In this video I will show you how to change Housing Case iPhone 12 Facebook- groups Page- / mobileservice.fr Facebook Page - / mobile.service.fr audio source: Free RU-vid Audio library
Good Video, great work however noticed you still had the battery connected and was using metal tools which could short the motherboard … advice from a fellow engineer
16:05 THAT PART IS SUPPOSED TO COME OF WITH THE BLACK attenas! HE Broke it. You will get bad WiFi reception if you also break it. Needs to be replaced.
Normally I use 80 degrees on the screen edge when I have to remove the glass from an iPhone. How much heat (and for how long?) do you use? In addition, I sometimes use a suction cup, but it doesn't work if the front or back glass is smashed. I have also previously used a barberry leaf to get under the glass. But from the iPhone 12 you can't because the glass sits further down in the frame. Do you have any tricks?
So many chances to totally screw up the phone and kill it forever. That’s why I’m happy this isn’t my job to disassemble and assemble fiddly stuff like this. Main thing I learned from this vid that I’d rather stay away from any possibly repaired phone… I think it’s nearly impossible to put it back together exactly like it was initially manufactured and quality will most likely suffer from that.
@@l0gical998 I’m not talking about the way the phone was assembled the first time, but about the way that it’s being disassembled and then being put together again with the same components that were glued and then taken off. Damage might occur or even only a little bent of rearranged slightly different. That does not happen with completely new parts. The idea of having a repaired phone with tiny stuff potentially being pried inside just does not make me want one like that. Just look at the coil and the magnets, how they look afterwards. Now that alone makes me want to stay away.
@@l0gical998 yes but theres QC standard that manufacturers did ... its diy tho... most repair shops out there dont even have any certification to doing so...
@@EduhSamaits metal inside the glass is on the outer shell of the phone the edge of the circle is metal therefor magnets stay in place once laid down i never had to use glue to keep in place
Cómo que le sobraron 2 o 3 tornillos que se ven clarons en la parte superior del logo del vídeo jejej 😅😅 medio cómo que alguna función cumplían pero bueno seguro Iván bien abajo de todo el proceso