I'm afraid not. I just tried it on the Galaxy S6 Edge and the suction cup doesn't provide enough force to pull it out. Instead, I used the heavy-duty suction cups that iFixit recommends and even then it was difficult. I placed the suction cup near the bottom of the rear glass near the charge port after heating up the perimeter of rear panel. Once it got warm enough (about 20-30 seconds) I pulled the suction cup while having a friend slide in an opening pick into the very small gap near the charge port. Leaving that one in place, I worked my way around the sides of the phone, sliding in more opening picks as I went to prevent the glass from re-adhering to the phone.
+
I'm afraid not. I just tried it on the Galaxy S6 Edge and the suction cup doesn't provide enough force to pull the panel off. Instead, I used the heavy-duty suction cups that iFixit recommends and even then it was difficult. After heating up the perimeter of rear panel for 20-30 seoncds, I placed the suction cup near the bottom of the rear glass near the charge port and pulled the suction cup while having a friend slide in an opening pick into the very small gap near the charge port. Leaving that pick in place, I worked my way around the sides of the phone, sliding in more opening picks as I went to prevent the glass from re-adhering to the phone.
I'm afraid not. I just tried it on the Galaxy S6 Edge and the suction cup doesn't provide enough force to pull it out. Instead, I used the heavy-duty suction cups that iFixit recommends and even then it was difficult. I placed the suction cup near the bottom of the rear glass near the charge port after heating up the perimeter of rear panel. Once it got warm enough (about 20-30 seconds) I pulled the suction cup while having a friend slide in an opening pick into the very small gap near the charge port. Leaving that one in place, I worked my way around the sides of the phone, sliding in more opening picks as I went to prevent the glass from re-adhering to the phone.