics, For [...]

[...] of talking and discussing, it is finished and in working order. Very cool, head one over to Tyler’s website for more details on this crazy Linkys MacBook [...]

[...] part 1 ] [ part 2 ] [ part 3 ] [ via [...]

You’re on the front page of engadget now, better get your servers ready for the flood- oh and nice mod by the way

[...]  |  Phantom Dev  | Email this | Comments Go to [...]

Hi there,
Interesting mod bud how do you get around the fact that the MacBook logicboard will only run at 30% of its nominal speed without a battery connected?
Regards,
David

I wasn’t aware of that. The newer macbooks might employ this feature but I have seen no indication of a speed decrease or anything saying that the cpu clock is being limited due to not having a battery connected. I’ll research the matter more, and post what I come up with. I’m almost positive that nothing is being hampered due not having a battery.

[...]  |  Phantom Dev  | Email [...]

I wish I even HAD a router…

Derogatory comment left from Chicago. Edited by Admin

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