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13 inch 2011 macbook air charger
13 inch 2011 macbook air charger







13 inch 2011 macbook air charger
  1. 13 inch 2011 macbook air charger pro#
  2. 13 inch 2011 macbook air charger mac#

You get two bidirectional 10Gbps channels (20Gbps total per channel) and one DisplayPort input/output. On the iMac it's used to drive two ports on the back of the system.Įagle Ridge is half of Light Ridge. Light Ridge supports four bidirectional 10Gbps channels (20Gbps total per channel) channels and two DisplayPort inputs/outputs.

13 inch 2011 macbook air charger pro#

Light Ridge Thunderbolt Controller IC on 15" 2011 MacBook Pro - Courtesy iFixit

13 inch 2011 macbook air charger mac#

The chip used in the MacBook Pro, iMac and Mac mini is called Light Ridge and it looks like this: This is a brand new Thunderbolt controller from Intel - codenamed Eagle Ridge. Intel's Eagle Ridge SFF Thunderbolt Controller - Courtesy iFixit Looking carefully at the new MacBook Air you'll notice a tiny Intel chip near the Thunderbolt port: In all existing Thunderbolt Macs, the controller is very close to the Thunderbolt port. It's far more likely that the Thunderbolt controller is simply elsewhere on the motherboard. I didn't measure the two but they do look awfully similar. It looks unchanged from the square 6-series chipset die we saw back at CES earlier this year: The second problem with the assumption has to do with the QS67 die itself. While it's possible that Apple could request a special chipset from Intel, Apple would have to pay for the added design, manufacturing and validation costs or commit to huge volume numbers in order to make the effort worthwhile for Intel. First off, Intel has already announced that Thunderbolt wouldn't even be integrated in Ivy Bridge chipsets next year. Unfortunately there are a couple of things wrong with this assumption. IFixit assumed that the QS67 chipset integrated Intel's Thunderbolt controller. In fact, there are only two flip-chip parts on the motherboard - the Core i5 and the QS67 chipset.ġ3-inch MacBook Air (Mid 2011) Motherboard, QS67 (left), Intel Core i5 (right) - Courtesy iFixit If you look at iFixit's teardown of the new 13-inch MacBook Air you'll notice the absence of the traditional flip-chip Thunderbolt controller from the MacBook Pro, iMac and Mac mini. Both the new Mac mini and the MacBook Air now support Thunderbolt as well, although the Air's implementation is slightly different. We first met Thunderbolt on the 2011 MacBook Pro and saw it again on the iMac.

13 inch 2011 macbook air charger

The other major change to the new MacBook Air is support for Intel's new Thunderbolt interface.









13 inch 2011 macbook air charger