I would put hardware mounting screws designed to break when used more than once in the same category as fragile ribbon cables designed to break when the computer case is cracked open.
As per the article the accurate statement is that they are designed to break before the thread in the hole. Which is a sensible design decision.
A sensible design is to have a screw or bolt fail prior to the part it is being screwed or bolted into. A nonsensical design is to have a screw or bolt designed to fail after a single use.
Citation that it is designed to fail after a single use and not just shoddy enough that there is a good chance of it failing after a single use?
Distinction without a difference.
Someone engineered it.
"Good chance it fails" is intentional engineering.
+17
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
As a species we have a lot of information on how much it takes to break shit.
We have kits to determine how hard things are via scratch resistance. We have tables of torque strength and mathematical equations that allow us to know how thick metals of certain compositions have to be before they lose their strength at certain forces.
In short, we know beforehand the general strength of materials used in different applications. We know because we have over a century of testing. This is not arcane nor esoteric knowledge, it's basic engineering.
There is zero convincing me that neither the company that made that shoddy mount NOR Apple, who put their seal of approval on said mounting system, had no idea that using cheap screws in a load bearing application would not have very good chances to break like this.
So when, as is quoted, that the screws are designed to break a certain way, it's been designed with their lack of strength in mind.
+15
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
I would put hardware mounting screws designed to break when used more than once in the same category as fragile ribbon cables designed to break when the computer case is cracked open.
As per the article the accurate statement is that they are designed to break before the thread in the hole. Which is a sensible design decision.
A sensible design is to have a screw or bolt fail prior to the part it is being screwed or bolted into. A nonsensical design is to have a screw or bolt designed to fail after a single use.
Citation that it is designed to fail after a single use and not just shoddy enough that there is a good chance of it failing after a single use?
Practical difference being?
If it supports a tend of anti-consumer actions, or if it supports a trend of shoddy design and usage low quality materials.
Considering the cost, I repeat my question.
If it was as dirt cheap as the materials used, then we have something!
But the VESA mounting cost about as much as your typical VESA stuff, more even, and yet...
As a species we have a lot of information on how much it takes to break shit.
We have kits to determine how hard things are via scratch resistance. We have tables of torque strength and mathematical equations that allow us to know how thick metals of certain compositions have to be before they lose their strength at certain forces.
In short, we know beforehand the general strength of materials used in different applications. We know because we have over a century of testing. This is not arcane nor esoteric knowledge, it's basic engineering.
There is zero convincing me that neither the company that made that shoddy mount NOR Apple, who put their seal of approval on said mounting system, had no idea that using cheap screws in a load bearing application would not have very good chances to break like this.
So when, as is quoted, that the screws are designed to break a certain way, it's been designed with their lack of strength in mind.
The worst part is we're talking the difference between something like $0.001 and $0.0008 for the price difference between a low end steel screw and a zinc one probably. It's hard to find zinc screws because no one really makes them. There are zinc coated steel and aluminium though.
Granted that doesn't look like a lot but when you make hundreds of thousands of these that's a middle class salary in savings.
bowen on
not a doctor, not a lawyer, examples I use may not be fully researched so don't take out of context plz, don't @ me
+2
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
As a species we have a lot of information on how much it takes to break shit.
We have kits to determine how hard things are via scratch resistance. We have tables of torque strength and mathematical equations that allow us to know how thick metals of certain compositions have to be before they lose their strength at certain forces.
In short, we know beforehand the general strength of materials used in different applications. We know because we have over a century of testing. This is not arcane nor esoteric knowledge, it's basic engineering.
There is zero convincing me that neither the company that made that shoddy mount NOR Apple, who put their seal of approval on said mounting system, had no idea that using cheap screws in a load bearing application would not have very good chances to break like this.
So when, as is quoted, that the screws are designed to break a certain way, it's been designed with their lack of strength in mind.
The worst part is we're talking the difference between something like $0.001 and $0.0008 for the price difference between a low end steel screw and a zinc one probably. It's hard to find zinc screws because no one really makes them. There are zinc coated steel and aluminium though.
Granted that doesn't look like a lot but when you make hundreds of thousands of these that's a middle class salary in savings.
Which, for a company worth 1 trillion with annual profits in the billions/ten of billions, it really isn't a whole lot.
+10
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syndalisGetting ClassyOn the WallRegistered User, Loves Apple Productsregular
edited January 2019
Just speaking Occam's Razor for a second.
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
syndalis on
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Yes? Why is that so hard for you to believe?
That is absolutely a calculus these large companies do. Also one they do: "how many people will return them once it breaks after they remove the screw the first time?"
not a doctor, not a lawyer, examples I use may not be fully researched so don't take out of context plz, don't @ me
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Yes? Why is that so hard for you to believe?
That is absolutely a calculus these large companies do. Also one they do: "how many people will return them once it breaks after they remove the screw the first time?"
Because it absolutely doesn't make sense against the margin of the product. This is a niche accessory for a low volume, high margin "prestige" device. And the screw they went with ultimately ruined a multi thousand dollar device that they had to replace.
If they sell a few hundred thousand iMac Pros I will be flabbergasted, so there isn't a massive cost savings to consider here. Them doing this as a money driver with awareness that this would break and fuck over the consumer actively is just a level of stupid cynicism that doesn't align with reality.
Like I said, also a bad look... they had zinc, they use zinc on screws in other devices they make, so they used zinc for the accessory as a result and it turns out that was a bad choice.
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
0
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Neither.
You license out the part to the lowest bidder, collect a royalty off each sold by sticking your logo on the item, then when things go tits up you refuse warranty work because it's not an Apple product.
Because that's what actually happened. They only replaced anything because after quite literally months they found out they were dealing with someone with tens of thousands of YouTube subscribers and were looking at a PR nightmare.
+15
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Neither.
You license out the part to the lowest bidder, collect a royalty off each sold by sticking your logo on the item, then when things go tits up you refuse warranty work because it's not an Apple product.
Because that's what actually happened. They only replaced anything because after quite literally months they found out they were dealing with someone with tens of thousands of YouTube subscribers and were looking at a PR nightmare.
Who was it licensed to? how do you know it was lowest bidder? How in any way are you sure that "this is what actually happened?" - also, they did support it, just not over the phone because it is a VESA mount; there is precious little a phone support person is going to do in that situation aside from sending you to apple support in person or shipping it off.
As an aside, I had no idea this thing even happened and I follow a lot of news int his space. I did a little googling since this is being painted as such a big deal and found one youtube video (the one mentioned in the linked article), one review from that person on Apple's product page, another review mentioning the soft screws both from may 2018, and then a few positive reviews, including one where the end user explicitly mentioned the screws seemed fine and it was manufactured in october of 2018.
There are 7-8 reviews in total across the entire internet, including user reviews, of this product, because it is so amazingly ridiculously low volume and generally intended only for their currently highest end computer when people want to wall/arm mount it... which for iMac users is actually very rare.
So again... Apple fucks up, used a bad material for part of the design, quietly revises the design... and this is a big deal because?
syndalis on
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
0
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Donovan PuppyfuckerA dagger in the dark isworth a thousand swords in the morningRegistered Userregular
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Neither.
You license out the part to the lowest bidder, collect a royalty off each sold by sticking your logo on the item, then when things go tits up you refuse warranty work because it's not an Apple product.
Because that's what actually happened. They only replaced anything because after quite literally months they found out they were dealing with someone with tens of thousands of YouTube subscribers and were looking at a PR nightmare.
Who was it licensed to? how do you know it was lowest bidder? How in any way are you sure that "this is what actually happened?" - also, they did support it, just not over the phone because it is a VESA mount; there is precious little a phone support person is going to do in that situation aside from sending you to apple support in person or shipping it off.
As an aside, I had no idea this thing even happened and I follow a lot of news int his space. I did a little googling since this is being painted as such a big deal and found one youtube video (the one mentioned in the linked article), one review from that person on Apple's product page, another review mentioning the soft screws both from may 2018, and then a few positive reviews, including one where the end user explicitly mentioned the screws seemed fine and it was manufactured in october of 2018.
There are 7-8 reviews in total across the entire internet, including user reviews, of this product, because it is so amazingly ridiculously low volume and generally intended only for their currently highest end computer when people want to wall/arm mount it... which for iMac users is actually very rare.
So again... Apple fucks up, used a bad material for part of the design, quietly revises the design... and this is a big deal because?
Because Apple are one of the world's leading innovators in fucking over their customers.
+9
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Neither.
You license out the part to the lowest bidder, collect a royalty off each sold by sticking your logo on the item, then when things go tits up you refuse warranty work because it's not an Apple product.
Because that's what actually happened. They only replaced anything because after quite literally months they found out they were dealing with someone with tens of thousands of YouTube subscribers and were looking at a PR nightmare.
Who was it licensed to? how do you know it was lowest bidder? How in any way are you sure that "this is what actually happened?" - also, they did support it, just not over the phone because it is a VESA mount; there is precious little a phone support person is going to do in that situation aside from sending you to apple support in person or shipping it off.
As an aside, I had no idea this thing even happened and I follow a lot of news int his space. I did a little googling since this is being painted as such a big deal and found one youtube video (the one mentioned in the linked article), one review from that person on Apple's product page, another review mentioning the soft screws both from may 2018, and then a few positive reviews, including one where the end user explicitly mentioned the screws seemed fine and it was manufactured in october of 2018.
There are 7-8 reviews in total across the entire internet, including user reviews, of this product, because it is so amazingly ridiculously low volume and generally intended only for their currently highest end computer when people want to wall/arm mount it... which for iMac users is actually very rare.
So again... Apple fucks up, used a bad material for part of the design, quietly revises the design... and this is a big deal because?
For a $5000 machine and a fucking $80 VESA adapter I would expect actual quality control.
I'm sorry any company who can shove the equivalent of a 2011 desktop into a form factor the size of the iPhone/Galaxy/Pixel doesn't get to use the "whoopsy didn't know THAT would happen" defense when it comes to basic structural engineering.
jungleroomx on
+8
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
Please keep in mind, other people.... VESA adapters for literally everyone else are about $30 at the high end.
Wouldn’t the right to repair intersection on this be if Apple somehow prevented you from using alternative screws to the ones provided? It seems fairly simple to find steel alternatives and bypass this issue.
It’s standard Apple tax nonsense, for sure, but am I missing something inherent to the design that prevents customers fixing it themselves?
0
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HonkHonk is this poster.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
I’m mostly impressed there are pure zinc screws. I’ve eaten zinc.
PSN: Honkalot
+4
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
Wouldn’t the right to repair intersection on this be if Apple somehow prevented you from using alternative screws to the ones provided? It seems fairly simple to find steel alternatives and bypass this issue.
It’s standard Apple tax nonsense, for sure, but am I missing something inherent to the design that prevents customers fixing it themselves?
Completely voiding the warranty I'd assume? Non-standardized screw threads would be my other guess. It's not like they haven't used custom screws before.
The guy already said Apples service system was telling the Genius bar it was accidental damage and not covered.
I’m mostly impressed there are pure zinc screws. I’ve eaten zinc.
I'm impressed you've eaten zinc!
Wait was it like, zinc oxide?
I can’t say exactly but like zinc pills, someone somewhere claims they get you out of a cold quicker and then you pay $20 for a bottle because why not.
As a species we have a lot of information on how much it takes to break shit.
We have kits to determine how hard things are via scratch resistance. We have tables of torque strength and mathematical equations that allow us to know how thick metals of certain compositions have to be before they lose their strength at certain forces.
In short, we know beforehand the general strength of materials used in different applications. We know because we have over a century of testing. This is not arcane nor esoteric knowledge, it's basic engineering.
There is zero convincing me that neither the company that made that shoddy mount NOR Apple, who put their seal of approval on said mounting system, had no idea that using cheap screws in a load bearing application would not have very good chances to break like this.
So when, as is quoted, that the screws are designed to break a certain way, it's been designed with their lack of strength in mind.
The worst part is we're talking the difference between something like $0.001 and $0.0008 for the price difference between a low end steel screw and a zinc one probably. It's hard to find zinc screws because no one really makes them. There are zinc coated steel and aluminium though.
Granted that doesn't look like a lot but when you make hundreds of thousands of these that's a middle class salary in savings.
$100,000 * (0.001 - 0.0008) = $100,000 * (0.0002) = $200. And while I think the costs are off by an order of two magnitudes (so $20,000), it's still a trivial amount compared to the profits. As an engineer, the worst part to me is that using a non-standard screw material like this took the conscious decision of at least one other engineer and should have undergone a review process before being approved.
I’m mostly impressed there are pure zinc screws. I’ve eaten zinc.
You've probably eaten some iron and carbon before, but I don't recommend scaring down on a bag of galvanized nuts. They don't taste anything like almonds. Or so a friend tells me...
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Yes? Why is that so hard for you to believe?
That is absolutely a calculus these large companies do. Also one they do: "how many people will return them once it breaks after they remove the screw the first time?"
Agree. Especially since the "you" that syndalis conjectured in order to make a strawman argument there isn't the CEO but a manager who is probably at the level of running a group of ~50-100 people responsible for a single subsystem on a given product.
I’m mostly impressed there are pure zinc screws. I’ve eaten zinc.
they're not pure zinc afaik, but it's probably a really shitty zinc coated brass screw
If I pay $80 for a VESA adapter that shit better be a titanium alloy that also doubles as a clean linen air freshener and triples as a laundry folder.
Yeah anyone who's put up a door hinge knows just how shitty brass screws can get. And that's construction quality ones.
Imagine the small ones used in PC building being tossed up to hold a 15-30 lb monitor to a mount instead.
I think the sheer strength of brass is 1/3 that of even the shittiest quality steel on things like #8 screws.
A typical threading brass such as C34000 with a 0S025 temper has a yield strength of 19.6 ksi versus something like grade 2 carbon steel, zinc plated, which will have around a 60 ksi yield. Stainless steels can actually have yield strengths as low as 20 ksi and are generally not a good fastener material (at least 300 series isn't).
Yes... But how much shear strength do M6 zinc plated screws have?
..
Asking for a friend.
If they're steel and there's 4 of them and you bought them from home depot? Probably strong enough to hold several hundred lbs each before shearing. The reason I suspect these screws are brass is because brass is a very soft, malleable metal (depending on its composition). A zinc coated steel screw probably shouldn't break, but like heffling said there are really shitty steels in screws sometimes.
not a doctor, not a lawyer, examples I use may not be fully researched so don't take out of context plz, don't @ me
There's also the "supplier cheaping out and pocketing the difference" that can happen, which is why you need good supplier qc and contract enforcement.
Related: apparently the UK passed some sort of law about reducing/eliminating waste, that Right to Repair supporters are calling a win. It seems like a bit of a leap, to me, and doesn't necessarily pressure OEMs to make hardier/repairable items, just on its own.
MayabirdPecking at the keyboardRegistered Userregular
Elizabeth Warren supports a national right to repair law. It's part of her agricultural platform so the first focus is on farm equipment (where the movement started) but there's a whole 'nother thread about how Warren wants to break up the big tech monopolies so Apple and co. would be targeted next. Good.
This is so dumb. They oriented the control board so that the ribbon actually pulls tight when you open the screen. Had they simply rotated the board 180 degrees, the cable would slacken as you open the screen and these issues would go away. Aside from the dumb fact that they incorporated the ribbon into the screen fab.
It's especially egregious for Apple, because the pre-iPhone Apple was famous for products that lasted much longer than the industry standard. It was part of the cost/value proposition with Apple products, and it was how they built the brand loyalty that kept them alive long enough to produce the iPhone.
+8
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jungleroomxIt's never too many graves, it's always not enough shovelsRegistered Userregular
Posts
Distinction without a difference.
Someone engineered it.
"Good chance it fails" is intentional engineering.
We have kits to determine how hard things are via scratch resistance. We have tables of torque strength and mathematical equations that allow us to know how thick metals of certain compositions have to be before they lose their strength at certain forces.
In short, we know beforehand the general strength of materials used in different applications. We know because we have over a century of testing. This is not arcane nor esoteric knowledge, it's basic engineering.
There is zero convincing me that neither the company that made that shoddy mount NOR Apple, who put their seal of approval on said mounting system, had no idea that using cheap screws in a load bearing application would not have very good chances to break like this.
So when, as is quoted, that the screws are designed to break a certain way, it's been designed with their lack of strength in mind.
Considering the cost, I repeat my question.
If it was as dirt cheap as the materials used, then we have something!
But the VESA mounting cost about as much as your typical VESA stuff, more even, and yet...
The worst part is we're talking the difference between something like $0.001 and $0.0008 for the price difference between a low end steel screw and a zinc one probably. It's hard to find zinc screws because no one really makes them. There are zinc coated steel and aluminium though.
Granted that doesn't look like a lot but when you make hundreds of thousands of these that's a middle class salary in savings.
Which, for a company worth 1 trillion with annual profits in the billions/ten of billions, it really isn't a whole lot.
You are a company that generates roughly 10-11 thousand dollars a second. Do you purposefully choose a shitty screw to save a shaved penny so that across the entire run of a high end, low volume niche product's niche accessory as to save maybe half a second's worth of revenue across the life of the product... or did you use what was already in your supply chain out of convenience and fuck up, and will probably replace the material in the screws (if they haven't already; this happened 8ish months ago and there hasn't been an ongoing story around this).
Neither are a particularly good look, but one is significantly, SIGNIFICANTLY more likely than the other.
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
Yes? Why is that so hard for you to believe?
That is absolutely a calculus these large companies do. Also one they do: "how many people will return them once it breaks after they remove the screw the first time?"
But I bet you their supply lines also had non shit screws too.
Because it absolutely doesn't make sense against the margin of the product. This is a niche accessory for a low volume, high margin "prestige" device. And the screw they went with ultimately ruined a multi thousand dollar device that they had to replace.
If they sell a few hundred thousand iMac Pros I will be flabbergasted, so there isn't a massive cost savings to consider here. Them doing this as a money driver with awareness that this would break and fuck over the consumer actively is just a level of stupid cynicism that doesn't align with reality.
Like I said, also a bad look... they had zinc, they use zinc on screws in other devices they make, so they used zinc for the accessory as a result and it turns out that was a bad choice.
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
Neither.
You license out the part to the lowest bidder, collect a royalty off each sold by sticking your logo on the item, then when things go tits up you refuse warranty work because it's not an Apple product.
Because that's what actually happened. They only replaced anything because after quite literally months they found out they were dealing with someone with tens of thousands of YouTube subscribers and were looking at a PR nightmare.
No.
Extremely tiny zinc screws going on a proprietary plate design to mount the VESA bracket on the iMac.
Who was it licensed to? how do you know it was lowest bidder? How in any way are you sure that "this is what actually happened?" - also, they did support it, just not over the phone because it is a VESA mount; there is precious little a phone support person is going to do in that situation aside from sending you to apple support in person or shipping it off.
As an aside, I had no idea this thing even happened and I follow a lot of news int his space. I did a little googling since this is being painted as such a big deal and found one youtube video (the one mentioned in the linked article), one review from that person on Apple's product page, another review mentioning the soft screws both from may 2018, and then a few positive reviews, including one where the end user explicitly mentioned the screws seemed fine and it was manufactured in october of 2018.
There are 7-8 reviews in total across the entire internet, including user reviews, of this product, because it is so amazingly ridiculously low volume and generally intended only for their currently highest end computer when people want to wall/arm mount it... which for iMac users is actually very rare.
So again... Apple fucks up, used a bad material for part of the design, quietly revises the design... and this is a big deal because?
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
Because Apple are one of the world's leading innovators in fucking over their customers.
For a $5000 machine and a fucking $80 VESA adapter I would expect actual quality control.
I'm sorry any company who can shove the equivalent of a 2011 desktop into a form factor the size of the iPhone/Galaxy/Pixel doesn't get to use the "whoopsy didn't know THAT would happen" defense when it comes to basic structural engineering.
It’s standard Apple tax nonsense, for sure, but am I missing something inherent to the design that prevents customers fixing it themselves?
Completely voiding the warranty I'd assume? Non-standardized screw threads would be my other guess. It's not like they haven't used custom screws before.
The guy already said Apples service system was telling the Genius bar it was accidental damage and not covered.
they're not pure zinc afaik, but it's probably a really shitty zinc coated brass screw
I'm impressed you've eaten zinc!
Wait was it like, zinc oxide?
If I pay $80 for a VESA adapter that shit better be a titanium alloy that also doubles as a clean linen air freshener and triples as a laundry folder.
I can’t say exactly but like zinc pills, someone somewhere claims they get you out of a cold quicker and then you pay $20 for a bottle because why not.
Yeah anyone who's put up a door hinge knows just how shitty brass screws can get. And that's construction quality ones.
Imagine the small ones used in PC building being tossed up to hold a 15-30 lb monitor to a mount instead.
I think the sheer strength of brass is 1/3 that of even the shittiest quality steel on things like #8 screws.
$100,000 * (0.001 - 0.0008) = $100,000 * (0.0002) = $200. And while I think the costs are off by an order of two magnitudes (so $20,000), it's still a trivial amount compared to the profits. As an engineer, the worst part to me is that using a non-standard screw material like this took the conscious decision of at least one other engineer and should have undergone a review process before being approved.
You've probably eaten some iron and carbon before, but I don't recommend scaring down on a bag of galvanized nuts. They don't taste anything like almonds. Or so a friend tells me...
Agree. Especially since the "you" that syndalis conjectured in order to make a strawman argument there isn't the CEO but a manager who is probably at the level of running a group of ~50-100 people responsible for a single subsystem on a given product.
A typical threading brass such as C34000 with a 0S025 temper has a yield strength of 19.6 ksi versus something like grade 2 carbon steel, zinc plated, which will have around a 60 ksi yield. Stainless steels can actually have yield strengths as low as 20 ksi and are generally not a good fastener material (at least 300 series isn't).
..
Asking for a friend.
If they're steel and there's 4 of them and you bought them from home depot? Probably strong enough to hold several hundred lbs each before shearing. The reason I suspect these screws are brass is because brass is a very soft, malleable metal (depending on its composition). A zinc coated steel screw probably shouldn't break, but like heffling said there are really shitty steels in screws sometimes.
https://ifixit.org/blog/12903/
This is so dumb. They oriented the control board so that the ribbon actually pulls tight when you open the screen. Had they simply rotated the board 180 degrees, the cable would slacken as you open the screen and these issues would go away. Aside from the dumb fact that they incorporated the ribbon into the screen fab.
Rock Band DLC | GW:OttW - arrcd | WLD - Thortar
"Defective by design"?
3DS: 0473-8507-2652
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PSN: AbEntropy
"Predatory engineering."