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Samsung's flagship phone, the Galaxy S8. Released in April 2017.

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Is it possible to change the LCD on these tow devices

I have got 2 Galaxy S8 . One of those has some problems with speaker and another one has damaged LCD .

Is it possible to change the LCD on these tow devices without any software work ?

I mean I am not really good in changing software or something like that .

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After the S6 was released, Samsung has stopped playing as many games as they used to with nonstandard parts. Yes it still happens, but it’s pretty much only an issue with Sprint phones at this point. The Sprint issues go back to the CDMA days, so it’s longstanding and may stick around for a while until they become more standard. Verizon also used to be incompatible due to the network differences, but is pretty much like the AT&T/T-Mobile phones with parts compatibility these days. Transplant the good speaker to the frame of the good screen - removal damages the AMOLED panel.

If the phones are model/carrier matched, it’ll absolutely work. If you are dealing with different carriers the general rule is AT&T/T-Mobile parts are easily interchangeable (with the exception of SIM locked motherboards for obvious reasons). GSM unlocked phones are all universal as well.

Verizon phones used to be just as bad as Sprint phones, but once they got to the S6 they dropped the odd placement of the radio ICs (which is why the S1-S5 CDMA pones are useless on GSM phones - there’s provisions for a heatsink in these, but it isn’t used in correct location a lot of the time), which is the issue with old phones from them. Since he S6 is the first visibly passing phone, it shouldn’t be completely trusted for compatibility - double check or use a network matched donor on these. The good news is he CDMA network is going away in 2019 so the writing is permanently on the wall as to if the days of frustrating incompatibilties are over for good. A this point, the Verizon S10 will likely be the first fully interchangeable phone. The S6/S7 will still need compatibility verification. The S8/9 being is likely to be 100% interchangeable, but it should still be verified just in case. However, I wouldn’t hesitate to buy a bad IMEI example to fix a GSM phone if I was getting it cheap enough knowing it will probably work since it’s new enough it should work in practice - but only do that if you’re confident in your working information.

Sprint phones have been hot garbage for parts interchangeability since the S1 and with how long they kept their nonstandard parts, completely distrust Sprint phones outside of Sprint phone work. However, things may be different for Sprint too like the Verizon S6 as I was looking for an S6 Edge+ parts phone and found Sprint phones were cheap, so I did look into compatibility and it all looks good to me. However, I don’t trust them to be fully compatible unlike Verizon phones with verification because Sprint is a weird carrier so the odds of an incompatibility are higher. I would avoid them unless you know what is interchangeable on the phone you are working on.

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