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- | [* black] Separating the saucer section from the battery housing. |
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- | [* black] Battled the black housing off one side, then pried open the clamshell ''then'' found "pull to remove" tabs on the battery. Good joke Magic Leap! |
- | [* black] All these layers and adhesives probably help with shock-resistance. But it seems like it would be trivially easy to make this battery pack removable/swappable from the computer portion of it. When your battery dies in a couple years you'll need to replace the ''entire'' system. |
- | [* black] Two-cell battery sandwich, specs. |
+ | [* black] Next the saucer section lifts off, leaving the battery housing vulnerable to our prying hands. |
+ | [* black] Our hands have to pry a little harder than expected, but eventually we make our way to the Lightpack's power plant. |
+ | [* black] We're pleasantly surprised to find stretch-release adhesive securing the battery, but getting to it is such an ordeal that we aren't sure it does much good. |
+ | [* icon_note] All these layers and adhesives probably help with shock-resistance and general durability. The downside is that when the battery inevitably dies in a couple years you'll need to replace the entire Lightpack—a very expensive fix for what should be a simple problem. |
+ | [* black] Magic Leap packs this battery sandwich with 37.77 Wh, running at 3.83 V. |
+ | [* icon_note] This battery's capacity falls squarely in the same range as [guide|92362|some|stepid=173122|new_window=true] [guide|111895|popular|stepid=214155|new_window=true] [guide|105416|tablets|stepid=198954|new_window=true]. |