Samsung's latest Galaxy Note 7 phablet has undergone its first proper teardown, and the smartphone scores poorly due to difficult repairability. Teardown experts at iFixit cracked open the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 to reveal its innards as well as to see how easy was it to repair the handset.
The Galaxy Note 7 scored 4 out of 10 which was slightly better than the flagship Samsung Galaxy S7 which received an even lower score of 3 out of 10. The teardown suggested that replacing the front glass was "probably impossible" without destroying the display because of its curved nature. iFixit also pointed that the tough adhesive and a glued-on rear panel made replacement very difficult.
"Front and back glass make for double the crackability, and strong adhesive on the rear glass makes it very difficult to gain entry into the device," noted iFixit. The teardown experts claimed that the S Pen stylus stacked well against Microsoft's Surface Pen and Apple's Pencil.
The teardown found few similarities in the innards of the Galaxy Note 7 to the Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge including the Sony IMX260-based main camera sensor and a tiny heat pipe which serves the same purpose as the liquid cooling copper heat dispersal apparatus. iFixit claimed that the battery was "fortified by walls" which gave it extra structural integrity as well as possibly some water protection.
The teardown found that the Galaxy Note 7's iris scanner was a two-part system, "a nearby infrared blaster invisibly lights up your eye, while the sensor captures an image that's said to be more secure than a fingerprint." iFixit added that the iris scanning sensor provided the infrared illumination to "make eyes pop." The teardown also found that many "components were modular and could be replaced independently."
Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.
Supernova’s First Moments Show Olive-Shaped Blast in Groundbreaking Observations
Intense Solar Storm With Huge CMEs Forced Astronauts to Take Shelter on the ISS
Nearby Super-Earth GJ 251 c Could Help Learn About Worlds That Once Supported Life, Astronomers Say
James Webb Telescope May Have Spotted First Generation of Stars in the Universe