はじめに
Motorola Moto G7 は3000 mAhリチウムイオンバッテリーを搭載しています。一年以上このデバイスを使用しているユーザーは、このデバイスは早い速度で充電容量を失っています。バッテリーを交換する必要があります。このガイドを使って、Motorola Moto G7のバッテリーを取り出します。
作業を始める前に、Rescue and Smart Assistantアプリをダウンロードしてデバイスをバックアップし、問題がソフトウェアまたはハードウェアに関連しているかを診断してください。
対応モデルはXT1962-1ですが、XT1962-4とXT1962-5もこの修理ガイドを適用することができます。
作業を始める前に、デバイスの電源が切れて、外付け電源に接続されていないことを確認してください。下に列挙したツールとMotorola Moto G7の交換用バッテリーを準備してください。
必要な工具と部品
デバイスを再組み立てする際は、これらの手順を逆の順番に従って作業を進めてください。
デバイスを再組み立てする際は、これらの手順を逆の順番に従って作業を進めてください。
7 の人々がこのガイドを完成させました。
以下の翻訳者の皆さんにお礼を申し上げます:
100%
Midori Doiさんは世界中で修理する私たちを助けてくれています! あなたも貢献してみませんか?
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16 件のコメント
I don’t know what phone you are replacing a battery on here, but it looks nothing like my Motorola G7, which has a JK50 battery in it. The JK50 is NOT interchangeable with the JG30 you have pictured here and available to order.
The Moto G7 has many variations, including the G7 Play and the G7 Power, which is the model that takes the JK50. These instructions are for the plain vanilla G7.
This is a careless incomplete guide. It skips crucial steps, like removing the speaker subassembly (which the photos clearly show was done but not even mentioned), the buttons connector, and last but not least the battery connector itself. I also have wound up with two mystery rubberized parts which fell out at two separate points in disassembly, which are also never mentioned and which I will now have to black-box to figure out where they came from.
It also glosses over the reassembly, omitting it entirely in fact, thus failing to remind the reader, for instance, not to overlook the fingerprint reader’s connector when reinserting the motherboard and paying heed of the several tabs - and rubber parts which must be considered when reattaching that metal shield over the camera.
Also not mentioned is any suggestion how to replace the original rubberized adhesive “gasket” that attaches the front glass, which is supposed to provide some waterproofness as well as adhesion. In my instance that was compromised before I even started: the battery inflated with gas and bowed the glass front outward. Thank goodness Corning has chosen to evolve Gorilla Glass to be more flexible rather than more scratch-resistant and more brittle, otherwise I’d have had a cracked front. (That battery inflation is now the second occurrence in a second Motorola phone; I am officially spooked of Motorola phones now.)