Samsung Galaxy S10 Teardown Video Shows Off Thick Copper Pipe, Ultrasonic In-Display Fingerprint Scanner | Digital Web Review

Samsung Galaxy S10 Teardown Video Shows Off Thick Copper Pipe, Ultrasonic In-Display Fingerprint Scanner

If you’ve been wondering what hides inside the Samsung’s latest flagship the Samsung Galaxy S10, well, you’re in the right place. Yes. The Samsung Galaxy S10 teardown video has been published on the YouTuber Zack Nelson’s popular channel JerryRigEverything.

Samsung Galaxy S10 Teardown

A teardown of the Samsung Galaxy S10 performed by the Zack Nelson shows its internal components. And, the highlight is the Ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor used by the device.

As expected with most of the devices, the Samsung Galaxy S10 is disassembled from the back using a heat gun. Then he opened the device up with the help of a razor blade revealing the internals of the Galaxy S10.

As you know, a new feature on the Galaxy S10 called Wireless PowerShare that allows to wirelessly charge the other Qi-enabled phone just by laying it on the back of the S10 is visible inside. The wireless charging pad hasn’t changed too much and does not have any special hardware.

Also Read: – Samsung Galaxy S10 First Impressions: Killer Design, Great Performance, and Impressive Reverse Charging

Later, Zack Nelson removed the motherboard from the frame, a copper heat pipe is visible. The copper pipe is quite wide and is considerably thicker than the predecessor Galaxy S9. The heat pipe has copper strands inside it which help the liquid inside the heat pipe wick from one end to the other to transfer heat.

One of the main highlights of this teardown is the removing of the selfie camera. When the selfie camera is removed, we can see the punch-hole display. The ultra-sonic fingerprint scanner is visible once the display was separated from the frame. The ultrasonic fingerprint scanner is glued to the display and it cannot be separated for replacement. The area around the in-display ultrasonic fingerprint scanner is transparent and visible only when lights are on.

Feast your eyes on the teardown video of the Samsung Galaxy S10