DaveC
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The slot Superdrive in my 2006 Mac Mini had been used sparingly: maybe 80
playing of DVDs and probably half that burning discs in the 6 years since it
was born.
In the past year, errors started to pop up, then recently it wouldn't mount a
disc.
I tried different brands of discs -- no joy.
I surmised that the cause could be one of two possibilities: either the laser
had dimmed over the years (they tend to do that), or the lens that focuses
the laser onto the disc became obscured with dust or some other material.
In drawer-type optical drives, the optical laser & lens assembly is usually
readily visible. In a slot-type of drive, accessing the drive means removing
it as well as some disassembly.
But I figured with nothing to lose I just might try a shot of canned air.
I firmly attached the little plastic tube to the nozzle of a can of air
purchased at the local electronics store. I used some tape to secure the
tube, because if it became detached it would be lost inside the optical
drive, necessitating replacement of the drive -- I'd never be able to
retrieve that tube.
I know that the Superdrive's optical assembly is just left-of-center, and (as
are all DVD & CD drives) immediately below where the disc would spin: just
below the level of the slot.
I inserted the tube into the slot, judging when the tip reached approximately
half the diameter of a DVD, aimed slightly to the left, and gave a couple of
healthy blasts.
It's important to keep the can exactly upright and not tip it, as the
propellant in the can is liquid under pressure and can be expelled instead of
the gas I want, possibly ruining the laser & lens.
The end result: the drive now behaves as expected: I can read and burn discs
like it was new.
YMMV. If you don't feel qualified to try this, don't.
Cheers,
Dave