Evento | Contagem | Delta |
---|---|---|
Alguém completou seu guia | 774 | 5388 |
O administrador aprovou o seu guia | 10 | 960 |
Alguém curtiu seu guia | 378 | 904 |
Postagem recebeu avaliação positiva | 17 | 204 |
Uma postagem contendo um link para o seu guia recebeu avaliação positiva | 49 | 167 |
Resposta aprovada | 5 | 150 |
Voto contra à postagem | 1 | -6 |
We actually went back and ripped up an iPhone 5s Screen for comparison and research; it turned out it was very similar to this (minus the 3D Touch Sensors and the mylar being part of the backlight). The only other teardown we've done specifically on a device's screen was for the Retina MacBook Pro.
I can't be sure about Apple's policy on screen replacement, though I assume to maintain good success rates for repairs and turnaround times they'll just replace the screen assembly. Independent repair shops are another story; depending on their experience level and access to the necessary tools and parts, it is totally possible to perform. Ultimately it seems a bit more time consuming for something that is usually a 10-20 minute part swap. On top of all this, the people who provide parts will almost always provide displays in their entirety instead of layer by layer.
I think this will be a refurbisher only kind of procedure.
Yes sir, that is correct. I double checked and referenced our old Chromecast teardown and it seems there was a major decrease in flash memory and the RAM has stayed the same.
All of the chip specifications were in Gb, just like the 2013 Chromecast.