The latest Apple Mac Studio is now out in the wild, and that means the various Mac sites and YouTubers are getting their hands on the Apple M1 Ultra. One of the most interesting videos so far is from Max Tech, which is a complete teardown of the Mac Studio, revealing the simply massive System-on-a-Chip at the heart of the unit.
Max Tech dropped over $17,000 buying up three different versions of the Apple Mac Studio as well as some screens in order to do the teardown, and we're glad they did because it's certainly an interesting beast to rip apart. While it isn't the most technical teardown you'll ever see, there are still plenty of interesting tidbits in there, including confirming that the Mac Studio's SSDs appear to use a slightly different interface to previous models.
It's not an easy system to get into, with no obvious screws or catches to open it up. At least not until you remove the rubber ring on the base. Once that's done there's a whole world of unscrewing needed before you can access the main motherboard and chip. It appears that every port needs to be extracted before you can remove the bulk of the machine.
While stripping the Mac Studio down does look possible with fairly standard tools, and with no particularly evil design practices at play, having to strip everything down to access the SoC does look daunting. As Max Tech says, «I'm just dreading putting this thing back together.»
Once freed, though, it reveals an impressive piece of design with twin blowers on the top of the motherboard tasked with keeping the chip cool. Most importantly, the M1 Ultra is an absolutely massive SoC. During the teardown, they hold up an AMD Ryzen 3 3300X next to it for scale and it absolutely dwarfs the AMD CPU.
It's worth
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