You can now upgrade or downgrade BridgeOS on your Intel T2 Mac with an IPSW file & Apple Configurator 2!
As soon as Apple released the very first T2-equipped Mac, MacAdmins wished that they had a way to downgrade BridgeOS. You can now even downgrade BridgeOS on a T2 Mac up to 7 days after an update!
UPDATED: 6/07/22
BridgeOS IPSW Downloads
In the chart below is a list of previous BridgeOS IPSW files along with the signing status. (Signed = You can upgrade or downgrade) All links are Apple Software Update direct downloads.
You can downgrade BridgeOS to one previous version (with in 7 days of a new os update) if you are having issues or would like to test the software update mechanism. The requirement for BridgeOS downgrade is that you need to satisfy the minimum OS Version or newer.
Why would anyone want to downgrade BridgeOS?
Example – You updated to macOS Big Sur 11.2.3 from 11.1. Something in the new version of bridgeOS is causing problems on your T2 Mac. You now want to downgrade to a previous version so you can single out the issue. You will need to downgrade macOS down to 11.2 to support the previous version of BridgeOS. If you downgrade BridgeOS to an older version than the installed OS then macOS Big Sur will not boot and you will be prompted to update BridgeOS from the macOS Update Assistant environment. After downgrading BridgeOS you will need to reinstall/downgrade 11.2 over the top of 11.2.3, or reinstall 11.2. You will now be running 11.2 and the matching bridgeOS version 18P4346.
NOTE! You can only downgrade back one previous version. Apple usually supports T-1*, current minus one version. *Apple will usually leave the previous version of BridgeOS signed for about 7 days after the release of a new update. The BridgeOS signing schedule follows iOS. (Apple will unsign previous versions of iOS about one week after a new update)
How to Downgrade BridgeOS on a T2 Mac
If you would like to learn how to do this, click on the link below!
Big Sur 11.0.1 (20B50) was released to block 2013 & 2014 13″ MBPro’s from installing the OS. This move looks to be related to the Big Sur install problems with these models.
UPDATE 12/14/20 – Apple has added the Mac-189A3D4F975D5FFC BoardID back to the newly released macOS Big Sur 11.1 Full installer! It looks like Apple has found and fixed the issue with the installer that was causing problems! This means that you can now download, install and reinstall Big Sur 11.1 on your 2013-14 13″ MacBook Pro again.
UPDATE 11/25/20 – If you attempt to install Big Sur on your 13″ 2013-2014 MBPro, you might get this error.
Installation of macOS could not continue. installation requires downloading important content. That content can’t be downloaded at this time. Try again later.
If you are wondering about the Big Sur Installer issue for the 2013 & 2014 13″ MacBook Pro users, I wrote about the situation earlier this week.
To review, if you have a 2013 or 2014 13″ MacBook Pro and attempted to install macOS Big Sur, it was possible that the installer could brick your Mac.
When I say “brick” I mean that it boots to a black screen and is 100% non responsive. You can’t boot to recovery, USB installers, reset the pram or SMC.
The only option for users is to bring it in for repair. The reports say that Apple is saying that the logic board needs to be replaced at a price over 500$. Even worse some are being told it’s a vintage product and they can’t parts. This is FALSE, Apple will keep stock of parts up to 7 years.
Vintage products are those that have not been sold for more than 5 and less than 7 years ago. Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod, and Apple TV vintage products continue to receive hardware service from Apple service providers, including Apple Retail Stores, subject to availability of inventory, or as required by law.Apple.com – https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201624
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201624
Hopefully Apple will cover the cost of the repair for free.
The solution for now? Release a new macOS Big Sur Installer that removes both models from the Big Sur compatibility list.
The link below shows the list of Big Sur compatible Macs
If you can’t install macOS Big Sur on certain 13-inch MacBook Pro computers from 2013 and 2014. Follow these steps if you can’t install macOS Big Sur on a MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Late 2013) or MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014). When you install macOS Big Sur on these Mac models, the installer might say that the update cannot be installed on this computer, or your Mac might start up to a blank screen or circle with a line through it.
Apple.com
The most important part of this article is this line
“or your Mac might start up to a blank screen“
This is exactly what will happen to some users if they install macOS Big Sur on their 2013 or 2014 13″ MacBook Pro.
Let’s look at the other parts of the note.
“the installer might say that the update cannot be installed on this computer“
This is because both models have been removed from the new Big Sur installer compatibility list.
“or your Mac might start up to a blank screen or circle with a line through it“
This might happen if you make a new USB installer of Big Sur 11.0.1 (20B50) and attempt to boot to it.
Removed from the Big Sur Compatible List?
The macOS installer has a file inside called the distribution file. For this release it’s called 001-83532.English.dist.
Compatible Macs for install are listed in this file as BoardID for older devices and DeviceIDs for newer models. The boardID we are looking for is
Mac-189A3D4F975D5FFC
This BoardID is for the MacBookPro11,1 or the 2013 & 2014 13″ MacBook Pro.
I keep a database of all Mac BoardID and DevicesIDs here
This means that (for now anyway) you will not be able to install macOS Big Sur on your 2013 or 2014 13″ MacBook Pro.
Will Apple fix this issue and add them back later?
Unknown at this time. It’s possible that Apple will fix issue the Big Sur installer is causing to these models. They could then add the models back to the compatibility list later.
Apple has a released a new Supplemental Update for macOS Catalina 10.15.5 (19F2200). This update is ONLY for the new AMD Radeon Pro 5600M equipped 16″ MacBook Pro.
In a surprise one week before WWDC, Apple has released a new version of the 16″ MacBook Pro. The new option is a new AMD Radeon Pro 5600M graphics card with 8GB of HBM2 memory. The new A new Supplemental Update build of macOS Catalina 10.15.5 was also released today. This update is only for the new 5600M equipped 16″ MacBook Pro that was released today. The New Supplemental update patch notes say “macOS Catalina 10.15.5 Supplemental Update provides important security updates and is recommended for all users“. This says “All Users” even though it’s only for the new model. The Supplemental Update is now also available for download as a pkg update and updated full installer.app.
New (16-inch, AMD Radeon Pro 5600M)
The new Machine model name = (16-inch, AMD Radeon Pro 5600M). The shipping BuildVersion of this new model is macOS Catalina 10.15.5 (19F2096). The new supplemental update will show up in softwareupdate for the new AMD 5600M 16″ MacBook Pro only. After the Supplemental Update is installed the BuildVersion will be (19F2200).
New BoardID
I keep an index of all Mac BoardID’s on this page.
Every Single Mac Board ID from 2006-2021 + M1 Apple Silicon DeviceIDs
This page will be updated with the latest list of Mac BoardIDs, Model IDs and Machine Models. Apple started to document attributes like ModelID on the page below but stopped after 2017.
Most BoardID’s are scattered all over the web but are not all in one updated page. I started with the version Intel based version and will update when new BoardID’s are introduced.
Can I upgrade or downgrade macOS on my Mac?
I wrote an article including every Intel Mac since 2006. The list includes the lowest and highest macOS version that you can install on your Mac.
The macOS installer.app uses the boardID value to figure out if the Mac Model is supported when the user starts the install.
You can find this list inside the macOS installer.app. Look for the InstallESD.dmg After you mount the DMG navigate to /System/Library/CoreServices/PlatformSupport.plist
Inside this plist you will find the list of logic board ID’s that installer supports.
How do I find the Mac BoardID?
To find your BoardID use this command.
ioreg -l | grep -i board-id
The output should read like this
"board-id" = <"Mac-942C5DF58193131B">
How do I find the Mac DeviceID?
To find your T2 DeviceID use this command. HT @eholtam for the command.
Index of Intel & Apple Silicon-Based Mac Hardware (2006-2023)
1. Macbook Pro – (2006-2021)
2. Macbook Air – (2008-2022)
3. Macbook – (2006-2017)
4. Mac Pro – (2006-2019)
5. iMac – (2006-2020)
6. iMac Pro – (2017)
7. Mac Mini (2006-2020)
8. Xserve (2006-2009)
Article Updated: 1/07/23
DeviceID & ModelID
The macOS Big Sur installer is now checking T2 Macs for the DeviceID attribute. Hat Tip #1 goes to @rickmark who maintains the main DeviceID list here. Help us fill in the blanks! Hat Tip #2 goes to @grahamrpugh who found the new code in Big Sur.
// Next compare T2 devices against the list of supported deviceIDs. … // For legacy hardware T1 and older, we use boardIDs
iBridge Product ID
DeviceID
ModelID
Description (Product ID)
iBridge2,1
J137AP
Apple T2 iMacPro1,1 (j137)
iBridge2,3
J680AP
Apple T2 MacBookPro15,1 (j680)
iBridge2,4
J132AP
Apple T2 MacBookPro15,2 (j132)
iBridge2,5
J174AP
Apple T2 Macmini8,1 (j174)
iBridge2,6
J160AP
Apple T2 MacPro7,1 (j160)
iBridge2,7
J780AP
Apple T2 MacBookPro15,3 (j780)
iBridge2,8
J140KAP
Apple T2 MacBookAir8,1 (j140k)
iBridge2,10
J213AP
Apple T2 MacBookPro15,4 (j213)
iBridge2,11
J230AP
?
iBridge2,12
J140aAP
Apple T2 MacBookAir8,2 (j140a)
iBridge2,13
J214AP
?
iBridge2,14
J152FAP
Apple T2 MacBookPro16,1 (j152f)
iBridge2,15
J230kAP
Apple T2 MacBookAir9,1 (j223k)
iBridge2,16
J214KAP
Apple T2 MacBookPro16,2 (j214k)
iBridge2,19
J185AP
Apple T2 iMac20,1 (j185)
iBridge2,20
J185fAP
Apple T2 iMac20,2 (j185f)
iBridge2,21
J223AP
Apple T2 MacBookPro16,3 (j223)
iBridge2,22
J215AP
Apple T2 MacBookPro16,4 (j215)
iBridge2,19
J185AP
Apple T2 iMac20,1 (j185)
iBridge2,20
J185fAP
Apple T2 iMac20,2 (j185f)
N/A
J274AP
Macmini9,1 Apple Silicon M1
N/A
J293AP
MacBookPro17,1 Apple Silicon M1
N/A
J313AP
MacBookAir10,1 Apple Silicon M1
N/A
J456AP
iMac21,1 Apple Silicon M1
N/A
J457AP
iMac21,2 Apple Silicon M1
N/A
J314sAP
MacBookPro18,3 – M1 Pro 14″
N/A
J314cAP
MacBookPro18,4 – M1 Max 14″
N/A
J316sAP
MacBookPro18,1 – (16″ Pro, 2021)
N/A
J316cAP
MacBookPro18,2 – (16″ Max, 2021)
N/A
J375cAP
Mac13,1
Mac Studio (M1 Max, 2021)
N/A
J375dAP
Mac13,2
Mac Studio (M1 Ultra, 2022)
N/A
J413AP
Mac14,2
MacBook Air (M2, 2022)
N/A
J473AP
Mac14,3
Mac mini (2023) M2
N/A
J414cAP
Mac14,5
MBPro (14-inch, 2023) M2 Max
N/A
J416cAP
Mac14,6
MBPro (16-inch, 2023) M2 Max
N/A
J493AP
Mac14,7
MacBook Pro (13-inch, M2, 2022)
N/A
J414sAP
Mac14,9
MBPro (14-inch, 2023) M2 Pro
N/A
J416sAP
Mac14,10
MBPro (16-inch, 2023) M2 Pro
N/A
J474sAP
Mac14,12
Mac mini (2023) M2 Pro
N/A
J504AP
Mac15,3
MBPro (14-inch, 2023) M3
N/A
J433AP
Mac15,4
iMac (24-inch, 2023) M3
N/A
J434AP
Mac15,5
iMac (24-inch, 2023) M3
N/A
J514sAP
Mac15,6
MBPro (14-inch, 2023) M3 Pro
N/A
J516sAP
Mac15,7
MBPro (16-inch, 2023) M3 Pro
N/A
J514cAP
Mac15,8
MBPro (14-inch, 2023) M3 Max
N/A
J516cAP
Mac15,9
MBPro (16-inch, 2020) M3 Max
N/A
J514mAP
Mac15,10
MBPro (14-inch, 2023) M3 Max
N/A
J516mAP
Mac15,11
MBPro (16-inch, 2023) M3 Max
1. MacBook Pro (2006-2020)
The MacBook Pro was introduced by Steve Jobs at Macworld Conference & Expo on January 10th, 2006. The MacBook Pro has seen five redesigns over the last 15 years. Starting with Gen 1 (2006-2008), Gen 2 Unibody (2008-2012), Gen 3 Retina (2012-2015), Gen 4 Touch Bar (2016-2019) & Gen 5 16″ Scissor (2019).
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
MacBookPro16,4
(16-inch, AMD Radeon Pro 5600M)
Mac-A61BADE1FDAD7B05
MacBookPro16,3
(13-inch 2020)
Mac-5F9802EFE386AA28
MacBookPro16,2
(13-inch 2020)
Mac-E7203C0F68AA0004
MacBookPro16,1
(16-inch Late 2019)
Mac-E1008331FDC96864
MacBookPro15,4
(13-inch Mid 2019)
Mac-53FDB3D8DB8CA971
MacBookPro15,3
(15-inch Mid 2019)
Mac-1E7E29AD0135F9BC
MacBookPro15,2
(13-inch Mid 2018)
Mac-827FB448E656EC26
MacBookPro15,1
(15-inch Mid 2018)
Mac-937A206F2EE63C01
MacBookPro14,3
(15-inch Mid 2017)
Mac-551B86E5744E2388
MacBookPro14,2
(13-inch Mid 2017)
Mac-CAD6701F7CEA0921
MacBookPro14,1
(13-inch Mid 2017)
Mac-B4831CEBD52A0C4C
MacBookPro13,3
(15-inch Late 2016)
Mac-A5C67F76ED83108C
MacBookPro13,2
(13-inch Late 2016)
Mac-66E35819EE2D0D05
MacBookPro13,1
(15-inch Late 2016)
Mac-473D31EABEB93F9B
MacBookPro12,1
(13-inch Early 2015)
Mac-E43C1C25D4880AD6
MacBookPro11,5
(15-inch Mid 2015)
Mac-06F11F11946D27C5
MacBookPro11,4
(15-inch Mid 2015)
Mac-06F11FD93F0323C5
MacBookPro11,3
(15-inch Mid 2014)
Mac-2BD1B31983FE1663
MacBookPro11,2
(15-inch Late 2013)
Mac-3CBD00234E554E41
MacBookPro11,1
(13-inch Late 2013)
Mac-189A3D4F975D5FFC
MacBookPro10,2
(13-inch Early 2013)
Mac-AFD8A9D944EA4843
MacBookPro10,1
(15-inch Early 2013)
Mac-C3EC7CD22292981F
MacBookPro10,2
(13-inch Retina 2012)
Mac-
MacBookPro10.1
(15-inch Retina 2012)
Mac-
MacBookPro9,2
(13-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-6F01561E16C75D06
MacBookPro9,1
(15-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-4B7AC7E43945597E
MacBookPro8,3
(17-inch Late 2011)
Mac-50619A408DB004DA
MacBookPro8,2
(15-inch Late 2011)
Mac-
MacBookPro8,1
(13-inch Late 2011)
Mac-
MacBookPro8,3
(17-inch Early 2011)
Mac-942459F5819B171B
MacBookPro8,2
(15-inch Early 2011)
Mac-94245A3940C91C80
MacBookPro8,1
(13-inch Early 2011)
Mac-94245B3640C91C81
MacBookPro7,1
(13-inch Early 2010)
Mac-F222BEC8
MacBookPro6,2
(15-inch Early 2010)
Mac-F22586C8
MacBookPro6,1
(17-inch Early 2010)
Mac-F22589C8
MacBookPro5,5
(13-inch Mid 2009)
Mac-F2268AC8
MacBookPro5,4
(15-inch Mid 2009)
Mac-F22587A1
MacBookPro5,3
(15-inch Mid 2009)
Mac-F22587C8
MacBookPro5,2
(17-inch Early 2009)
Mac-F2268EC8
MacBookPro5,1
(15-inch Late 2008)
Mac-F42D86C8
MacBookPro5,1
(17-inch Late 2008)
Mac-F42D86A9
MacBookPro4,1
(15-inch Early 2008)
Mac-F42C89C8
MacBookPro4,1
(17-inch Early 2008)
Mac-F42C86C8
MacBookPro3,1
(15-inch Late 2007)
Mac-F4238BC8
MacBookPro3,1
(17-inch Late 2007)
Mac-F42388C8
MacBookPro2,2
(15-inch Late 2006)
Mac-F42187C8
MacBookPro2,1
(17-inch Late 2006)
Mac-F42189C8
MacBookPro1,2
(17-inch 2006)
3A107
MacBookPro1,1
(15-inch 2006)
3A106
2. MacBook Air (2008-2019)
The MacBook Air was first introduced at Macworld San Fransisco by Steve Jobs on January 15th, 2008. For the 1st Generation from 2008-2010 the screen size was or a 13.3″ and included a Intel Core 2 Duo Processor. The Second Generation introduced in 2010 added an 11″ version. From 2017 on you could only get the 13″ Model. The 3rd Generation 13-inch MacBook Air was released in 2018.
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
MacBookAir9,1
2020
Mac-0CFF9C7C2B63DF8D
MacBookAir8,2
(TT Retina, 2019)
Mac-226CB3C6A851A671
MacBookAir8,1
(Late 2018)
Mac-827FAC58A8FDFA22
MacBookAir7,2
(Mid 2017)
Mac-937CB26E2E02BB01
MacBookAir7,2
(13-inch Early 2015)
Mac-937CB26E2E02BB01
MacBookAir7,1
(11-inch Early 2015)
Mac-9F18E312C5C2BF0B
MacBookAir6,2
(13-inch Early 2014)
Mac-7DF21CB3ED6977E5
MacBookAir6,1
(11-inch Mid 2013)
Mac-35C1E88140C3E6CF
MacBookAir6,2
(13-inch Mid 2013 )
Mac-7DF21CB3ED6977E5
MacBookAir6,1
(11-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-66F35F19FE2A0D05
MacBookAir5,2
(13-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-2E6FAB96566FE58C
MacBookAir5,1
(11-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-66F35F19FE2A0D05
MacBookAir4,2
(13-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-742912EFDBEE19B3
MacBookAir4,1
(11-inch Mid 2012)
Mac-C08A6BB70A942AC2
MacBookAir3,2
(13-inch Late 2010)
Mac-942C5DF58193131B
MacBookAir3,1
(11-inch Late 2010)
Mac-942452F5819B1C1B
MacBookAir2,1
(13-inch Late 2008)
Mac-F42D88C8
MacBookAir1,1
(13-inch Early 2008)
Mac-F42C8CC8
3. MacBook – (2006-2017)
This Section covers the original 2006 13-inch MacBook all the way to the 2017 12″ Version. The MacBook has seen 4 different designs since 2006. Gen 1 Polycarbonate (2006-2008), Gen 2 Aluminum Unibody (2008-2009). Gen 3 Polycarbonate Unibody (2009-2010) & Gen 4 12″ USB-C (2015-2017).
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
MacBook10,1
(Mid 2017)
Mac-EE2EBD4B90B839A8
MacBook9,1
(Early 2016)
Mac-9AE82516C7C6B903
MacBook8,2
(Early 2015)
Mac-F305150B0C7DEEEF
MacBook8,1
(Early 2015)
Mac-BE0E8AC46FE800CC
MacBook7,1
(Mid 2010)
Mac-F22C8AC8
MacBook6,1
(Late 2009)
Mac-F22C8AC8
MacBook5,2
(13-inch C2D Early 2009)
Mac-F22788AA
MacBook5,1
(13-inch C2D Late 2008 Aluminum)
Mac-F42D89C8
MacBook5,1
(13-inch C2D Late 2008 Aluminum)
Mac-F42D89A9
MacBook4,1
(13-inch C2D Early 2008)
Mac-F22788A9
MacBook3,1
(13-inch C2D Late 2007)
Mac-F22788C8
MacBook2,1
(13-inch C2D Late 2006)
Mac-F4208CAA
MacBook2,1
(13-inch C2D Late 2006)
Mac-F4208CAA
MacBook1,1
(13-inch Core Duo 2006)
Mac-F4208CC8
4. Mac Pro – (2006-2019)
The Mac Pro was first introduced at WWDC on August 7, 2006. It has seen 3 Generations from 2006-2019. Gen 1 “Cheese Grater” V1 (2006-2012), Gen 2 “Trash Can” (2013) & Gen 3 “Cheese Grater” V2 (2019).
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
MacPro7,1
(2019)
Mac-27AD2F918AE68F61
MacPro6,1
(Late 2013)
Mac-F60DEB81FF30ACF6
MacPro5,1
(Mid 2010)
Mac-F221BEC8
MacPro4,1
(Nehalem 2009)
Mac-F221BEC8
MacPro3,1
(Eight Core 2008)
Mac-F42C88C8
MacPro2,1
(Eight Core 2007)
Mac-F4208DA9
MacPro1,1
(Quad Core 2006)
Mac-F4208DC8
5. iMac – (2006-2020)
The iMac was first introduced at an Apple Special Event at the Flint Center, Cupertino on May 6, 1998 by Steve Jobs. The First Intel Based iMac was introduced at Macworld Conference and Expo on January 10, 2006 by Steve Jobs. It has seen seven different designs since 1998.
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
iMac20,2
(Retina 5K, 27-Inch, 2020)
Mac-AF89B6D9451A490B
iMac20,1
(Retina 5K, 27-Inch, 2020)
Mac-CFF7D910A743CAAF
iMac19,1
(27-Inch 5k, 2019)
Mac-AA95B1DDAB278B95
iMac18,3
(27-Inch 5k Mid-2017)
Mac-BE088AF8C5EB4FA2
iMac18,2
(21.5-Inch 4k Mid-2017)
Mac-BE088AF8C5EB4FA2
iMac18,1
(21.5-Inch Mid-2017)
Mac-4B682C642B45593E
iMac17,1
(27-Inch 5k, Late 2015)
Mac-65CE76090165799A
iMac17,1
(27-Inch 5k, Late 2015)
Mac-DB15BD556843C820
iMac17,1
(27-Inch 5k, Late 2015)
Mac-B809C3757DA9BB8D
iMac16,2
(21.5-Inch Late 2015)
Mac-FFE5EF870D7BA81A
iMac16,1
(21.5-Inch Late 2015)
Mac-A369DDC4E67F1C45
iMac15,2
(27-Inch 5k, Late 2014)
Mac-FA842E06C61E91C5
iMac15,1
(5K, 27-inch, Late 2014)
Mac-42FD25EABCABB274
iMac14,4
(21.5-inch Mid 2014)
Mac-81E3E92DD6088272
iMac14,3
(21.5-inch Late 2013)
Mac-77EB7D7DAF985301
iMac14,2
(27-inch Late 2013)
Mac-27ADBB7B4CEE8E61
iMac14,1
(21.5-inch Late 2013)
Mac-031B6874CF7F642A
iMac13,3
(iMac Late 2012)
Mac-7DF2A3B5E5D671ED
iMac13,2
(27-Inch Late 2012)
Mac-FC02E91DDD3FA6A4
iMac13,1
(21.5-inch Late 2012)
Mac-00BE6ED71E35EB86
iMac12,2
(27-inch Mid 2011)
Mac-942B59F58194171B
iMac12,1
(21.5-inch Mid 2011)
Mac-942B5BF58194151B
iMac11,3
(27-inch Mid 2010)
Mac-F2238BAE
iMac11,2
(21.5-inch Mid 2010)
Mac-F2238AC8
iMac11,1
(27-inch Late 2009)
Mac-F2268DAE
iMac10,1
(iMac Late 2009)
Mac-F2268DC8
iMac10,1
(iMac Late 2009)
Mac-F221DCC8
iMac10,1
(iMac Late 2009)
Mac-F2268CC8
iMac9,1
(20-inch Mid 2009)
Mac-F2218EA9
iMac9,1
(24-inch Early 2009)
Mac-F2218FC8
iMac9,1
(20-inch Early 2009)
Mac-F2218EC8
iMac8,1
(24-inch Early 2008)
Mac-F227BEC8
iMac8,1
(20-inch Early 2008)
Mac-F226BEC8
iMac7,1
(24-inch Mid 2007)
Mac-F42386C8
iMac7,1
(20-inch Mid 2007)
Mac-F4238CC8
iMac6,1
(24-inch Late 2006)
Mac-F4218FC8
iMac5,2
(17-inch Late 2006)
Mac-F4218EC8
iMac5,1
(20-inch Late 2006)
Mac-F42786A9
iMac5,1
(17-inch Late 2006)
Mac-F4228EC8
iMac4,2
(17-inch Mid 2006)
iMac4,1
(20-inch Early 2006)
3A103
iMac4,1
(17-inch Early 2006)
6. iMac Pro (2018)
The iMac Pro was introduced at WWDC on June 5, 2017.
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
iMacPro1,1
(5k, 27-inch Late 2017)
Mac-7BA5B2D9E42DDD94
7. Mac Mini – (2006 -2018)
On January 10, 2005, the Mac mini was announced at the Macworld Conference & Expo by Steve Jobs. He said at the time the Mac Mini was “the cheapest, most affordable Mac ever”. The Intel Version was announced on February 28, 2006.
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
Macmini8,1
(Late 2018)
Mac-7BA5B2DFE22DDD8C
Macmini7,1
(Late 2014)
Mac-35C5E08120C7EEAF
Macmini6,2
(Late 2012)
Mac-F65AE981FFA204ED
Macmini6,1
(Late 2012)
Mac-031AEE4D24BFF0B1
Macmini5,3
(Mid 2011)
Mac-7BA5B2794B2CDB12
Macmini5,2
(Mid 2011)
Mac-4BC72D62AD45599E
Macmini5,1
(Mid 2011)
Mac-8ED6AF5B48C039E1
Macmini4,1
(Early 2010)
Mac-F2208EC8
Macmini3,1
(Early 2009)
Mac-F22C86C8
Macmini2,1
(Mid 2007)
Mac-F4208EAA
Macmini1,1
(Late 2006)
3A102
Macmini1,1
(Early 2006)
GMC2
8. Xserve – (2006-2009)
I almost forgot about Xserve. How could I forget about one of my favorite most reliable Macs ever created? The Xserve was introduced on May 14, 2002. The First Generation was based on a G4 Processor. The 2nd Generation was based on the G5 and the 3rd and final Generation was based on Intel’s Xeon Processor.
Model Identifier
Machine Model
Board ID
Xserve3,1
(Quad Core Early 2009)
Mac-F223BEC8
Xserve2,1
(Eight Core Early 2008)
Mac-F42289C8
Xserve1,1
(Quad Core Late 2006)
Mac-F4208AC8
If you have any information to add to this list or find an error, please Contact Me. Thank You!
List of Mac BoardIDs Mac Machine Model Board-ID Model-ID