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  • Now the goal of this whole video is to open up the Vivo X20 Plus and see what that in-screen

  • fingerprint scanner looks like from the inside.

  • Even though this phone survived my durability test, at the end the screen went black when

  • it got cracked over the top of the fingerprint scanner.

  • So now let's see how it's all put together and see what can be replaced.

  • Let's get started.

  • [Intro]

  • There are two visible screws at the bottom of the Vivo X20, both of which are a T2 screw.

  • I'll link the toolkit I use, and any replacement parts I find in the video description like

  • usual.

  • Once those screws are out I'll slip my metal pry tool between the plastic edge of the screen

  • and the metal edge of the phone.

  • I've taken apart several other phones with a similar build to this, and it's held together

  • with a series of clasps around the outside.

  • So a few strategically placed pry tools should be able to pop the screen out of the back

  • metal housing.

  • Luckily, since my screen is already shattered, I don't have to worry too much about being

  • gentle and keeping it in one piece.

  • There is a little bit of adhesive holding the back to the front panel, but there's nothing

  • special attached to that back metal.

  • So I'll set it off to the side and start taking out the 3 screws holding down the large C

  • shaped bracket, and then I'll set that off to the side next to the screws to keep things

  • organized.

  • This phone is pretty complex inside, unfortunately.

  • I'll unclip the battery ribbon cable first, and then the button ribbon.

  • And then the charging port ribbon unsnaps like a little Lego, which is actually super

  • interesting because the mirco USB charging port is only held in place by two little screws

  • down here at the bottom, then the whole port comes out.

  • This is literally the easiest charging port replacement that I've ever seen.

  • There are two screws holding down one more silver bracket over the two extension ribbons

  • that I'll explain in a second.

  • I'll fold those down gently, making sure not to kink anything.

  • And then grab the little green battery pull tab and remove it from the frame.

  • The 3900 milliamp power battery is actually pretty easy to remove and to replace compared

  • to other mainstream phones.

  • The motherboard has an incredibly small eccentric rotating mass vibration motor tucked over

  • here underneath the camera.

  • You can see how it rotates and spins around on it's little motor.

  • I'll remove 4 more screws holding down the motherboard, and unclip one of the two main

  • camera ribbons over here on the side, just like a little Lego.

  • Same here with the earpiece resting in the center of the motherboard.

  • There are two wire cables, a white and a black, one on either side of the phone.

  • Then the motherboard can pull up and away from the phone body.

  • Looking at the motherboard we can get a close-up view at the SIM and SD card tray, along with

  • the dual camera set upboth 12 megapixel.

  • Vivo doesn't advertise OIS so this little movement in the lens might just be the focusing

  • mechanism.

  • Moseying our way down to the bottom of the phone to look for that in-screen fingerprint

  • scanner, we find another 8 screws.

  • I'll keep these organized by setting them on the table next to me arranged in the same

  • shape they were while inside the phone.

  • The black plastic pops off revealing the loud speaker and protective plastics.

  • And then all we have left attached to the phone is the extension ribbon for the headphone

  • jack.

  • Then the headphone jack itself.

  • And finally, the last remaining ribbon.

  • Now, the screen is very permanently glued onto this metal frame, and by permanent, I

  • mean any attempt to remove the screen will end up breaking the display and the glass.

  • Luckily mine is already broken, so I don't have too much to worry about.

  • But it will all need to be removed in order for us to get a glimpse of how that fingerprint

  • scanner functions.

  • I've been warming up the phone with a heat gun, getting it barely too hot to touch.

  • This softens the adhesive under the screen, allowing my thin metal pry tool to slip in

  • between the glass and the plastic edge, cutting through the soft adhesive.

  • The display has the fragility of a potato chip underneath that glass, so this definitely

  • destroys the display.

  • And this is also why I only remove phone screens that are already completely broken when they're

  • glued in like this.

  • Once my pry tool has cleared all the adhesive around the edges, the whole thing can pull

  • up and away from the frame.

  • If I were to replace the screen right now, I would just clean up that frame and reuse

  • it with the new screen.

  • Finally, we get to see the backside of the display fingerprint scanner.

  • It's got a little latch style connector tying it into the screen ribbon cable.

  • I'll unlock that with my plastic pry tool and very carefully pull the fingerprint scanner

  • up and away from the back of the screen.

  • It's very lightly adhered to the slot that it's sitting in and it is pulling away with

  • some of the little bits of fragile AMOLED display attached to it.

  • You can see inside the slot, the screen has different layers.

  • The clear glass layer on the outside, and then that brownish display layer made up of

  • tiny LEDs that I compared to a fragile potato chip.

  • And then finally this little rectangular fingerprint scanner called the FS9500 made by a company

  • called Synaptics.

  • That little orange block in the center is the sensor that captures the image of your

  • fingerprint and turns it into an equation based off of the contrasting points of your

  • fingerprint ridges.

  • This sensor is designed to work pretty much covered and in close range, so it's not the

  • exact same as the colorful, normal camera sensor like the one we saw inside of the LG

  • V30 teardown.

  • Both of the cameras are designed for different tasks, but it's still interesting to see the

  • sensors side by side.

  • Thumbs up for that.

  • Let's take a closer look at the display panel since the fingerprint scanner essentially

  • takes a picture through the LEDs displaying the images you see with your eyes on the phone

  • display.

  • The shards are semi-translucent and you can see light through the rectangle where the

  • sensor used to be.

  • The only reason the rest of the display is as black as it is, is because of this black

  • layer of tape covering the AMOLED panel.

  • Without this black layer of tape, the rest of the panel becomes as translucent as the

  • little rectangle above the fingerprint scanner.

  • Confirmed by the translucentness underneath the tape that I peeled away.

  • Pretty fascinating stuff.

  • Like MKBHD said in his video, he really can put that fingerprint scanner anywhere and

  • make it as large as you want since it just works underneath the LED panel.

  • It will be interesting to see how the technology improves and progresses.

  • This is the first phone ever with an in-screen fingerprint scanner and I imagine we'll see

  • it more often in the future.

  • And I'll definitely be here to show it to you from the inside, so make sure you're subscribed.

  • Normally at this point I would put the phone back together, but I don't have the replacement

  • screen on hand yet, so it'll have to wait.

  • Come hang out with me on Instagram and Twitter, and let me know what other phones you want

  • to see the insides of.

  • Thanks a ton for watching, and I'll see you around.

Now the goal of this whole video is to open up the Vivo X20 Plus and see what that in-screen

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イングラス指紋リーダーTEARDOWN!- どうやって使うの? (In-Glass Fingerprint Reader TEARDOWN! - How does it work?!)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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