Changes to Step #12
Edit by Jeff Suovanen —
Edit approved by Jeff Suovanen
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Step Lines
- | [* black] The glued |
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- | [* black] |
- | [* red] [link|https://osch.oss-cn-shanghai.aliyuncs.com/blogContentFile/1571714102322.pdf%7C|TPS SY8801 smart charge power and communication chip |
+ | [* black] The glued-in charging coil separates easily from the housing, but remains soldered to the bottom board of the charging case. |
+ | [* black] The bottom board holds onto the soldered USB-C charging port, the pairing button, and some more chips: |
+ | [* red] [link|https://osch.oss-cn-shanghai.aliyuncs.com/blogContentFile/1571714102322.pdf%7C|TPS SY8801|new_window=true] smart charge power and communication chip |
[* orange] 1680 2112 2005 | |
- | [* yellow] [link|https://docplayer.net/186394973-Cx32l003-arm-cortex-m0-32-bit-microcontroller-datasheet.html%7C|L003F8|new_window=true] PP98498— |
- | [* black] We have to say |
+ | [* yellow] [link|https://docplayer.net/186394973-Cx32l003-arm-cortex-m0-32-bit-microcontroller-datasheet.html%7C|L003F8|new_window=true] PP98498—possibly an ARM Cortex 32-bit microcontroller |
+ | [* black] We have to say, there definitely seems to be room for more modularity in these products—at least within the charging case. Dear Nothing, since you're already showing off those tech-tastic internals, why not make it repair-friendly as well? |
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