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Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

Compact and convenient, the MacBook Air SuperDrive connects to your MacBook Air computer with a single USB cable and fits easily into a travel bag. It lets you install software and play and burn both CDs and DVDs, including double-layer DVDs.

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Questions & Answers

22 Questions + 28 Answers

Purchase Information

A$ 139.00

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Overview

The sleek, compact SuperDrive for MacBook Air.

Everything you need in an optical drive.
Whether you’re at the office or on the road with your MacBook Air, you can play and burn both CDs and DVDs with the MacBook Air SuperDrive. It’s perfect when you want to watch a DVD movie, install software, create backup discs, and more.

Take it anywhere.
Only slightly bigger than a CD case, the MacBook Air SuperDrive slips easily into your travel bag when you hit the road and takes up little space on your desk or tray table when you’re working.

The essence of simplicity.
You’ll never have to worry about lost cables with the MacBook Air SuperDrive. It connects to your MacBook Air with a single USB cable that’s built into the SuperDrive. There’s no separate power adapter, and it works whether your MacBook Air is plugged in or running on battery power.
 
 

Ratings & Reviews

3.5

Based on 86 reviews

Most Useful Reviews

  • Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

    3.0

    One Trick Drive

    Written by CK from Chicago

    9/07/2008

    As an owner of a MacBook Air SuperDrive I have to say it is a good external drive, but it is a bad investment. If you only own a MacBook Air, then this is the device for you. However, if you're like me and have access to a few other Macs, this drive is a dud.

    But why?

    Well, it only works with the Air. I can't use the drive with any other machine: MacBook, nope. iMac, nope. PowerMac G5, nope. Just the Air. Why would you care about my hardware problems? Well, here's my real-world example: the DVD drive died on my personal MacBook so I tried to use the Air SuperDrive instead. Useless. Wouldn't inject the disk. Yes, there's a lot of technical reasons for this, but the fact of the matter is that the drive shouldn't be dedicated to a single machine. Let's face it: in two years when you drop the machine and have to replace it, you'll discover that the drive won't work with the machine you've replaced it with. The MacBook Air hardware will change and render your external drive instantly obsolete.

    If you only own an Air and need a battery-powered drive for watching movies on a plane (then again, if you have an Air, you probably have an iPhone and watch movies that way, but I digress...), I'd recommend this drive. However, for the rest of you out there, buy a third party USB drive that plugs into AC power and gain a whole lot of flexibility down the road. At least when you decide to change machines, you won't be stuck with a piece of hardware you can't use such as the myriad monitor adapters over the years (ADC, mini-DVI and now micro-DVI) and the Apple SCSI dock for the PowerBook Duo 210 (okay, I'm really, really old when it comes to Apple notebooks and have seen this many times before -- and never learned).
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    1857 of 2004 people found this useful

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  • Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

    3.0

    Light and compact, but doesn't share well.

    Written by WM from Haverhill

    11/02/2008

    The MacBook Air SuperDrive is light and compact as advertised. It slides into a bag pocket and hardly adds any weight or bulk. And it performs as advertised, quickly and quietly.

    But, it consumes the MacBook Air's only USB port and works only with that one port -- it does not work with USB hubs! With no downstream ports of its own, you can't use your SuperDrive and any other USB device at the same time. Like a keyboard or mouse, or your iPhone or iPod, or a USB printer.

    This is a remarkable oversight. But if you want to install Boot Camp or play DVDs, it's the only game in town.
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    1348 of 1718 people found this useful

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  • Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

    5.0

    USB HUB DEVICE

    Written by DD

    5/03/2008

    2300$ cash (CA$) for the new and beautiful MacBook Air + Superdrive, surprisedly my usb hub wont work with it...

    PLEASE MR. JOBS ASK YOUR R&D DEPARTEMENT TO DEVELOP A NEW USB HUB DEVICE...
    I will pay any retail prices for that new device 40$ 100$ 150$, will be OK...

    From a disappointed costumer.
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    1177 of 1676 people found this useful

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Most Recent Reviews

  • Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

    5.0

    Can be used as an OEM repair part.

    Written by DF from Osceola

    4/12/2009

    We needed a new DVD drive for our Core Duo Mac Mini couldn't find an Apple branded replacements reasonably priced. This works as a no-hack plug-n-play OEM fix for the Mini. Remove the drive, brackets and daughterboard from this Air Superdrive, then six screws to get the drive out of the Mac Mini and off you go! More

    7 of 8 people found this useful

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  • Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

    3.0

    Cool?

    Written by DS from Shelter Island

    10/11/2009

    I rely on a mouse for my computer work, but only one usb port??? NOT Cool.

    27 of 41 people found this useful

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  • Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive

    4.0

    Won't work with USB hub!

    Written by MA from Edmond

    5/11/2009

    The device itself is beautiful and works perfectly, but it consumes the Air's SINGLE USB port and does not work with any USB hubs! As a college student, I prefer to use a mouse while spending hours at my desk and when I need my SuperDrive I can't use my mouse or any other USB device, such as my flash drive. It's irritating and I wish Apple would invent a USB hub that could handle the SuperDrive's extensive power needs and provide the user with more USB ports for things such as keyboards or flash drives. More

    46 of 53 people found this useful

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Questions & Answers

Most Interesting

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  • Best Answer

    It is only functional on MacBook Air models, you would need to replace the internal of your iMac, or look into another brand of USB external optical drive. More

    • Answered by BM from Winnipeg
    • 8/10/2009
    • 18 of 21 people found this useful
    • 1 more answer
  • Best Answer

    The previous answer is incorrect.

    The drives are not region free. the drives enforce the regions through their firmware. the Computer or the OS helps you change it, but it cannot "undo" a change. 5 changes lock a drive.

    - Some third party programs like VLC will ignore a region code mismatch, but it is only useful if the disc data is not encrypted. Most discs are. so VLC will fail to read a disc that is encrypted, because the drive will not play along in decrypting the data for VLC.

    - The Optical drive's firmware only allows for the region on it to be changed 5 times. after that it is locked by the drive itself, and the region can't be changed again.

    - There are ways to change the firmware of optical drives to ignore the regions, but for most modern drives that Apple uses, there is no "region Free" hacks that currently work, and probably not anytime soon.

    The short answer is you can change the region 5 times, and that's that. After that, it is locked to that region.
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    • Answered by JW from La Mesa
    • 21/10/2009
    • 8 of 8 people found this useful
    • 2 more answers
  • Best Answer

    This accessory does NOT work with the Mac Mini. (It does work with the Mac Mini Server.)

    • Answered by MR from Santa Fe
    • 23/10/2009
    • 15 of 15 people found this useful