What This Error Means
F90 on a MacBook Pro is a fan / cooling system error. Translation: the Mac thinks at least one fan isn’t spinning right or the cooling system can’t keep temps under control.
What you see: fans blasting at full speed, random slowdowns or shutdowns, and F90 (often in diagnostics or a third‑party tool) complaining about fan failure or abnormal RPM.
Official Fix
Apple’s playbook is simple: assume a hardware cooling fault and push you to a service center. Here’s the clean, by‑the‑book route.
- 1. Power it down properly
- Shut down macOS (Apple menu > Shut Down).
- Unplug the charger and disconnect everything else (USB, hubs, displays).
- 2. Basic vent check
- Look at the rear hinge area and side vents.
- Remove any snap‑on case or skin blocking airflow.
- Blow out loose dust from vents with short bursts of compressed air (from the outside only).
- 3. Reset the SMC (System Management Controller) (Intel MacBook Pro only)
- With it shut down, hold Shift + Control + Option (left side) + Power for 10 seconds.
- Release, then press Power again to turn it on.
- If you’re on Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3), a full shutdown and 30 seconds unplugged is the SMC equivalent.
- 4. Run Apple Diagnostics
- Shut down again.
- Hold D while powering on (or Option + D for internet diagnostics).
- Let the test run. If it flags a fan or cooling error again, that’s Apple’s green light for hardware replacement.
- 5. Update macOS and firmware
- Boot back into macOS.
- Go to System Settings > General > Software Update.
- Install everything offered. Some models calm fan logic with firmware tweaks.
- 6. Official service path
- If F90 or fan‑related diagnostics persist, Apple’s official move is part swap, not repair.
- For older MacBook Pros: they’ll usually replace the fan assembly for that side (or both).
- For newer models where fans are tied closely into the main board, you may get quoted for a full top case or even logic board replacement.
- Cost at Apple/AASP typically: US$150–$350 for fan/top case work, up to $500–$900+ if they jump straight to logic board.
Bottom line: official route = diagnostics, then part replacement (fan or board), no board‑level fiddling, no cleaning beyond basic dusting.
The Technician’s Trick
Here’s what a bench tech actually does before dropping big money on boards.
- 1. Back up like it might die
- If it still boots, run a full Time Machine or Clone backup now.
- Any cooling fault can turn into random power‑offs. Don’t trust it.
- 2. Open it and check the fans for real
- Shut down, flip it over, remove the bottom cover (usually P5 pentalobe screws).
- Look at the fans: any broken blades, dust packed in the vents, or signs of liquid?
- Spin each fan gently with a finger. It should spin freely and stop smoothly. Grinding or stiffness = bad fan.
- 3. Reseat fan connectors
- Unplug each fan connector from the board carefully, then plug it back in firmly.
- A half‑seated connector can throw F90 even if the fan is fine.
- Check for corrosion (green/white gunk) around the connector. That screams liquid damage.
- 4. Proper deep clean
- Hold the fan blades in place and blow dust out of the heatsink fins with compressed air.
- Brush off caked dust from the fan edges and exhaust slots.
- Do not spin fans with air like a turbine; that can kill the bearings.
- 5. Thermal paste refresh (for hot/older machines)
- On 5+ year old Intel Pros running hot, many techs pull the heatsink and replace the thermal paste.
- Fresh quality paste can drop temps and keep the Mac out of panic mode, clearing borderline F90 events.
- If you’re not comfortable pulling the heatsink, skip this and just replace bad fans.
- 6. Test with fan monitoring
- Reassemble, boot, and use any reputable macOS fan/RPM monitor.
- You want both fans reporting normal RPM ranges and responding when the system heats up.
- No RPM on one side, or zero change under load, means that fan or its circuit is toast.
- 7. When we call it a logic board fault
- New fans installed and seated, but F90/fan errors stay? Then the fan driver or sensor line on the logic board is likely blown.
- Shop techs may do component‑level repair, but consumers usually choose between living with loud fans or replacing the board.
Insider rule: try fans and a serious clean before paying for a logic board. Fans fail way more often than the board circuitry that drives them.
Is It Worth Fixing? (The Financial Verdict)
- ✅ Fix: F90 on a MacBook Pro less than 6–7 years old, no liquid damage, fans clearly dirty or noisy. Fan + clean job is usually cheap and worth it.
- ⚠️ Debatable: Mid‑age Intel Pro with high battery cycles, some cosmetic wear, and a quote that involves fan + top case work in the $250–$400 range.
- ❌ Replace: Very old Intel MacBook Pro, liquid damage on the board, or any repair where they’re quoting $500+ for a logic board just to solve F90.
Parts You Might Need
- MacBook Pro cooling fan (model‑specific) – Find MacBook Pro cooling fan on Amazon
- Heatsink / fan assembly (for some models sold as one piece) – Find heatsink / fan assembly on Amazon
- Thermal paste (for CPU/GPU repaste) – Find thermal paste on Amazon
- Pentalobe and precision screwdriver kit – Find screwdriver kit on Amazon
- Compressed air / electronics cleaning kit – Find electronics cleaning kit on Amazon
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