Why Wine and Macbooks Don’t Mix…and How to Handle the Aftermath

Why Wine and Macbooks Don’t Mix…and How to Handle the Aftermath

Ready for a revelation? A concept that you’ve never considered before? Well here it is: never ever, ever pour a glass of wine into your Macbook keyboard. Or, more practically put, be extremely careful when there’s a drink of any kind near your laptop. If a spill occurs, and you don’t act quickly enough, you’ll find yourself staring at a massive bill for a new logic board, hard-drive, battery, and anything in between.

Accidents do happen — so plan on it. What’s more important is that you learn exactly what to do when these spills inevitably occur.

Republished Tutorial

Every few weeks, we revisit some of our reader's favorite posts from throughout the history of the site. This tutorial was first published in July, 2010.


Step 1. Don’t Freeze. Unplug!

Macbook Wine Spill

Ahhhh! The wife (meaning, you) accidentally spilled wine all over your keyboard. From personal experience, I can assure you that, for some odd reason, your first instinct with a massive computer spill is to freeze for five seconds or so, in shock. Don’t do this! Luckily Apple laptops are pretty helpful about automatically shutting down to prevent as many issues as possible before they happen. The more recent laptops even have liquid detection…though I’m certain that Apple is more interested in voiding your warranty than protecting you. For those uninformed, most laptop warranties do not cover spills.

Nonetheless, don’t waste a single second. Quickly unplug the computer, and shut it down.

The walls and carpet may have liquid on them as well, but ignore that. The computer is far more important right now.


Step 2. Flip that Sucka

Turn the laptop over to let the liquid drain

The next step, which should occur within seconds of beginning Step 1, is to flip the laptop upside down, into an L-shape. Gravity will then force as much liquid to drain out of the keyboard as possible. Make sure that you lay it on a towel so that it can soak up the liquid.

Let gravity do its job. Immediately flip the laptop into an L-shape.


Step 3. Open the Back

Unscrew the laptop to reveal the insides

Using a tiny screw driver, unscrew the back-side of your laptop. This will, of course, vary, depending upon which model you’re using. I’m sure you can figure it out.

Particularly on Macs, not all of the screws are the same size. Make a note of which screw goes where.


Step 4. Remove the Battery and Hard Drive

Remove the Macbook Pro battery

Before progressing, ensure your livelihood and touch some metal objects nearby to remove any potential static electricity from your body.

Needless to say, batteries and liquids — especially sugary, acidic liquids — don’t play nice together. Wherever yours is located on your laptop, remove it as quickly as possible. Next, get the hard drive out as well. We don’t want to risk any liquid seeping in, and corrupting your file system!

And now that you know how easy it is to remove a hard drive, don’t ever again pay a person to upgrade your hard drive. It only takes a moment to do yourself. ;)


Step 5. Dry the Insides

Clean the insides of the computer after a drink spill

With a paper towel of some sort, begin cleaning the insides of your computer. Depending upon how much liquid was spilled, this may either be a quick or lengthy process. For yours truly, it took around ten minutes to clean everything.

Some people prefer to use a hair dryer to clean the insides. This one is up to you; however, I’d encourage you to not do so. Play it safe and use a towel. We don’t want to risk frying the insides.


Step 6. Rubbing Alcohol and Cotton

Clean the insides with a cotton swab

Next, we need to continue removing as much sugar and acid as possible from the logic board. Otherwise, over time, it can begin to corrode the wiring. Yeah, this isn’t good!

Using rubbing alcohol and a cotton swab, begin dabbing any stained areas — but be gentle. If you have access to the backside of your keyboard, clean that area as well. Unfortunately, on the newer Macbook Pro models, it’s extremely difficult to access this section. With past models, it was quite easy to remove the keyboard entirely, for cleaning purposes. Unfortunately, that’s no longer the case.

Rubbing alcohol will help dissolve any remaining acid or sugar on the logic board.


Step 7. Leave it Alone

Leave the computer off for 3-5 days after a spill

Anxiety is a dangerous thing. Resist the urge to determine whether or not you’ve destroyed your laptop, and keep it off for a minimum of 72-120 hours (3-5 days). This will allow any remaining liquid to dry/evaporate first. Make sure that, while its drying, you keep the battery outside of the computer. This is mostly a precaution.

Keep the computer off for 3-5 days — no questions asked. Do not turn it on during this window.


Step 8. Cross Your Fingers

Cross your fingers

After 72-120 hours, reconnect the battery, screw everything back in, cross your fingers, say a prayer, and turn on the computer. Particularly if you’re using a newer Macbook Pro (2010+ models), you’ve done everything you can do. With hope, and more often than not, it’ll chime, and start-up like a charm. However, if the battery is dead, or the hard drive is corrupted, you’re next best option is to take it in for official repair. Of course, this will somewhat depend upon how skilled you are, when working under the hood.


About the Author

Jeffrey Way — me…yes, I’m speaking in third person — once committed a Cardinal Sin, and caused a massive wine spill into his Macbook Pro. Had he not followed these exact steps, he’d be forking over another life savings for a new Mac. Luckily, that was not the case.

Thanks for reading. Should the same ever happen to you, I hope this guide will help a bit!

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  • http://pixel13.net Mike

    That was a FUN read :)
    Note that some hairdryers also have a cool air function. Works like a charm!

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      Good point. I forgot to mention that.

  • http://www.bransonwerner.com Branson

    Loved the change of pace with this helpful article!

    I have 1 question regarding the first step. What is the reason behind unplugging a laptop? Its battery powered. Mac gods…school me!

    • http://createmy.com.au Dale Hurley

      I would imagine this would at least stop power getting from the main to the laptop

  • Dom

    Loved the comedy value of this :p I recommend something other than a towel because of the potential static issue, toilet paper is a personal favourite :p

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      Ooh, good thinking. I forgot to write about static electricity. Updating right now.

  • http://relevantdevelopment.co.uk Ash Kendall

    I am now terrified of having a drink near my MBP. Not because I think I might spill something – that goes without saying – but because I know I don’t have a screwdriver small enough to open it up if I ever did!

    • yassir

      I recommend that you buy one ASAP

    • Brian

      They’re really inexpensive, but you’ll need two of them — the outside case screws are phillips and the inside parts use a “star” head.

  • Wesley

    You don’t really risk frying the components with a hairdryer. The components can take a much, much higher temperature than your hairdryer can produce (Which is a good thing). Just avoid the plastic and you’re good.

  • http://andrewburgess.ca Andrew Burgess

    Wow, that’s bad; It’d be hard not to freeze in terror when that happens; thanks for the detailed explanation!

    When I saw this article come up in Google Reader, I though you’d be telling us why not to run the Windows software emulator on a Mac :)

    • Paul Du Long

      My exact same thought :D

    • Chris Dhanaraj

      Haha, same thought here was well. I’ve had a little bit of experience with the liquid on MacBook Pro though – was deathly ill one day, thrashed around in my sleep and managed to pour an entire bottle of Gatorade onto it.

  • Seb

    One more reason why desktops are so much more awesome :P

  • http://www.ecustom.ca/ Damon Bridges

    Lol Jeffrey, this was a nice, fun read.

    I’m looking to purchase a MacBook soon, any suggestions, anyone?

    • Seb

      A PC ^^

    • http://connorcrosby.me Connor Crosby

      It all depends on what you will be using it for. Is it going to be just for coding? Are you going to be video editing? If you are going to do mostly internet things, use small applications such as MS Word and coding, then you will only need a Macbook or the 13 inch Macbook Pro. If you will be doing hard core video editing or gaming then get the 15 inch or 17 inch Macbook Pro. Hope that helps!

      • http://www.ecustom.ca/ Damon Bridges

        @Connor, I plan to be coding and using Photoshop a lot, video editing would likely be minimal, if at all. Gaming would still be on my hardy old Windows. But, what’s the difference between a MacBook and a MacBook Pro (13in). Thanks for your answer though!

        Sorry, but my Mac experience is solely desktop.

        @Seb, I’ll still have my PC desktop, which is an amazing revved up machine, but I’ve been desiring a Mac lately, and I’m running XP SP3 on my PC, which is slowly becoming outdated.

        Anything else to consider?

  • http://twitter.com/z0r z0r

    Recently bought a mid2010 macbook pro, treat him like it should be treat. No eating, drinking and “always wash your hands” rules served good since it had been bought.
    The problem after the spill of wine is the fact that keyboard may (and will) become sticky. That’s annoying. Hope you will enjoy your mbp and wont have troubles. Cheers!

  • Jacob Tyo

    Great guide! Ill be sure to keep this in mind if/when I spill something on it.

    I have to admit, I never expected to see this in nettuts though… :)

  • http://spotdex.com Davidmoreen

    The lost tutorial from cpututs+ ;p

    I’ll keep this in mind if I ever need to (knock on wood).

  • Nathan

    In addition to Step 7 (leave it alone) – it’s best to place the laptop within a closed off bag, along with a large cup of uncooked rice. The rice will soak up any moisture, and thus will speed up the evaporation of any moisture on the laptop. The sealed off bag will prevent any additional moisture from the room air getting in.

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      Yeah — I read that a lot of people have saved things like iPods with the rice method too.

      • http://www.ecustom.ca/ Damon Bridges

        lol, never even heard of it.

        I just keep my food and drink in a totally seperate room. That way the “wife” can’t spill. ;)

  • http://freecss.info CSS Tutorials

    Wow, what an obscure tut.

    • http://www.shaneparkerphoto.com Shane Parker

      I think Jeffrey provides us with enough great content that we can allow a little bit of sidetrack from him :)

      • http://createmy.com.au Dale Hurley

        Two Thumbs Up!

  • http://newfreenintendowiipoints.info/ jason

    great tutorial :D

  • http://astorebargains.blogspot.com/ astore

    i enjoyed reading this tutorial very much. =]

  • http://freeplaystationcards.weebly.com/ playstation

    great step by step tutorial =D

  • http://azzcatdesign.com Catherine Azzarello

    I’ve been very careful w/my Macbook Pro. But the reason we have MacBooks is to work anywhere. On our laps. On the deck while sipping lemonade (or wine, depending what time it is!). Which means that very likely…sooner or later…a drink is going to get spilled. I worry more about sloshing my breakfast cereal on the keyboard than wine. Milk would be monumentally gross! :P

    I’ve also heard about the rice. Came across this little gadget some while back and remembered wondering if they’d offer the large size for laptops and iPads: http://www.bheestie.com/index.html

    Thanks for the how-to on removal clean-up. I’m quick with the turning it over (motherly instinct, I think) but would have been terrified about removing more than the battery.

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      Interesting link. :)

  • http://www.seowisedesigns.com Yheng

    I really thought it was “wine” an emulator for windows software to run on mac :)

    • Peter Petersen

      As the name WINE means “WINE Is Not an Emulator”, WINE is not an emulator…
      But As I read the title of the article my first thought also was that it was about running Windows software on a Mac…

  • http://technology.markhammonds.ws Mark Hammonds

    Great post, Jeff! I had the same thing happen with my MBP about 3 years ago, only substitute wine with George Killian’s Irish Red beer. It was pizza night. :)

  • MacMechanic

    A hair dryer, if used, should be used from a distance, even if set to cool. Air rushing over a surface can generate a static charge due to the Bernoulli effect. This is why vacuums used to clean keyboards come equipped with brushes, it’s to break up that airflow.

    We once had an ice dam on a flat roof that caused a huge backup of water. The ceiling collapsed and dumped gallons of water and soggy ceiling tiles on half a dozen Macs. Happened at night, no one there. Thankfully none were on, but they were plugged in. We unplugged them, we picked them up, literally poured water out of keyboards, mice monitors and CPUs and wrote up the insurance claim forms. We waited a week, plugged them all back in and every blasted one of them worked perfectly – so much for the insurance . Obviously, your experience may not be the same but it can amaze you what they can put up with. On the other hand, I had someone put their hand on their keyboard and wipe the dust of the front of their screen at the same time – the static build up arced through the keyboard cable and fried her main logic board. Static can be far worse than water…

    • Kate

      I agree — a hair dryer isn’t the best idea, but there’s a far more likely negative consequence: if you’re using the cool setting (since heat is not the best idea here) you’re ultimately going to wind up just pushing water deeper into the components rather than evaporating much of it.

  • http://twitter.com/xrommelx xRommelx

    Repair tuts+

    • Jamal

      repair.tutsplus[dot]com — Nice point

    • +1 =D

      • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
        Author

        It’s definitely a good idea. Just messaged my boss about the idea. It could cover lots of things: upgrading ram, building a computer from scratch (with parts), repair tuts (like this one), changing out hard drives, etc.

  • Andrew

    Yes, tip the MacBook upside down and yes you can disconnect the battery. But personally I think it’s downright irresponsible for you to suggest pulling apart a laptop when most people on here wouldn’t know the first thing about how to service one of these puppies.

    I used to work for an Apple repair agent, and you literally have to remove the logic board to salvage it from a spill, because funnily enough liquid tends to pool on the top rather than the bottom.

    Most people on here wouldn’t have anti-static mats/setups, and Apple has now moved to a more environmentally friendly plastic, which is very brittle. Take into someone who knows what they’re doing.

    Best advice? Remove hard drive, and claim your accident on insurance.

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      I wouldn’t call it irresponsible — maybe if this was a blog form moms. :) This is a community of web developers who most likely are fairly comfortable in this area. I’d recommend that they remove as much as they’re comfortable with, and nothing more.

  • Adam

    A fresh cup of coffee thrown across your laptop is equally devastating :(

  • http://wiredcraft.com hunvreus

    Got a little accident when my MacBook met with my coffee cup; have been deprived of the “delete” for 5 months now…

  • http://www.art-coder.com Eugene

    This is discrimination. What if I have ASUS laptop? Wouldn’t all of that apply the same way?

    • Luke

      Not at all. Non-Apple laptops are in fact water resistant to 100m. I quite often leave my Samsung N210 in the sink over night to ensure it’s clean.
      :P

      • http://www.art-coder.com Eugene

        You are insane :D

  • Robert

    Use a ThinkPad!

  • Ben

    “never ever, ever poor a glass of wine into your Macbook keyboard.”
    I wouldn’t pour a glass of wine in either

  • Kumar

    Yeah , poor … or pour ..

  • http://www.virtuosimedia.com Benjamin @ Virtuosi Media

    Glad you were quick enough to save the laptop. Kudos on thinking to write an article about it and taking pictures all the while. The picture on Step 4 looks like there are something like bullet holes in the upper left (CD drive?). Did something break in the rush to dry it off, or is that normal?

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      Those are just tiny screws. :)

  • Kim Dolleris

    3 words; All risk insurance ;)

    • Kim Dolleris

      Ow.. and Time Machine =)

  • Chuck

    i could easily guess the author of this article when i saw the title. lol

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      haha

  • Hi

    Nice tutorial!

  • Vijay

    How come none of you guys use or thought of using a Skin Keyboard protector.
    Something like this….
    http://www.iskin.com/protouch_macbook/common_features.html

  • Csongor Kiss

    Awesome guide!
    If you have a Mighty Mouse, please write another article about how to clean that too… I can’t find a useful method.

  • http://iainspad.com iainspad

    Anyone notice the spelling mistake at the start? ;)

  • Toby

    I left a Macbook under an open Velux window and went to the shop. While in the shop there was a massive down pour (it was April). When I got home the Macbook was drenched and swimming in a big puddle of water, and still ‘ON’.

    I turned it off and put it upside down on a radiator for a few nail biting hours. Turned it back on…it was fine!

    I also witnessed a music producer spill a can of orange soda (sugary drinks are the worst for damage) into a brand new mixing console in a recording studio. That story didn’t end so well!

  • http://addictivefonts.com Addictive Fonts

    Hahaha. Awesome Writeup, Jeff.:P

  • http://danharper.me Dan Harper

    And the best thing to do if you dunk your phone/pda/ipod etc. in water is to remove as many internal parts as you can (battery etc.) leave it in a tub of dry ice for a couple days. Apparently works a lot better than leaving it out to dry.

    • http://danharper.me Dan Harper

      Oops. Dry RICE. Not dry ice haha

      • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
        Author

        Haha – definitely not dry ice.

      • http://www.vaporizerkits.com Zephyr Ion

        I was just about to comment that rice works. But for a laptop, you’d have to get a LOT of rice!

  • http://www.markdijkstra.eu Mark Dijkstra

    I am no apple person, but i must say Jeff, this a pretty cool article(not the regular kind that you will expect here on nettuts).

    Nice one!!(keep’m comming)

  • http://JamieBroussard.com Jamie

    Back when I worked on audio equipment we never used alcohol on on electronics. While this is probably much better than wine, rubbing alcohol has water in it. After the alcohol evaporates the water will rust components.

    I would only use this method as a last resort. It probably did save the laptop from sure death.

    We always used nasty chemicals that you probably don’t have around the house like Tricloralethelene.

  • http://www.dangermoose.co.uk flashmac

    Not sure I could get over the shock before step 1. It IS my worst nightmare scenario. Dates back to when my misses used to tease me by hovering a cuppa over my Mac Book Pro. Still scares the living bejesus out of me.

    As such, all drinks are banned from my man cave. Prevention better than the cure.

    Nice read all the same.

  • http://humblebunny.com Nathan Hoernig

    I had a similar thing happen to me. I was showing a design to a client (who was drinking an iced tea), he reached over to point to something on the screen and dumped the entire (about 80% full) glass all over my trackpad/keyboard/speakers.

    I didn’t do any of the steps above, aside from flip it over on a towel, because I had bought a Zcover for my keyboard. Not a single drop got inside because of it. I was insanely lucky.

    Bottom line, spend 20 bucks on one and potentially save yourself a potentially massive headache in the future. That was 2 years ago and I’m writing this comment on the same Macbook Pro.

    • http://www.jeffrey-way.com Jeffrey Way
      Author

      Very good advice.

  • http://www.jordanwalker.net Jordan Walker

    Hopefully it wasn’t a glass from one of those bottles you have been saving for a special occasion. Nothing like spilling a vintage.

  • DeeCee

    Woulda really come in handy seven years ago…..

  • w1sh

    I fried a laptop the other day because I left the window open, took a smoke break and it started pouring rain (from nowhere). Raced upstairs to see a firehose dousing my office with buckets of water.

    Unfortunately I lost Ol’ Betsy…

    Anyway, I’ve exhausted my hour on the library’s computer. See ya!

  • http://askmatthewpotter.com Matthew Potter

    Wow, nice. This past winter, my girlfriend had brought be coffee while I was working on my laptop but the way things ended up, you’d think that she brought it for my Macbook Pro too. I had done the same thing with one exception, I had placed the thing in the microwave (not on obviously but rather just for storage and out of sight-ness) along with a small open cup of rice which worked to absorb ANY moisture. The cross your fingers step is FOR SURE!

  • adrian

    It might help to put the macbook in a huge bowl of rice during the 3-5 days, i hear that works for iphones

  • Simon

    Wish i had a mac :(, but im a student and dont have money for that :(

  • http://nataliaventre.com Natalia Ventre

    Thanks for the heads up, Jeffrey, next time I drink wine, I’ll have a screw driver nearby.

    repair tuts+ is a great idea, we all have siblings and spouses breaking our dear equipment.

  • http://www.loudamedia.com James Scott

    haha great article…what do I do if it’s chunky soup?