Sorry, I didn't take many photos, but I've removed the screen, and it's so screwed. From a manufacturing perspective I can't think of a worse way to design a device such that:
- repairability is as costly as possible due to having to break things in the process of the repair.
- as environmentally UN-friendly as possible because there is no way to re-use perfectly fine components nor can you separate out parts for recycling
There is a strip of very strong adhesive around the perimeter of the chassis (see pics). One side of the adhesive is attached to the aluminum chassis and the other side is attached to the *1mm thin* glass of the screen.
So the glass is guaranteed to break as you're removing it from the chassis, and what's worse is the glass is permanently glued to the LCD and digitizer (pics), so you have to throw out a perfectly usable 1080p IPS LCD screen with awesome colors and viewing angles because you can't remove the broken glass layer that's glued to it. The glue literally covers the entire surface area of the screen. It would be nice to use it for something else like a secondary external display or something, but you can't due to the glass permanently adhered to it.
And even if you managed to remove all the glass from the LCD, there's going to be glue residue EVERYWHERE on the screen. From an IFixIt thread:
"The problem is that to seperate the LCD screen from the digitizer you should really use a heated vacuum machine or you will have to break the old glass and remove it piece by piece to avoid prying on the screen. Then you have to clean all the glue off of the old screen perfectly, which requires caustic chemical solvents like N-Hexane. Then apply the correct clear adhesive called LOCA, which requires UV lights to cure. Then finally reglue the screen to the new digitizer, which you should use a specially designed mold to line up the screen perfectly and a vacuum press or laminate machine so you don't end up with very visible bubbles and/or debris particles in between the two. TL;DR, a DIYer is NOT equipped to do this properly."
This glue along the edge is so completely unnecessary from a design perspective. There are *plenty* of empty spots between the interior components to install standoffs so you can have it all secured together using screws without making the device any thicker. In fact, the amount of empty space inside is kind of mind-boggling.
And the batteries are glued in as well with super-secure adhesive.
Just.... GUHHHHH
Black double sided tape around the perimeter:
Tape along the 1mm thin glass skirt:
Glue adhering the glass to the LCD, which is otherwise fine.
Glue leaves a thick residue everywhere on the LCD screen.
LCD is perfectly fine.