Introduzione
Segui questa guida per sostituire la batteria del tuo iPod Shuffle. Sostituire la batteria richiede un saldatore con punta sottile e qualche esperienza con la saldatura di componenti sulle schede logiche.
Cosa ti serve
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Prima di iniziare, assicurati che il tuo iPod sia spento come mostrato.
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Usa il bordo di uno strumento di apertura per iPod per fare leva sulla copertura in plastica sul lato della presa jack dell'iPod Shuffle.
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Rimuovi la copertura in plastica e mettila da parte.
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Usa il bordo di uno strumento di apertura per iPod per rimuovere la copertura in plastica dal lato dei controlli dell'iPod Shuffle.
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Rimuovi la copertura in plastica e mettila da parte.
The On-Off switch here is turn around. Usually it is green when the iPod is turned on.
The plastic cover has small clips at either edge in the middle and alongside the button. Put the iPod opening tool in about a third of the way in from either end to avoid breaking the clips.
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Usa un paio di pinzette per rimuovere l'interruttore Hold e Shuffle dall'iPod Shuffle.
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Usa il bordo di uno strumento di apertura per iPod per separare l'adesivo sotto la batteria che la fissa alla scheda madre.
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Ruota la batteria verso l'alto per svelare i suoi contatti saldati alla scheda madre.
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Dissalda la batteria dalla scheda madre scaldando un contatto alla volta con un saldatore e, al contempo, usando un paio di pinzette per tirare via il cavo della batteria dalla scheda madre.
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Se non hai mai saldato prima, abbiamo una guida per aiutarti nella procedura.
If after leaving the charger plugged into a known good power source overnight and the green indicator light on the shuffle is not lit, there’s a pretty good chance the battery is dead.
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Per rimontare il tuo dispositivo, segui le istruzioni in ordine inverso.
Per rimontare il tuo dispositivo, segui le istruzioni in ordine inverso.
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20 Commenti
Followed your clear instructions and made a successful battery change. It would be helpful to explain that both cover plates are held ond by double sided sticky tape and to give caution on the location of the miniclips on the control cover - I cut through 2 of them by mistake. Thanks for the help.
Regards, Frank, North yorkshire, UK
I rarely find instructions so detailed and foolproof. I ended up with a "new" iPod saving a bunch of money.
Read on about the incidents I encountered.
The working end of the plastic pry tool snapped off rendering it useless, but not before it irreparably bent the pink housing. The suggested screwdriver for which I paid extra did not undo the tiny screws, and I eventually tapped them out with a miniscule eyeglass-repair screwdriver. (Is it a coincidence I did not see a screwdriver in any of the photos?)
Ditto on the suggestion that the super-sticky adhesive presents itself as an obstacle. A suggestion to apply pressure slowly as the adhesive releases would have been helpful.
I loved that the instructions were really easy to follow. It would be helpful to mention that the logic board ought to be really carefully pushed out. It was difficult in my case and I had to apply a considerable amount of force to slowly push it out.
Despite taking care to control my strength and push it out, part of the protective yellow tape got torn and one of the components was dislodged and broken. It must've been pretty important cuz unfortunately my iPod didn't work after I put it together in one piece. I'm sure the fault lies in my carelessness, the instructions were great. I hope you guys have better luck with yours (:
just to add what Frank said: the white plastic control cover has 6 tiny clips; two either side of the sliding switches and two in the middle. I found that gently levering the cover up by inserting the tip of an Xacto blade through the holes the sliders ride in avoids damaging the clips. Be careful not to turn the iPod on when you do this or scratch the green paint next to the on/off slider.
Does anyone have what the best approach to removing the resin from the solder points?
We followed the instructions, it worked!!
I scraped the epoxy off of the solder points with the end of the #00 screwdriver (using it like a file).
My FIL did the soldering, with a big blunt tip, he's amazing.
Thank you!!
Really.. I am thankful to you (Andrew Bookholt), Also it would be more helpful if you mention the link where the original battery will be available.
I have had success by soaking each end in 99% isopropyl alcohol for a few hours to let it break down the adhesive. That way you won’t break tabs on the switch side.
Also, to remove the resin - you can melt it off with the soldering iron instead of using a metal implement to scrape it off.
Thank you! Seems to have worked OK - charging the new battery now…. - I’ll see if it plays when it’s charged up I used alcohol to ease the sticky tape, as advised by another person on here…. VERY fiddly and I should have used a much smaller soldering iron tip - maybe a thin nail or something. Need good eyesight!.
Hi, change ipod battery’s is very hard but these instructions are very helpful.
Most harder is desoldering battery because the space between + and - is very little.
thanks a lot
A French guy
This stops at taking the battery out. Is there nothing about putting a new battery in, and the process of reassembly (and what may be required, e.g. more soldering, epoxy, etc.)?
I was wondering this too. Plan on trying this out once I have all the parts and tools. 🤞
Excellent tutorial!!!