That actually sounds about right price wise. The reason MLBs are so expensive, is Apple solders the CPU right to the board, they don't use a ZIF socket like virtually everyone else. So every MLB has the CPU attached to it, which makes it that much more valuable a component. Not that it stops other vendors from grossly overcharging for that part too, but anyway.
If you are able to take a couple days vacation to say Hawaii, then you could probably get the thing repaired under Apple's flat rate system for $300 and change. You'd need to be able to stick around for a few days, because they'll ship it to a facility run by Flextronics (Shhhh.... That's supposed to be a secret. Apple wants people to think they run their own repair depots, not outsource operations to a third party) in I want to think Kentucky or maybe Virginia. So it gets shipped overnight there, but it being Hawaii it might add an extra day on either side. If you could take like a week long vacation in Hawaii, then you could probably get it fixed for less than half the price.
The one thing to be careful about, is the Flextronics people are under strict orders from Apple to be real arseholes about "non-Apple" hardware inside units. Basically they're not allowed to do "partial" repairs, meaning only fix the MLB even if there is something else wrong that you don't care about, like say the ODD is bad. So if they decide your RAM is bad or something, since it's almost a guarantee you added it third party, they will either requote the repair as a Tier 4 which is like $1200 something, or send the thing back. You will want to make sure that the rest of the hardware is good, or replace the factory stuff if you still have it. Not that a week long vacation to Hawaii would ever likely be a complete bust, but one of the reasons for going there would end up being a bust.
Hello,
I am wondering, what it would take to resurrect a MacBook Pro with a dead logic board.
The laptop unexpectedly died and I took it in to Apple to have it checked, if it was the known nVidia graphics card problem, but unfortunately the logic board died.
The computer was purchased in the US, but I am living in Asia now. They (Apple) quoted the equivalent to about $800 here to fix it... obviously I am not taking them up on that offer. However, is there any other way to replace the board myself? Where would I get the part for a reasonable cost?
While I have a MacBook Air for work and travel, it would be nice to get this one working again at home. Screen is perfect, casing is perfect, has a great SSD installed and 6GB of RAM...
Anyone has a suggestion? Thanks in advance!

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