Lmao, I've an android, and I've probably changed a half dozen batteries on my own phones. It's not that hard, and the barriers reagent last more than a few years anyway...
Fair enough lol, my motto is if there is a Will, there is a way. For instance if 8 year old Chinese kids can assemble them, I don’t see why anyone who is mechanically gifted would be hesitant to disassemble, repair and reassemble. No matter what the product is, I actually fixed a $300 TDK Bluetooth speaker my boss gave me for free, worked fine plugged in but needed a new battery pack for wireless playing, after a $20 trip to the hobby store and some soldering the speaker isn’t only fixed but now has a much larger Capacity battery. It pays to tinker 😂
I actually fixed a $300 TDK Bluetooth speaker my boss gave me for free, worked fine plugged in but needed a new battery pack for wireless playing, after a $20 trip to the hobby store and some soldering the speaker isn’t only fixed but now has a much larger Capacity battery.
my only caveat there would be to make sure you know what you're doing when messing around with lipo batteries. They don't like to be overcharged and can catch fire if you do so, which is why most electronics with lithium batteries have an on-board charging circuit to prevent overcharging.
I'm not saying don't do it, just be extremely careful the charging circuit is intact and can handle the extra capacity. =)
Your cell phone is probably one of those products.
You’ve never cracked iPhone glass and repaired it? :shrugs:
Lmao, I've an android, and I've probably changed a half dozen batteries on my own phones. It's not that hard, and the barriers reagent last more than a few years anyway...
Fair enough lol, my motto is if there is a Will, there is a way. For instance if 8 year old Chinese kids can assemble them, I don’t see why anyone who is mechanically gifted would be hesitant to disassemble, repair and reassemble. No matter what the product is, I actually fixed a $300 TDK Bluetooth speaker my boss gave me for free, worked fine plugged in but needed a new battery pack for wireless playing, after a $20 trip to the hobby store and some soldering the speaker isn’t only fixed but now has a much larger Capacity battery. It pays to tinker 😂
agreed.
my only caveat there would be to make sure you know what you're doing when messing around with lipo batteries. They don't like to be overcharged and can catch fire if you do so, which is why most electronics with lithium batteries have an on-board charging circuit to prevent overcharging.
I'm not saying don't do it, just be extremely careful the charging circuit is intact and can handle the extra capacity. =)