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  • This teardown is sponsored by NordVPN.

  • Watch till the end to get a 75% discount and a free month.

  • The Mi Mix 3 is a unique slider phone with the physically hidden front facing cameras.

  • One thing I did notice while charging the phone up for this video was that the cable

  • in the box is specifically designed and formed for this phone, allowing the screen to slide

  • while charging.

  • But, while using a third party cable, the screen is stuck in the closed position.

  • Kind of interesting.

  • It's time to take apart the Mi Mix 3 and see what kind of magic is holding the whole contraption

  • together.

  • Let's get started.

  • [Intro]

  • Since the Mi Mix 3 isn't water resistant, we can always hope it won't be glued shut

  • quite as tight as some of the other water tight phones.

  • A little bit of heat gets the phone hot enough to soften the adhesive between the glass and

  • the frame of the phone.

  • I can use my suction cup to pull up on the glass slab and slide my razor, or metal pry

  • tool, underneath to slice away the adhesive holding the two portions together.

  • It kind of makes you miss the good old days when all you needed was a screw driver...but,

  • it is what it is.

  • The back glass panel does pull away easy enough.

  • I'm taking special care not to put any stress on the fragile ribbon cable connecting the

  • fingerprint scanner to the board.

  • I'll reach my plastic pry tool in there and unsnap it like a little Lego.

  • Then the back glass can fold away from the phone.

  • It kind of looks cool inside with the black plastic and gold antennas.

  • The wireless charging coil is still connected to the rear glass and covered with black plastic

  • on both sides.

  • So it's not quite as aesthetic as Google's copper colored coils on the Pixel 3.

  • And we also have what's probably the NFC pad up here at the top, attached to the back glass.

  • Xiaomi does have not one, but two, warranty void stickers...which means we better stop

  • the teardown.

  • Just kidding.

  • With 9 normal Phillips head screws holding down the top protective plastics, we can finally

  • unplug the battery and make our way down to the magical pull tabs poking up from the bottom.

  • I'll get to show you exactly how the magic happens with these pull tabs because one did

  • end up breaking.

  • They are unfortunately silent, but do their job for the most part, hypothetically allowing

  • the battery to release without putting any stress on the pouch itself.

  • If the fragile pull tab doesn't break during the pull, of course.

  • Now that the battery is out, you can see how the adhesive reacts when tension is applied

  • to the white strip.

  • It loses it's stickiness and pulls out from underneath the battery easily, while leaving

  • no reside behind.

  • The longer the battery has been installed though, the more brutal these become, and

  • the easier they break.

  • But still, pull tabs are better than the permanent adhesive alternative.

  • Inside the Mi Mix 3 is a 3200 milliamp hour battery.

  • After the battery's removed, we get our first glimpse of how the sliding mechanism works.

  • Two rather large rectangular magnets.

  • You can see how it pulls the metal screw into the center with it's magnetismic force.

  • I don't really know how magnets work.

  • The screen ribbon flexes with the motion of the slide, kind of like what we saw with the

  • Vivo Nex S's motorized camera from last year.

  • We got to go deeper though.

  • So the 7 Philips screws surrounding the bottom plastic plate are next.

  • The plastics that pull away include the...

  • [drop]

  • ...include the loud speaker with the two square golden

  • contact pads.

  • These allow for communication with the motherboard.

  • I still think the black and gold accents are kind of fun.

  • I'll remove the one silver screw from the charging port board, and unplug the white

  • wire cable.

  • Then unclip the bottom extension ribbon.

  • This allows the small board to fall out of the phone frame.

  • It's got the standard USB-C port, along with the microphone, but no headphone jack.

  • Those are getting more and more rare these days.

  • All that's left in the bottom part is the cute little coin-style vibrator motor, but

  • we'll leave that in place for now.

  • The motherboard up top is where some cool stuff is happening.

  • Basically all the connectors have this copper grounding tape over the top.

  • I imagine that with the sliding motion of the phone, the internals are constantly feeling

  • sharp jolts and the screen jerks up and down.

  • So the tape probably helps keep the ribbon intact and plugged in.

  • Each of the 4 camera connections are unclipped, and there are 3 little silver Phillips head

  • screws holding down the motherboard.

  • The 2 front facing cameras come away next – a 24 megapixel and a 2 megapixel sensor

  • that allow for the blurry background portrait mode thing.

  • Both housed in the same metal housing.

  • The dual SIM card tray comes out next.

  • This would probably also make a good step number 1 if you like doing things in order.

  • Finally I'll unclip the screen ribbon surrounded by red rubber, which I assume helps support

  • the cable as it constantly flexes and moves with the sliding motion of the phone.

  • Xiaomi has said that they've tested the sliding motion over 300,000 times with no ill effects

  • on the hardware.

  • And it does look like they have taken extra precautions from the inside, which is nice.

  • Gray dollops of thermal pates on the back of the motherboard transfer heat to the metal

  • frame of the phone.

  • There is also a white hexagon shaped water damage indicator sticker next to the SIM card

  • tray.

  • This will turn pink if the phone ever gets wet.

  • And now the rear facing camerasboth with different functions.

  • The normal 12 megapixel sensor does have optical image stabilization, but the 12 megapixel

  • telephoto camera does not.

  • Both are mounted in the same metal housing.

  • We didn't come all this way to stop here though.

  • That sliding motion still needs to be explained.

  • Underneath the long black extension ribbon, we reveal a third set of yellow tape covered

  • screws, which I'm pretty sure all attach the screen into the body.

  • I'll peel away each of the 3 yellow tape strips and unscrew the 8 super flat Philips head

  • screws, similar to the same sidewall screws we saw back in the iPhone 4.

  • The Mi Mix 3 has 28 screws inside, so I'm definitely keeping them all organized off

  • to the side, so I can hopefully put the phone all back together again when I'm done.

  • After the last 2 top screws are removed, I can very gently slide the screen ribbon out

  • through the hole in the phone housing.

  • And we've successfully removed both halves of the phone.

  • The design of this thing is so simple, it's brilliant.

  • A little trick I saw on Marquez's channel was this magnet paper that shows us where

  • magnets are hidden inside of electronics.

  • Two large rectangular magnets in the main body of the phone, and down here we can also

  • see it's picking up the little tiny magnet inside of the vibrator motor.

  • Then over here on the screen half of the slider, we have another 2 main magnets.

  • The silver sliding rack itself on the screen side is completely free floatingno springs

  • or resistance.

  • It slides up hitting the large rectangle, and then slides back down and locks out with

  • the little silver tabs bent up, hitting the ends of the plastic rails.

  • These blocks keep it from extending too high up and too far down.

  • Obviously the thin AMOLED screen is glued into the other side of this thin piece of

  • plastic, and it is replaceable with enough heat.

  • The little gold screen ribbon just pokes through the hole in the back of the plastic.

  • Now you might be thinking to yourself, 'Hey Jerry, don't magnets spend all their time

  • attracting each other?

  • How does the slider stay open if the magnets are the only thing inside of there?'

  • Well, I'm glad you asked.

  • As you can see, when the slider is in the closed position, the magnets line up directly

  • over top of each other with a large amount of attaching force.

  • But when I slide up, the magnets move from the initial attracting magnetic field, into

  • a position where the magnets are actually repelling each other and pushing away from

  • each other, holding the screen in the upward, extended position.

  • This is pretty brilliant because there are no motors, springs or crazy complicated hardware

  • to get jammed or misalignedjust simple magnetic fields.

  • Let me show you.

  • I have two super strong magnets here.

  • Strong enough that they want to attract through my finger.

  • I'll put them on either side of my metal pry tool.

  • The north end of one magnet is currently very strongly attracted to the south end of the

  • other magnet.

  • But let's say I move the 2 magnets so that they're next to each other.

  • They start to repelpushing away.

  • Just like the position of the magnets in the phone when the slider is open.

  • But when the slider is closed, the magnets line back up again and attract each other

  • into the down position, keeping the slider tightly closed.

  • The fun sliding effect you feel with the Mi Mix 3 is that feeling of magnets passing from

  • one attracting magnetic field into the repelling magnetic field.

  • It's pretty smart of Xiaomi.

  • I mean, so far, this is the only phone I've taken apart in 2019, but with this kind of

  • ingenuity, we're off to a good start.

  • I'm definitely going to need y'all to collectively cross your fingers now, in hopes I can put

  • all 28 screws back into place with everything still working.

  • I'll make sure the yellow tape is back on top so the screws won't jiggle loose with

  • the jarring motions of the slide.

  • The motherboard can set back into place with it's red rubber protecting the screen ribbon

  • cable.

  • And all 4 of the camera units get plugged back in with the 3 silver motherboard screws

  • holding everything down.

  • Then I'll set the charging port down into the frame next to the small vibrator.

  • The rest of the install is super straightforward, with the super long extension ribbon cable

  • running under the battery, which also then gets set into place.

  • And then the camera lenses and all the plastics get screwed down with all those screws I kept

  • organized earlier.

  • The last step is the fingerprint scanner ribbon, and the back glass panel getting set back

  • onto the phone.

  • And lucky for us, the whole thing does still turn on, and slides up and down just like

  • it did out of the box.

  • This is partially due to the pure simplicity of the design and also because you had your

  • fingers crossed the whole time.

  • Thank you.

  • I agree with Xiaomi that the sliding mechanism is indeed secure.

  • And with no moving mechanical parts, it's probably going to last for a very long time.

  • Speaking of secure things, huge thanks to NordVPN for sponsoring this video and making

  • the teardown possible.

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  • Would you ever use a slider phone, or would you rather everything be in one solid piece?

  • Let me know in the comments.

  • Come hang out over on Twitter and Instagram.

  • And thanks a ton for watching.

  • I'll see you around.

This teardown is sponsored by NordVPN.

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