Apple launches repair program for 2016 13-inch MacBook Pros with 'stage light' problem

Posted:
in Current Mac Hardware edited June 2020
At last addressing a long-standing controversy, Apple has introduced a Backlight Service Program for the "stage light" problem affecting some 2016-model 13-inch MacBook Pros.

2016 MacBook Pro with Touch Bar


Machines qualifying for the program are eligible for free repairs up to four years after initial purchase. Apple claims that the problem affects a "very small percentage" of 2016 Pros, equipped with either two or four Thunderbolt 3 ports, nevertheless sold in a long stretch between October 2016 and February 2018. Repairs can be conducted at Apple stores, authorized service providers, or via a mail-in process.

MacBook Pro owners have long been complaining about "flexgate" issues, sometimes known as "stage lighting." When they manifest, a Pro's backlight may show bright spots along the bottom of the screen, or just stop working entirely.

Third-party repair outfit iFixit suggsted that the culprit is Apple's use of fragile flex cables instead of the wire cables used in earlier MacBook models. Though the current cables are thinner, wire cables can be routed through a hinge instead of around it, reducing wear.

Some Pro owners have been able to persuade Apple to pay for fixes, but the lack of an official program meant that others were on their own dime. People who have already paid for repairs may be able to claim a refund.

At present, the program does not extend to other Apple portables beyond the 2016 13-inch model, such as the 2018 Air. The 2018 MacBook Pro has a longer flex cable and may not be impacted by the same problem.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 7
    chasmchasm Posts: 3,304member
    This is very traditionally how Apple addresses problems that get past its own internal QA: capture machines with the problem, study them extensively, engineer a solution, make that available to owners, improve their QA process so the issue doesn’t come back.

    It all takes longer than anyone would like, particularly in some troublesome cases, which is why Apple sometimes extends warranty coverage for those issues. I wish it could be done faster, but the company does — eventually — do right by current owners when an engineering problem like this crops up.
    fastasleepracerhomie3
  • Reply 2 of 7
    ednlednl Posts: 61member
    Huh, I didn't know it was called that, but that's exactly what my iPad Pro 12.9 2nd gen recently developed. Very annoying, will have to get it fixed.
  • Reply 3 of 7
    racerhomie3racerhomie3 Posts: 1,264member
    Good job apple. The MacBooks remain on the top of my buy list again .
  • Reply 4 of 7
    mdossmdoss Posts: 40member

    At present, the program does not extend to other Apple portables beyond the 2016 13-inch model, such as the 2018 Air. The 2018 MacBook Pro has a longer flex cable and may not be impacted by the same problem.

    Is this correct, that 2018 MBPros are not affected by this?  I have a vague recollection of reading somewhere that all new MBPros had this issue; and since I read that I have been very careful to make sure that I never open the lid more than ninety degrees, like they show in all the Apple publicity pictures!

    Cheers
  • Reply 5 of 7
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    mdoss said:

    At present, the program does not extend to other Apple portables beyond the 2016 13-inch model, such as the 2018 Air. The 2018 MacBook Pro has a longer flex cable and may not be impacted by the same problem.

    Is this correct, that 2018 MBPros are not affected by this?  I have a vague recollection of reading somewhere that all new MBPros had this issue; and since I read that I have been very careful to make sure that I never open the lid more than ninety degrees, like they show in all the Apple publicity pictures!

    Cheers
    The 2018 has a slightly longer flex cable.
    mdoss
  • Reply 6 of 7
    darkvaderdarkvader Posts: 1,146member
    chasm said:
    This is very traditionally how Apple addresses problems that get past its own internal QA: capture machines with the problem, study them extensively, engineer a solution, make that available to owners, improve their QA process so the issue doesn’t come back.

    It all takes longer than anyone would like, particularly in some troublesome cases, which is why Apple sometimes extends warranty coverage for those issues. I wish it could be done faster, but the company does — eventually — do right by current owners when an engineering problem like this crops up.

    Apple traditionally does nothing of the sort.  Apple traditionally either comes out with a non-fix or replaces parts like-for-like and hopes the replacement part won't fail again until the repair extension ends.

    And that's a very longstanding tradition, going all the way back to the Apple /// with the infamous drop fix and continuing to the present with the butterfly keyboard REP, where you get a new keyboard that's exactly the same as the keyboard that failed.

    I don't know if they've changed the replacement screens for this one, but I strongly suspect they haven't.
    muthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 7 of 7
    waveparticlewaveparticle Posts: 1,497member
    free repairs up to four years after initial purchase”???
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