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  • This dual screen Nubia Z20 is low-key one of my favorite phones of the year. At $550,

  • it's half the cost of a normal flagship, yet has triple cameras and screens on both sides

  • that can mirror each other. Or act as dual monitors. And now it's time to see how it

  • all works from the inside. This video is sponsored by Skillshare.

  • Let's get started.

  • [Intro]

  • When both screens are off, the Nubia Z20 looks pretty much just like any other smartphone,

  • so getting inside it should be interesting. There never are any instruction books for

  • tear downs like this, so we'll take an educated guess and start from the backside with the

  • smaller secondary screen. Heating everything up till it's barely too hot to touch and then

  • lifting up with my large suction cup while simultaneously slicing through the adhesive

  • under the glass and continuing this process all the way around the edge of the phone.

  • Finally, with all the adhesive cut, the back screen can fold open from the phone like a

  • book, revealing a long display ribbon that crosses the length of the phone and plugs

  • into the motherboard. It's probably a bad idea to turn the phone on at this point, but

  • we're going to go ahead and do it anyway. Normally you can swap between the screens

  • by physically flipping the phone around, but you can also manually trigger the screen swap

  • with an on-screen button. And since the screens are currently side-by-side, that's what we're

  • going to be using right now. I can have one app open on the front, and a different app

  • open on the back. It's a pretty ingenious little system that Nubia is implementing and

  • I'm a huge fan.

  • You can see the camera lens scoping out the underside of the rear panel. Having the patient

  • awake during surgery is kind of fun. Looks like you don't need the rear panel to take

  • selfies. Anyway, let's go back to the teardown. There is a long black underscreen shield between

  • the back of the AMOLED screen and the battery. But there is no way to unplug that battery

  • just yet. There is a small metal bracket over the rear display connector. I'll unscrew that

  • little screw holding it in place and then unsnap the screen connector from the phone

  • like a little Lego. This is the AMOLED screen. The only way to get a display this this is

  • by using an OLED panel where each individual pixel lights itself. An LCD screen which has

  • a back light would be a bit thicker than this and take up more space inside of the phone.

  • OLED is pretty cool technology. The same construction is also why OLED TVs are much thinner than

  • LCD TVs.

  • I can remove the 8 Phillips head screws holding down the top metal and plastic shield of the

  • phone. Pulling it away from the body, we see that it comes attached to the triple LED camera

  • flash. Two colors on the left and a single color on the rightboth of which plug

  • into the motherboard with the same Lego-style connector. I'll unplug the battery first and

  • make my way around to the other ribbon connectors, unclipping the screen and bottom extension

  • ribbons, along with the smaller screen switching side button ribbons.

  • Down at the bottom of the phone we have another 8 screws holding down the lower plastics and

  • loudspeaker. Pulling it away reveals that the loudspeaker has no balls inside, but it

  • does have the gold contact pads that allow it to communicate with the charging port board.

  • There is no water resistance inside this phone. I'll unclip the charging port, unscrew one

  • more screw down here, and then I can pull the coin-style vibrator motor and USB-C charging

  • port out of the phone at the same time. The two are soldered together. The phone looks

  • new and modern on the outside, but they are using some older-style build methods on the

  • inside.

  • Removing the last few small ribbons from the top of the motherboard. I also go to remove

  • the black signal wire and it accidentally pops the head completely off of the motherboard.

  • That super cheap price point is starting to show itself a little inside of the phone with

  • that soldered vibrator motor and weak signal wire connections. I'll pull the SIM card tray

  • out. It's got room for two SIM cards but no memory card expansion slot, which for me is

  • pretty important, especially as the phone gets older.

  • There is one more screw at the top of the motherboard, and then I can lift the whole

  • motherboard away from the Nubia Z20 housing. It comes off with a triple camera setup still

  • attached and leaves behind a gigantic blob of pink Double Bubble-style thermal paste

  • underneath. The Z20 is using the metal frame of the phone as a heat dissipation system.

  • The triple camera setup is all mounted together in their own metal housing and each camera

  • has it's own Lego-style connector attached to the motherboard. The main 48 megapixel

  • camera is on the left, which does have the optical image stabilization. And then we have

  • the 16 megapixel ultra wide camera in the center and the 8 megapixel 3x telephoto zoom

  • lens on the right side. Neither of the 2 secondary cameras have OIS.

  • I'll plug the cameras back into the motherboard. I'm a huge fan of more phones coming out with

  • this triple camera setup. Now for the battery. It is a few pennies cheaper to make the battery

  • permanent and that's what Nubia has done with the Z20. This makes battery removal super

  • dangerous. Bent batteries can tear and explode and start on fire, which isn't my favorite

  • thing on the inside of a phone. Plus there are a few fragile ribbons underneath the battery

  • that should be more protected. Eventually the battery does come out, but now that it's

  • been bent, the internal layers have probably touched and it'll just slowly start expanding

  • over the next few months, causing the phone to die a slow and painful death. So the best

  • thing to do for the phone and the planet is just for Nubia to use removable adhesive next

  • time, even if it does cost a few pennies more.

  • The 4000 milliamp hour battery can fast charge at 27 watts. The 1080p larger front screen

  • is glued into the metal housing and is using that same super thin AMOLED technology to

  • utilize the least amount of space inside of the phone. It's pretty amazing how thing these

  • things can get. The display is just as thin as the piece of glass that's on the outside

  • protecting it. The smaller rear display is 720p.

  • I'll put the battery back in and start putting this little guy back together. The goal is

  • to have a working phone when I'm finished. I do feel like Nubia did cut some costs in

  • a few areas with that weaker antenna connector, permanent battery, and a soldered vibrator.

  • It's got the outside looking like a prime Olympic athlete, but the inside's looking

  • more like a fast food eating couch potato. It all comes together to make a decent phone

  • though, and still just proves that you don't need to spend $1000 for a flagship when a

  • $550 phone can still get the job done just fine, even if the insides aren't as fine-tuned

  • and glamorous as the outsides.

  • I'll get the rear screen plugged in with a metal bracket in place. And then the whole

  • thing folds shut into a functional device again. I'm a fan. It's still definitely one

  • of my favorite phones of the year. I like it when companies innovate and try new things.

  • The dual screen Nubia Z20 gets a thumbs up from me.

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  • The free trial link is down in the description, and huge thanks to Skillshare for sponsoring

  • this video.

  • It was a lot of fun taking apart the Nubia Z20. If you enjoyed this video, hit the subscribe

  • button. Come hang out with me on Instagram and Twitter. And thanks a ton for watching.

  • I'll see you around.

This dual screen Nubia Z20 is low-key one of my favorite phones of the year. At $550,

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背靠2塊螢幕?- 努比亞Z20拆解! (Back 2 Back Screens? - Nubia Z20 Teardown!)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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