
"The back of this snapped iPhone is fairly easy to remove - all you need is some heat, a prying tool and the removal of two pentalobe screws. The interior is primarily occupied by the metal-enclosed 3,149mAh battery, and we can see the MagSafe magnets and copper coils, which facilitate wireless charging. The screen is held down by a hefty amount of glue as well as a tri-point screw and two ribbon cables."
"Back to the other side, where the battery is held in place by the same electrically releasing adhesive as the iPhone 16 and 16 Plus. Once the special tab on the battery is activated with the correct voltage, the pull-tabs release the battery. iPhone Air motherboard and USB-C port We then get a good look at the key components like the motherboard, cameras and the fancy titanium 3D-printed USB-C housing. Check out the full video below."
The device was previously bent using an engine hoist applying over 97 kg (216 lbs) of pressure. The back of the iPhone 17 Air can be removed with heat, a prying tool and removal of two pentalobe screws. The interior is dominated by a metal-enclosed 3,149mAh battery alongside visible MagSafe magnets and copper coils for wireless charging. The display is secured by heavy adhesive, a tri-point screw and two ribbon cables. The battery uses electrically releasing adhesive activated by a voltage-applied tab to free pull-tabs. The teardown also exposes the motherboard, cameras and a titanium 3D-printed USB-C housing.
Read at GSMArena.com
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