crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

AirPods Max 분해도

crwdns2936315:0crwdne2936315:0
crwdns2936325:0crwdne2936325:0
crwdns2931653:09crwdne2931653:0
AirPods Max Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:01crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 AirPods Max Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:02crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 AirPods Max Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:03crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0
  • With the screws removed, the drivers flip right out, revealing a pair of repair-friendly spring contacts directly underneath. Neat!

  • That provides enough clearance to remove our next target: the battery. As shown in the X-ray, both battery cells live in the right ear cup, tethered together by a single cable.

  • To our relief, both cells are fastened with screws, not adhesive. Even better, they provide power via a single, iPhone-style pop connector—no solder here.

  • That was surprisingly painless, particularly for an AirPods product. Were it not for the glue-y opening procedure, you could almost say it was easy. Imagine that—easily replacing a consumable component, instead of throwing the whole device away.

  • Made by Sunwoda, the two cells are wired in parallel, with a total capacity of 664 mAh and 2.53 Wh total energy at 4.35 V. Each cell measures approximately 5.7 x 20 x 28 mm.

  • This is right in line with the 2.39 Wh cell in the Bose NC 700 wireless headphones, which also promise around 20 hours of listening time. Sony WH-1000XM4s offer a longer, 30 hour listening time, with a correspondingly larger 4.1 Wh battery driving them.

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2944171:0crwdnd2944171:0crwdnd2944171:0crwdnd2944171:0crwdne2944171:0