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Psion 5 Teardown
Teardown
Teardowns provide a look inside a device and should not be used as disassembly instructions.
User-Contributed Guide
This guide is not managed by iFixit staff.
Here's a Psion Series 5 for disassembly. It's manufactured in 1997 and made in the UK. It was very popular for business men because of the stable OS, named EPOC. (Now known as Symbian OS) It's powered by two AA batteries. It has a 640x240 pixel greyscale LCD with a backlight. The keyboard is generally considered to be amongst the best for its size, with large-travel keys and touch-type capability. The most common problem was a design fault in the screen and keyboard cable. By opening and closing, the cables get stressed and lead to vertical lines on the screen.
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Edit Step 3 ¶
Open it from the back to the front.
Don't forget to remove the plastic on the back.
Now let's see what we found:
EPOC with the OS stored in ROM. It's removable for the different languages & countries.(Chip with the green stick on it.) The other one is the 4MB RAM.
ARM 710 RISC-processor with 18.43MHz.
The touchscreen controller.

Edit Step 5 ¶
Now, slide up the Psion.
Carefully remove the mainboard and diconnect the two ribbon cables. (That's the faulty design I mentioned in the description.)
Let's see the other side of the mainboard:
4x 2MB of RAM.
Connectors for the two ribbon cables. The blu one's the keyboard and the brown one's screen and touchscreen cable.
Compactflash card connector.
Connector for PC synchronistation,Printer and internet.
Again, the front of the mainboard.
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