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  • Here we have the baby blue-pearlescent-unicorn-sneeze colored P30 Pro.

  • Yeah, the outside looks cool, but have you seen the inside?

  • Today we're going to find out what the periscope 5x optical zoom camera hardware looks like,

  • and see how the P30 Pro operates from the inside.

  • Let's get started.

  • [Intro]

  • The Huawei P30 Pro is glued shut, probably with more glue than any other phone I've taken

  • apart recently.

  • That's good news for the water resistance, but bad news for repairs.

  • I'm using a glowing hot heat gun to warm up the back glass and soften the adhesive under

  • the panel.

  • Then I'll use a large suction cup, which I'll link in the description, to pull up on the

  • glass while simultaneously sliding my sharp razor through the gap next to the frame.

  • Some people use thin plastic tools for this which might be smart if you value your fingers.

  • Using my metal pry tool to keep the glass propped open so it won't re-adhere, I'll keep

  • the whole thing hot while gently slicing around the curved edges till the whole back panel

  • is loose.

  • Remember that the top glass is...glass, and the bottom layer worth about $1,000.

  • So one wrong move in either direction could be devastating.

  • No pressure.

  • Finally, with the adhesive cut, the back panel releases showing no hardware connected to

  • the back glass.

  • We can tell though that a clear phone would look pretty epic.

  • The quad camera array over on the left side looks impressive sitting above the wireless

  • and reverse wireless charging pad.

  • The lowest of the camera units, the square 8 megapixel periscope camera, is the one that

  • I'm most interested in.

  • It still has a protective covering over the square hole and the camera sensor itself lays

  • off at an angle inside the rectangle, literally just like a submarine periscope.

  • I'll take it all apart in just a second so we can see what's inside.

  • The top 20 megapixel wide angle camera does not have OIS, but the main 40 megapixel does

  • have the optical image stabilization.

  • Let's go deeper.

  • There are a total of 10 screws holding down the top plastics to the motherboard.

  • There are some hidden screws in the corners covered by more black plastic and adhesive.

  • Phones are getting pretty hard to fix these days.

  • There are also 7 screws down along the bottom plastics, with a few screws also hidden in

  • the corners.

  • Luckily, Where's Waldo was my jam as a kid, so I'm real good at finding stuff.

  • Finally the plastics can come loose, along with the wireless charging that's attached

  • to those plastics.

  • It can receive wireless power at 15 watts, and gives back wireless power to other electronics

  • at a fraction of that...usually less than 5 watts.

  • The connector for the battery is this little guy sandwiched between the two extension ribbon

  • cables.

  • I'll unsnap that like a little Lego.

  • Then unsnap the two extension ribbons.

  • And also the tan colored screen ribbon connector after that.

  • Since we've already removed the bottom screws, the plastic can be taken off and the battery

  • uncovered.

  • I assume that the numbers on the orange colored battery pull tabs are for the removal.

  • I'll grab number 3 and pull on it...and the whole battery comes out of the frame.

  • This massive lithium ion block is 4200 milliamp hours and rests inside the rather stunning

  • guts of the P30 Pro.

  • The P30 Pro is milled from a solid block of aluminum.

  • As you can see from the markings running diagonally from the battery cavity, after the phone's

  • shape is cut out of the block, it's silver aluminum is dipped into an anodizing bath

  • to give the frame color, before adding all the circuitry hardware and electronics.

  • Down here at the bottom we have our SIM card slot.

  • I'll remove that little guy, and the charging port can come out.

  • This time around we have an orange ring around the USB-C port tip.

  • Pretty nifty.

  • I can unplug the under screen fingerprint scanner and the loudspeaker Lego style ribbon

  • connector and detach the two wire connectors that run alongside.

  • The tiny circuit board has this little slot for the SIM and proprietary nano memory card

  • slot.

  • Then the loud speaker can come out.

  • As far as water proofing goes on the Huawei P30 Pro, we have the standard water resistant

  • mesh over the loud speaker holes, and a circular white water damage indicator next to the SIM

  • card tray.

  • And we also have impermeable white stickers over the microphone holes.

  • One question I get a lot is, 'Hey Jerry, I accidentally stuck my ejector tool in the

  • wrong hole.

  • Did I damage anything?'

  • The answer is no.

  • Pretty much every phone is built the same way.

  • The microphone hole fits the ejector tool purely by coincidence, but the white impermeable

  • layer is off to the side of the shaft and not directly at the end.

  • So no matter how deep you go, the tool won't puncture any of the water resistance or poke

  • the microphone hardware.

  • It's just good practice to get it right the first time.

  • The under screen fingerprint scanner has it's own baby extension ribbon...kind of weird.

  • Then the optical fingerprint scanner can pull away from its little cavity in the frame revealing

  • a hole in the screen that it takes pictures of your fingerprint through.

  • What you're seeing here is the actual underside of the pixels in the display.

  • While the screen is turned on, the pixels light up illuminating your fingerprint ridges.

  • Then the sensor takes a picture to match it with the data stored in the phone and then

  • unlocks the phone if it's a correct match.

  • Pretty cool tech.

  • Let's check out the motherboard and it's 5 cameras.

  • There are 6 total cameras in the phone if you count the optical fingerprint scanner.

  • With the motherboard out of the frame, we immediately see two circular vibrators and

  • a lot of thermal paste over the top of a rectangular copper inlay.

  • It's not a heat pipe, but it's still better at absorbing hot temperatures than bare aluminum.

  • The dual vibrator set up is strange, but let's check it out.

  • The larger of the vibrators here in the center is actually the earpiece that Huawei calls

  • electromagnetic sound levitation.

  • This little guy projects sound through the screen.

  • Then the little guy over here on the right handles all the notification vibrations.

  • There is an infrared LED built right into the motherboard that shines through the black

  • circle on top of the phone.

  • This controls TVs and other remote controlled tech.

  • This phone has quite a lot of features, and we're finally getting to the good stuff....the

  • cameras.

  • The front camera on the P30 Pro is a 32 megapixel beast with no optical stabilization.

  • Out of the 4 rear cameras, 3 of them are stuck together in the same L-shaped metal housing.

  • I'll unplug the 3 ribbons and then pull the block out of the motherboard.

  • The coolest camera though is the bottom 8 megapixel periscope camera.

  • The reason it's called a periscope camera is because the image sensor is off at an angle,

  • perpendicular instead of parallel to the back of the phone.

  • I'll show you what I mean.

  • The periscope hardware is comprised of 3 different sections all locked in tight with a full metal

  • surround shell.

  • You know me thoughmy razor will get into anything.

  • Each side of the metal surround can snap off with a bit of force.

  • This kills the camera but autopsies must be performed in the name of science.

  • After the final metal side is popped off, I can turn my attention back to the end of

  • the camera unit which is where the sensor itself resides...kind of like the camera body

  • of a professional DSLR, since it is the component that captures all the image data and sends

  • it to the phone.

  • The rest of the block is the lens or glass, as photographers like to call it, this is

  • the part that magnifies the object and brings it 5 times closer than normal - the actual

  • telephoto lens.

  • The third and last of the segments is the angled mirror that allows the whole thing

  • to lay flat inside the phone instead of sticking out like 2 or 3 centimeters, which would look

  • pretty funny.

  • Pretty awesome technology.

  • I can definitely see cool things happening with this style of camera hardware in the

  • future.

  • If you think about it, this 5x zoom lens is taking up maybe 30 or 40% of the lengthwise

  • space inside the phone.

  • By laying even more camera hardware flat inside the body, we could definitely see 10 or 15

  • times optical zoom with the right magnification and mirror combination.

  • Congrats to Huawei for pioneering this idea.

  • People are going to go pretty nuts when Apple comes up with it in a few years.

  • I'll get the charging port back into it's slot in the frame, and drop the bottom plastics

  • back on top again, then scooch the battery back into it's position inside the phone.

  • The rear plastics, wireless charging, and 17 screws hold everything in place.

  • And then I'll set the colorful rear glass panel back onto the P30 Pro.

  • Even without my periscope camera installed, the phone still should turn on.

  • And there we have it – a fully torn down and reassembled Huawei P30 Pro.

  • One of the coolest phones we've been inside of so far this year.

  • I might make fun of the color a little bit, but I think it's growing on me.

  • Hit the subscribe button if you haven't already.

  • I have some fun videos on the way.

  • And come hang out with me on Instagram and Twitter.

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

Here we have the baby blue-pearlescent-unicorn-sneeze colored P30 Pro.

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華為P30 Pro拆解!- 潛望鏡相機」怎麼用? (Huawei P30 Pro Teardown! - How does a 'Periscope Camera' work?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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