Introducción
Reemplazar la batería requiere un soldador de punta fina.
Herramientas
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Usa una combinación de herramientas de apertura para iPod y spudgers metálicos para separar el panel posterior del Shuffle por la costura más cercana al interruptor de ENCENDIDO / APAGADO.
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Usa el borde de la herramienta de apertura de un iPod para levantar la solapa de retención del zócalo ZIF del cable del botón de control.
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Usa un par de pinzas para sacar suavemente el cable plano del botón de control de su zócalo.
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Usa una herramienta de apertura de iPod para extraer suavemente la batería del adhesivo que la sujeta a la caja frontal.
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Saca la batería de la caja frontal, asegurándote de no forzar sus cables delicados.
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Inserta la punta de una sonda de metal en el orificio moldeado en el retenedor de la placa lógica más cercano a la placa lógica.
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Separa el retenedor de la parte frontal de la caja frontal, luego tira de él desde el lado de la caja frontal.
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Retira el retenedor de la placa lógica del Shuffle.
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Usa el borde de la herramienta de apertura de un iPod para empujar el conector de los auriculares hacia el centro del Shuffle.
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Continúa empujando la placa lógica hacia abajo desde el borde superior del Shuffle.
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Saca la placa lógica de la caja frontal por el lado más cercano al botón de ENCENDIDO / APAGADO y mueve suavemente el conector para auriculares fuera de su hueco en la caja frontal.
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Retira el conjunto de la placa lógica del Shuffle.
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Usa la punta de una sonda metálica afilada para raspar el pegamento que cubre los terminales de la batería cerca del zócalo ZIF del botón de control.
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Usa un soldador de punta fina para calentar las conexiones de la batería en una caja de color rojo a la vez mientras tira del cable correspondiente del otro lado de la placa lógica.
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Para volver a ensamblar tu dispositivo, sigue estas instrucciones en orden inverso.
19 comentarios
I have a question. Why can't the leads to the old battery be cut without pulling the board, then just solder new battery leads to the old. Seems it might even be possible to add snap in connectors at this point to facilitate future changes.
FOF -
i have the same q.
imhockey -
Sure that’s a good plan also. Just make sure not to short the wires in any way and detach the negative wire first on disconnect & negative last on connecting again.
For a connector you’ll really need a very small connection then cause the space is very limited inside.
Ha ns -
I'm gonna try to remove the back cover with minimal prying to reduce cosmetic defects. The plan is to somehow remove the spring loaded clip by pushing out the lever pin, then drilling holes along the edge of the over wherre the 3 little hooks are (In this image, where the right thumb is touching. https://d3nevzfk7ii3be.cloudfront.net/ig...).
It would be great if someone could provide a closer look at where exactly the hooks are so I can position my 1.5mm drill bit better. Also, if you can to figure out how to remove the spring loaded clip mechanism without going through the 4 screws, that'd be awesome! I suspect the pin is held in place by just adhesive, but don't want to risk pushing too hard and causing defects. :(
Check my comment in the article on that specific step. You don’t have to drill out anything. You can use the clip on the shuffle itself to slightly force the back plate to bend giving enough room for the clips to snap off.
Ha ns -
I can't seem to find a replacement battery to purchase. Do they still sell them and can you provide a link? Thanks!
Me too! Where do we get the batteries?
you can use any same style/type 3.7v li-ion battery, but main thing is the battery must fit in without any injury :)
martin -
@martin Are you sure about this? I was thinking of doing that and again thought if there's any difference battery protection circuitries and cause issues.
I have the same issue sourcing batteries. You can find some on eBay but so pricey you can often get another used shuffle. And other sources for lipo batteries are often offering 150 mAh as the smallest capacity which is still way too big (original is 50 mAh).
Also I noticed the original has a protective circuitry built in. So just any lipo won’t do unless you transplant that very small board. Normally lipo’s rely on their chargers to be balanced and protected, hence having balancing leads (for multi cell configurations).
I though I had a good idea to buy this very cheap mp3 player (for < 3 EUR) and extract the battery from it but even that battery is way too big. I’ll keep looking in that direction though. Other electronics with very small batteries. https://www.benl.ebay.be/itm/Mp3-Player-...
https://i.ibb.co/BTQZFGK/mp3-player-lipo...
Ha ns -