I would be interested in seeing a labeled diagram of each section on the circuit board. i.e. a small description of each part - its purpose e.g. memory, processor. This would be very useful in fixing such items.
James Scobie — while we would like to label the various components visible in the devices we take apart, it would be rather time comsuming for us to do so. If you (or anyone else) happens to know which parts do what, we would love to hear about it in the forum.
We may be looking for a TIA team member to add some insightful electrical-engineering-type information to new articles. If you have such knowledge and are interested, send an email to chris[at]takeitapart[dot]net.
Dear sir
thanks first to u because thise side very important for technicians i’am a celluler technician please want more details mother board section please give how is search fault what is solution that please give this details
Dear sir ,
thanks first to u because thise side very important for technicians i’am a celluler technician please want more details mother board section please give how is search fault what is solution that please give this details .I live in india .
hmmmm.. what were you doing this for? any reason? just taking things apart? doing something with the components? because i have one of these and i don’t feel like exhibiting pointless destruction on it..
I would like to do something with it and it being destroyed in the process is fine with me
[...] parent. Teaching your kids to take things apart is (arguably) even more so. Of course you can find info on the web to read but nothing is better than getting your (and your kids’) hands [...]
@ vadj & susan
(even though this was like 2-3 years ago)
there’s nothing wrong with salvaging old phonesa and materials, or just seeing how things work… I’m currently trying to bulid a speaker out of an NES game cartridge, like the one on instructables. i have 2 old flip phone kyoceras… K4130…. can i get a guide on how to get this one apart?
I would be interested in seeing a labeled diagram of each section on the circuit board. i.e. a small description of each part - its purpose e.g. memory, processor. This would be very useful in fixing such items.
I would like to see a list of tools you used, and any ones you substituted. also, a brief discription of whot your doing would be cool.
Dear friend… I Appreciative your hard work. Realy great…. I need computer processor changing image… please update your site…
What sort of processor changing image are you looking for? A pentium 4 CPU change?
James Scobie — while we would like to label the various components visible in the devices we take apart, it would be rather time comsuming for us to do so. If you (or anyone else) happens to know which parts do what, we would love to hear about it in the forum.
We may be looking for a TIA team member to add some insightful electrical-engineering-type information to new articles. If you have such knowledge and are interested, send an email to chris[at]takeitapart[dot]net.
Dear sir
thanks first to u because thise side very important for technicians i’am a celluler technician please want more details mother board section please give how is search fault what is solution that please give this details
do you ever feel there is more to life than taking stuff apart?
No, taking stuff apart is the true meaning of life.
Dear sir ,
thanks first to u because thise side very important for technicians i’am a celluler technician please want more details mother board section please give how is search fault what is solution that please give this details .I live in india .
@Shaun Fletcher,
No. You get born, take stuff apart, you die, get to heaven to take even more stuff apart. That’s it!
I WOULD LIKE A LIST OF MATERALS
hmmmm.. what were you doing this for? any reason? just taking things apart? doing something with the components? because i have one of these and i don’t feel like exhibiting pointless destruction on it..
I would like to do something with it and it being destroyed in the process is fine with me
try and explin more on the pictures.
[...] parent. Teaching your kids to take things apart is (arguably) even more so. Of course you can find info on the web to read but nothing is better than getting your (and your kids’) hands [...]
@ vadj & susan
(even though this was like 2-3 years ago)
there’s nothing wrong with salvaging old phonesa and materials, or just seeing how things work… I’m currently trying to bulid a speaker out of an NES game cartridge, like the one on instructables. i have 2 old flip phone kyoceras… K4130…. can i get a guide on how to get this one apart?