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A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

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    A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

    Did a T2 restore. Boot loops constantly then eventually loads the OS.

    Did a T2 Restore and revive and OS reinstall. Same issue. Downgraded OS as well nothing.

    No visible water damage seen. No burn chips and MacBook has never been worked on.

    Once the OS is fully loaded seems good. For a while.

    No kernel panic info shows up so definitely curious what’s going on.

    It does boot fully into safe mode without issue.
    sigpic
    MEOWING IN THE IMPOSSIBLE UNIVERSE!

    #2
    Re: A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

    Check each and every SMBUS line.

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      #3
      Re: A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

      205/2000
      Good News and bad news! This kind of problem in my past maintenance experience, encountered a lot of similar models of similar failures, are a problem, CPU bad, BAD CPU! BGA CPU replacement perfect solution! If the appearance of the test, no problem, other measurements, are redundant!

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        #4
        Re: A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

        Good to know. From where do you source a replacement CPU? Donor board or can you share the details of a good vendor with reballed CPUs?

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          #5
          Re: A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

          We generally recycle chips from customers who scrap their motherboards, but we also get them from our peers. Buying them online requires a certain element of luck, which involves, sellers and buyers, IC dismantling, manual problems, and temperature control, if you don't handle it well, it will break!

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            #6
            Re: A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

            Sigh it’s a i9 32GB board. Sucks this is a bad CPU or GPU.
            sigpic
            MEOWING IN THE IMPOSSIBLE UNIVERSE!

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              #7
              Re: A1990 MacBook Pro boot looping

              There is another solution to this problem, which is to modify the circuitry, to solve the reboot problem, but the researchers have not yet published this solution, and friends around me have learned that it is partially solved by modifying the temperature control, you can go into safe mode, view the system error log, find the corresponding point to modify the circuit! You can try... !

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