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crwdns2933797:0Taylor Dixoncrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0

crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Taylor Dixon

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-[* black] At last we meet the second of the two power packs! This one may look like the smaller cell, but it is actually the more powerful of the pair: 1265 mAh, or 4.8 Wh.
- [* black] At first glance you might guess that it is glued directly to that pOLED display, but thankfully the two are separated by a layer of metal(?), making the necessary prying ''slightly'' less scary.
+[* black] At last we meet the second of the two power packs! At first glance it seems that it is glued directly to the back of the pOLED display. (''Yikes''!)
+ [* icon_note] We breathe a heavy sigh of relief as we realize the two are separated, if only slightly—the battery is glued into a metal well that piggybacks the screen.
+[* black] A nice isopropyl bath puts the battery at ease, and after some very careful slicing we have finally—''eleven steps'' into the teardown—removed both batteries.
+[* black] This yellow rectangle may look like the smaller of the two cells, but it is actually the more powerful of the pair: 1265 mAh, or 4.8 Wh.
[* black] The two batteries' typical ratings add up to Motorola's claim of 2510 mAh, or 9.7 Wh of power. For comparison, just one of [guide|122600|the Galaxy Fold batteries|stepid=236260|new_window=true] has about the same capacity of both of these things put together. [guide|126000|The giant L-shaped iPhone XS Max battery|stepid=243570|new_window=true] on the other hand, dwarfs them all at 3969 mAh, or 15.04 Wh.
[* black] Screen w/ copper shield removed has one last chip for us to ~~consume~~ examine:
[* red] Samsung S6SY77CX, likely an iteration of Samsung's [guide|120331|popular touch controller|stepid=232035|new_window=true].