TurboDiesel@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I recently took my Pixel 6a in for screen repair; somehow, water got under the glass and caused the whole thing to glitch out in a way that looked like I spilled black ink all over. Really bizarre.mAnyway, I picked up the phone and visually inspected it - all was good, so I took it home. They said they tested it, I took their word for it.
Turns out they destroyed the NFC antenna, disabling Google Pay for me. It took me almost and month and several emails to corporate, but they ended up fixing their mistake.
Point is, this very well may be the fault of the repair people. I’d reach out to them first.
weeeeum@lemmy.world 1 year ago
As a repair tech, this can happen really easily. There are sometimes like 2 dozen cables that need to be disconnected and perfectly reconnected for every function to work. Additionally if they don’t have a proper testing software it’s fairly labour intensive to test and it can eat deeply in your margins. Some cheap businesses won’t bother testing beyond turning it on and just letting the customer figure it out and deal with it then.
For example at my work we barely test sub 100$ computers. The amount of time to , refurbish, wipe the drive, put it into stock, keep track of it in accounting and shipping it already makes it barely profitable, having to throw in another and hour to half an hour of additional testing can easily make the computer a loss for the company assuming it sells at all.
TurboDiesel@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I absolutely understand; I used to be a repair tech for Sprint. That said, screen repair for the Pixel 6a doesn’t even require the back to be removed, so I think it was more an education issue than anything else. I don’t think it was malicious at all, but shortly after I noticed the NFC issues, the back fell off and I saw they’d cracked it pretty severely and stuck it back on with double-stick tape. It was less the crime and more the cover-up that pissed me off.
weeeeum@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I see. I recently had to repair an iPhone 13 with super bent frame and back glass. Apple wouldn’t touch it because of the damage but the phone was still alive. Once I got it back together the wifi didn’t work and unfortunately we couldn’t really do anything about it even if it was looking new
user224@lemmy.sdf.org 1 year ago
Sorry for asking, if you don’t mind, but do you have any tips on opening and gluing back these devices? I have a 6 year old Moto G5s Plus with 1 hour battery life (surprisingly, not bloated) and I’d like to try replacing that. The USB port also needs replacement, but that seems impossible. It’s soldered on and surrounded by multiple tiny SMD components.
I’ve seen someone on Reddit mention that they recommend waiting a bit before putting on the screen when using the B7000 glue, otherwise it will seep under the screen and you’ll probably never remove it without screen damage.
I may pay additional €9 for the OEM adhesive instead, but I’ll still need to use glue for fingerprint scanner, which unfortunately needs to be removed due to how the phone is constructed.
Also, how do I know I am not heating it up too much?
Thanks for any answer.