Aaaaand another one:
My cousin spilled coffee (with much sugar and milk, so basically the worst combination) on his mum's '09 MBA. It went over the right side of the keyboard. He flipped the MBA within seconds so most of it ran out again. He switched off the MBA instantly, opened it within minutes and disconnected the battery cable (fortunately he had tools and a bit of knowledge at hand)
I'm quite familiar with fluid damages on Macbooks and have opened and repaired like 5 or 6 in the past by replacing the logic board or other parts with a used one myself. That to say, I'm a webdesigner and not a real repair technician with detailed background knowledge about circuits and stuff. Still, when opening stuff like this I use my own work place with anti static mats and anti static gloves, so I don't do more damage.
I completely disassembled the MBA and had a good look at all parts. In this case it must have been not much fluid because the keys were almost dry again and no fluid had gotten to the logic board and other parts. Everything except the keyboard inside was completely dry.
We let it dry for 2 days now and it's booting normally - except keys are behaving weird and seem to send random presses. It turns on the first time, but when I shut it down again it turns off normally. Then I can't turn it on again.
When I disconnect/reconnect the battery AND the touchpad/keyboard connector it turns on again after that.
My question(s):
Is it technically possible that water in the keyboard area can damage the logic board and other parts through the connector cable? So if short circuit happens in the keyboard can this get through to other parts even though no fluid came out and actually hit the logic board etc.?
Is it worth a try to replace the top cover/keyboard or could this come from other damage, too?
My cousin spilled coffee (with much sugar and milk, so basically the worst combination) on his mum's '09 MBA. It went over the right side of the keyboard. He flipped the MBA within seconds so most of it ran out again. He switched off the MBA instantly, opened it within minutes and disconnected the battery cable (fortunately he had tools and a bit of knowledge at hand)
I'm quite familiar with fluid damages on Macbooks and have opened and repaired like 5 or 6 in the past by replacing the logic board or other parts with a used one myself. That to say, I'm a webdesigner and not a real repair technician with detailed background knowledge about circuits and stuff. Still, when opening stuff like this I use my own work place with anti static mats and anti static gloves, so I don't do more damage.
I completely disassembled the MBA and had a good look at all parts. In this case it must have been not much fluid because the keys were almost dry again and no fluid had gotten to the logic board and other parts. Everything except the keyboard inside was completely dry.
We let it dry for 2 days now and it's booting normally - except keys are behaving weird and seem to send random presses. It turns on the first time, but when I shut it down again it turns off normally. Then I can't turn it on again.
When I disconnect/reconnect the battery AND the touchpad/keyboard connector it turns on again after that.
My question(s):
Is it technically possible that water in the keyboard area can damage the logic board and other parts through the connector cable? So if short circuit happens in the keyboard can this get through to other parts even though no fluid came out and actually hit the logic board etc.?
Is it worth a try to replace the top cover/keyboard or could this come from other damage, too?