15-Inch MacBook Air Teardown Reveals Familiar Design and Upgraded Six-Speaker Sound System - MacRumors
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15-Inch MacBook Air Teardown Reveals Familiar Design and Upgraded Six-Speaker Sound System

Repair website iFixit today shared a 15-inch MacBook Air teardown on YouTube, offering a closer look inside the laptop. As expected, the 15-inch MacBook Air has a similar internal design as the 13-inch model, with the only notable difference being two extra speakers.

iFixit 15 Inch MacBook Air Teardown

Image Credit: iFixit

"The new 15-inch MacBook Air also features a phenomenal new six-speaker sound system with two tweeters and two sets of force-cancelling woofers," said Apple. "The new speakers deliver twice the bass depth for fuller sound, and Spatial Audio with support for Dolby Atmos provides immersive experiences whether listening to music or watching movies."

The battery is also larger, but Apple says battery life is equal to the 13-inch model. As with the 13-inch model, the battery cells have adhesive pull tabs for easier removal, but the battery can only be accessed after several other components are disassembled.


The teardown offers a look at the 15-inch MacBook Air's logic board with the M2 chip and a single NAND chip for the 256GB model, which can result in slower SSD read and write speeds compared to 512GB, 1TB, or 2TB models.

Like other Apple laptops, iFixit said the 15-inch MacBook Air is very difficult to repair. In addition, RAM and storage cannot be upgraded after purchase.

Key advantages of the 15-inch MacBook Air over the 13-inch model include a larger display, larger trackpad, and six speakers instead of four. Both models have the M2 chip for equal performance, and very similar battery life. Apple began accepting orders for the 15-inch MacBook Air last week, and the laptop launched on Tuesday.

Related Roundup: MacBook Air
Buyer's Guide: MacBook Air (Buy Now)
Related Forum: MacBook Air

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Top Rated Comments

zorinlynx Avatar
36 months ago
That crappy battery replacement experience is exactly why we need regulations to force companies to make it easier to swap batteries. There's NO VALID REASON they had to make the battery so hard to replace. Layering components in a different order and it'd be cake. They just don't want end users replacing them, pure and simple.
Score: 44 Votes (Like | Disagree)
k1121j Avatar
36 months ago
The ssd at 256GB is just sad for two reasons, 256GB in 2023 is crazy small. Apple overcharging the upgrade on memory and storage is also sad. Come on Apple Steve would not be impressed I can think of multiple quotes of his.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
jlc1978 Avatar
36 months ago

That crappy battery replacement experience is exactly why we need regulations to force companies to make it easier to swap batteries. There's NO VALID REASON they had to make the battery so hard to replace. Layering components in a different order and it'd be cake. They just don't want end users replacing them, pure and simple.
Actually, there may be valid design decisions involving how components are layered, from both a product and assembly POV. It's not as simple as just change the order of the layers.


The ssd at 256GB is just sad for two reasons, 256GB in 2023 is crazy small. Apple overcharging the upgrade on memory and storage is also sad.
256, at the entry level, is more than enough for most of those buyers.


Come on Apple Steve would not be impressed I can think of multiple quotes of his.
Had the IC tech that exists today been available and affordable for mass market devices, during Steve's tenure as CEO we'd seen the same decisions being made than as today.


I hope Apple has enough capacity to crank out millions of these laptops. This is THE laptop to buy, and will make for some very profitable quarters ahead. My only issue - get RID of the 256 configuration, it only exists allow them to quote a lower ‘starting at’ price. Anyone that knows anything about laptops would never get that model, insufficient memory AND slower.
A lower price point makes for an attractive entry point for many users who only want to do some web surfing, check emails, have some photos to edit in Photos, and maybe use Office. 256 is plenty for light users, whop will notice no impact from a slower memory bandwidth.

Techies are obsessed with specs and think their use case is the same for everyone.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
TheYayAreaLiving 🎗️ Avatar
36 months ago
Did anyone catch this from the MacBook Air 15" render? A little strange!


View post on X
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Joe Rossignol Avatar
36 months ago

They definitely could have fit bigger batteries in there , sad

Then again, there's the lightweight argument

So the battery isn't larger than the 13-inch?
Added a sentence to the MacRumors story to clarify this: "The battery is also larger, but Apple says battery life is equal to the 13-inch model."
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
36 months ago

That crappy battery replacement experience is exactly why we need regulations to force companies to make it easier to swap batteries. There's NO VALID REASON they had to make the battery so hard to replace. Layering components in a different order and it'd be cake. They just don't want end users replacing them, pure and simple.
I don’t fully agree that there are no valid reasons to make the battery hard to replace. I can imagine design issues being the reason. To make the entire device as compact as possible, I can see ease of battery replacement being a secondary concern.

The battery is still replaceable, but not as easy.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)