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Vue éclatée de la Playdate

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Playdate Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:01crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 Playdate Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:02crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 Playdate Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:03crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0
  • Here's where our disassembly efforts get gummed up.

  • The display—rumored to be a Sharp Memory LCD—seems firmly glued to the front half of the plastic enclosure. If you need to replace your display, you'll probably need a whole new plastic face—we were not confident we could separate the screen without destroying it. Probably not expensive, but not ideal.

  • Meanwhile, the buttons and other various I/O live on this sprawling flexible printed circuit, which is glued to the midframe. We started to un-glue it before realizing this wasn't a good, or reversible, idea.

  • One huge bright spot, though, is this 100% modular headphone jack. Is that considered retro now? Whatever the case, we're big fans.

  • A Knowles SPH1642HT5H-1 MEMS microphone can be found near the headphone jack, too!

C'est là que nos efforts de démontage ont été bloqués.

L'écran (qu'on dit être un Sharp Memory LCD) semble solidement collé à la moitié avant du boîtier en plastique. Si vous souhaitez le remplacer, vous aurez probablement besoin de tout un bloc frontal neuf – à notre avis, il y a peu de chances de réussir à le décoller sans le détruire. Ce ne sera probablement pas cher, mais pas idéal.

De même, les boutons et différents ports E/S sont logés sur ce circuit imprimé tentaculaire flexible, lui-même collé au châssis central. Nous commençons à le décoller avant de nous rendre compte que c'était pas une bonne idée (réversible).

Énorme bon point : la prise jack est 100 % modulaire. Est-ce rétro à présent ? Peu importe, nous sommes complètement fans.

On trouve également un microphone MEMS SPH1642HT5H-1 Knowles à côté de la prise jack.

[* black] Here's where our disassembly efforts get gummed up.
-[* black] The display—rumored to be a [link|https://www.sharpmemorylcd.com/aboutmemorylcd.html/|Sharp Memory LCD|new_window=true]—seems firmly glued to the front half of the plastic enclosure. If you need to replace your display, you'll probably need a whole new plastic face—we were not confident we could separate the screen without destroying it. Probably not expensive, but not ideal.
+[* black] The display—rumored to be a [link|https://sharpdevices.com/memory-lcd/|Sharp Memory LCD|new_window=true]—seems firmly glued to the front half of the plastic enclosure. If you need to replace your display, you'll probably need a whole new plastic face—we were not confident we could separate the screen without destroying it. Probably not expensive, but not ideal.
[* black] Meanwhile, the buttons and other various I/O live on this sprawling flexible printed circuit, which is glued to the midframe. We started to un-glue it before realizing this wasn't a good, or reversible, idea.
[* black] One ''huge'' bright spot, though, is this 100% modular headphone jack. Is that considered ''retro'' now? Whatever the case, we're big fans.
[* icon_note] A Knowles [link|https://www.knowles.com/subdepartment/dpt-microphones/subdpt-sisonic-surface-mount-mems|SPH1642HT5H-1|new_window=true] MEMS microphone can be found near the headphone jack, too!

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