Broken iPhone screen repair

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airborne_r6

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Oct 28, 2008
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My wife dropped her phone last week and the screen shattered. She is one month away from an upgrade so she was just going to use it until she could upgrade, then pieces of glass started falling into her ear while she was talking.

One of her coworkers said an Apple repair place charges $150 to change the screen. She thought of looking online and found that you can buy the parts and there are videos showing how to do it.

I ended up buying a DIY kit from www.phonedoctors.com. The basic kit to change the screen was $67 or $77 for whatever color she wanted.

Repair kit and broken iPhone.jpg
The kit comes with everything you see in the picture except the busted phone. The screwmat is magnetic and shows the location of every screw and the orientation of any other little pieces you have to take out. They include all the tools you need. Everything on the left was in the replacement screen box. Because she wanted to change colors it included a new back plate and home button.

They have a really good video for each model of phone that walks you through how to make the repair you are doing. You also get I think it is 30 days of 24 hour customer support if you have questions.

Following the video and pausing it between steps it took me about 90 minutes to do the whole thing.
Repaired iPhone.jpg

A few things I learned.
1) I used a 2X magnifying visor and I wouldn't recommend trying it without one. (The best price I found on a quality one was Amazon, link below.)
2) I put a white sheet on the floor under where I was working. If you dropped one of these screws on carpet you would never find it.
3) There is a little rubber piece on the iPhone 4S that they don't mention and it fell off the circuit board. It took us forever to figure out where it went, so if you try this PM me and I will explain it, it is important.
4) The screwmat is invaluable. Their videos sound like a commercial for them but you really do need it. The screw are all sorts of different sizes and having the magnetic mat where I could take the screw out and put it in the circle where it came from really helped.
5) I used tweezers to help with the screws and some of the other parts.
6) The metal spatula that is intended to help separate the screen from the housing could have a slightly finer edge. I used a pocket knife to get it started then finished with their tool.
7) You really have to watch out for the little pieces of glass. I got one between the new screen and the desk while reassembling the phone and its a good thing I had left the screen protector on.
8) You have to move the speaker mesh from the old face to the new one. When I took it off the old one all the adhesive to hold it in place stayed on the old face so I used some double sided scrapbooking tape to hold it in place. If you try this PM me and I will give you details.

This saved me a ton of money, I had no idea that you can change the screens on phones yourself. The website I found had repair kits for most touch screen phones and devices.

In case someone is interested here are links:
Phone Doctors - iPhone, Android and Blackberry DIY Kits and Repair
Donegan OptiVISOR Headband Magnifier: Amazon.com: Industrial & Scientific
 
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I think I would have slapped a screen protector on the front and gone the month.

Good for you. I didn't have the courage to make that repair on mine. It was almost new at the time though.
 
I think I would have slapped a screen protector on the front and gone the month.

Good for you. I didn't have the courage to make that repair on mine. It was almost new at the time though.

I had put a brand new screen protector on the day before but because it sticks to the glass and the glass was falling out it was peeling off too.

nice job on fixing that phone. Maybe it will give me the courage to give it a try the next time my son has issues with his.

It was actually really easy. The videos are great and literally show screw by screw. It only takes so long because I went really slow. The only problems I could foresee encountering are either covered in the video or the additional ones I mentioned. A lot of the things we do pen turning are more difficult.
 
I've done it with the iphone 3gs, but luckily havn't had to do it with a newer one yet :)

It is definitely not that hard. But you do need to have good vision and/or magnification and pay close attention to the notes about wires/plugs. Some of them can be pretty fragile.
 
Best screen protector I've found: invisibleSHIELD | Cases, Screen Protectors, Covers, Shields, Skins, Invisible Shield

The funny part is you can find people on YouTube blasting them for "failing" when they hit it with a Crescent wrench 20+ times in a row... I don't know about others, but I tend not to beat my phone with a wrench over and over.

Actually just put one on the new screen last night. I used them a couple years ago and had difficulties with the sensitivity of the touch screen. I don't know if the touch screen is better or the invisibleSHIELD is better or a combination but my wife says she doesn't have any issues with the one I put on.

Do they have a kit when it goes swimming in the "porcelain god" DAMHIH (don't ask me how it happened!). :eek::biggrin:
gordon

LifeProof does: Amazon.com: LifeProof Case for iPhone 4/4S - Retail Packaging - Black: LIFEPROOF: Cell Phones & Accessories

My wife wanted one so she could listen to music while swimming laps. I talked her out of it. Kind of wish I hadn't, as I wouldn't have needed to replace the screen if she had dropped it in one of those.
 
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