Creaking / Squeaking behind Galaxy S2, with and without Back Cover - Galaxy S II General

today i removed the back cover of my galaxy s2 after a long time and heard some creaking around the area circled in the picture below. I don't know if this is normal. however, the sound is concentrated over the microsd area. whether there is a microsd card inserted or not I still hear a creak when a little pressure is applied.
when the back cover is installed and when a little pressure is applied on the same area but from above the back cover, i can sometimes hear squeaking, but it depends where you apply the pressure. there seems to be a little gap between the cover and the interior of the chassis because sometimes it is easy to feel the SIM slot.
however, i don't know if this something to be concerned about because plastic materials do seem to behave this way after sometime. i don't think this is a heat-related issue because temperatures after using 3g usually concentrat on the opposite side (right)
let me know what you all think. what i am experiencing is focused in the area labelled as a square in the picture below
by the way, anybody know what is that area circled around the black piece, as shown in the picture below? the creaking can be easily felt there too.
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Isn't that the Internal Antenna? Could be wrong though!

i read that the antenna is placed below where the speakerphone is located
do any of you feel the squeaking in the region shown above?

I just popped the back cover to test and mine does not creak on that circled area, you might but im not sure if its a cause of worry though.

can you please check to see if you are experiencing the same thing i am facing. it could be normal, but i would like to hear from you all
ithehappy said:
Isn't that the Internal Antenna? Could be wrong though!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

i had to apply very hard pressure to get the squeak again. could there be screws loose, or could it be know normal since it is around the microsd slot area?
EDIT: the squeak lies around the the area circled, not squared, in the picture above. afaik, there are no screws in that area, i could be wrong though.
EarlZ said:
I just popped the back cover to test and mine does not creak on that circled area, you might but im not sure if its a cause of worry though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

It could just be the PCB flexing, and yeah I applied pressure on the circled area as I've said. Probably nothing to worry about but again im not 100% sure. I've also found a slight "thing" and im gonna post a thread about it in a bit, gonna do more testing.

like i pointed, this squeak is more prominent around the area circled around that black piece as pictured above. i don't know what that is

the highlighted area is the internal antenna

Im sure if i put force on areas, bent and twisted the phone, i would here creeks as well. Handle a phone how its supposed to be handled. Plastic by design does this especially when there isnt support and when its adhered to by metal parts. Common sense people.
Sent from my GT-I9100M using XDA App

well i didn't bend and twisted the phone, i was trying to get a case fitted but the case would not stay fit, some pressure had to be applied to get the case in there right, you would only hear the squeak if the force was hard enough
the plastic banding around the phone was made in such a way that it molds into itself over time when temperature comes into play,
but the squeaking was heard in an area where a microsd slot reside, some flexibility has to be present there you know
i don't know if what i encountered was a normal thing

I just noticed your phone does not have the samsung sticker on the top left area.. is it located on another part of the phone ?

Just like how if you press on someone's arm hard enough, it starts to bruise. Same with plastic that is covering an area where there is less support. If you press hard enough, it will creak.
The creaking is normal. Pressing that hard to make it creak is not.

My phone also squeaks a bit if I push the top left corner of the cover.
That connector shown is used in production. After the PCB is populated and the components soldered, they put it in a test device to calibrate the radio and some other systems. That connector actually cuts the path to the internal antenna when something is plugged in.
Sent from my GT-I9100

Related

rubber feet below device - not entirely stable

Hi,
The four rubber feet under my M5000 seem to be too short and it seems as though the device when sitting on a table partially rests on the camera lens plastic cover, making the device slightly wobble when typing in laptop mode.
Do any of you have the same problem too?
I cant remember how the device was when I first bought it 7 months ago... i wonder if the feet have slowly worn away ( they dont seem like very tough rubber)... or maybe it has always been like this.
The rubber part of the feet do not extend past the plastic part of the feet. Is this how yours is? If not can I get replacement rubber feet from somewhere?
thanks
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If your read around, there were some posts a while back about easing the feet (on the keyboard side) out and then re-seating them for a better fit. Not an easy job though, IIRC.
V
I find that the feet are too hard, which allows the Universal to slide easily around my desk while I type or tap on the screen. A silicon case takes care of that.
I don't know if anyone sells just the feet as replacements, but with some searching/googling, you surely will find replacement housings, which likely include the feet. It is overkill, but at least you get the feet.
Or, you could try to cut down some standard sick-on rubber feet from the local hardware store I had to do that for my laptop.
Or, you could get a silicon case should resolve the wobble problem without adding too much bulk, and improving the grip. I know it is not the ideal solution, but it worked for me.
I believe Vijay555 is referring to these threads below [edit by V: yup, that's the one(s)!]. Maybe you can duplicate this process for the feet.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/viewtopic.php?t=36452&highlight=scrren+feet
http://forum.xda-developers.com/viewtopic.php?t=38397&highlight=scrren+feet
StevePritchard said:
I've mentioned this under another post (search for "keyboard bump stops"). Basically, the little curves rubber stops in the bottom corners aren't tall enough to prevent the keyboard rubbing the top of the clamshell.
This is how I've fixed it...
1. Prize out the rubber stops (this is very easy with a jewellers screw driver, or similar)
2. Put a very small amount of Blu-Tac into the recesses, and pack it down with the screwdriver. This is to act as a base for step 3.
3. Using the screwdriver, carefully dab superglue on the blu-tac, and around the lip of the recess.
4. Push the bump stop back into place.
Mine now sit about 2-3mm proud of the surface, and I can see daylight through the closed clamshell, so the keys don't touch the top piece.
Cheers,
Steve.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My XDA had gone a bit wobbly, so managed to pull the offending rubber foot out with tweezers and popped it back in with superglue. Fiddly as hell. Without the glue, I'm not sure I'd have been able to actually push it back in, as it's a very tight fit. Worked a treat until I pulled my Exec out of my pocket last night and noticed that the rubber foot had obviously dropped out somewhere! :evil:
Device is now wobbly as hell, so it's a silicon case for me, I reckon.
douglasgrant said:
My XDA had gone a bit wobbly, so managed to pull the offending rubber foot out with tweezers and popped it back in with superglue. Fiddly as hell. Without the glue, I'm not sure I'd have been able to actually push it back in, as it's a very tight fit. Worked a treat until I pulled my Exec out of my pocket last night and noticed that the rubber foot had obviously dropped out somewhere! :evil:
Device is now wobbly as hell, so it's a silicon case for me, I reckon.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've got spare feet - drop me a PM - they should push in and stay firm without glue if you use a cocktail stick etc to push them through.
Richard.

having trouble replacing touch matrix... need help, pictures included

so my touch matrix cracked, got a replacement on ebay that looks perfect. i got it to work but everytime a do, a few days later it stops working until i fix it again. i can't seem to figure out how the flexible PCB connects to the back of the LCD module. it looks like HTC just puts a piece of tape over it.
however, i noticed when taking off the old LCD touch matrix that there was some sort of possibly conductive adhesive that made it very difficult to pull off. i got it off but one of the contacts got stuck on there and it i had to scrape it off with a scalpel.
see picture below for exact details. if anyone has any experience in doing this and getting it to work, please let me know, it's so frustrating not having touch on this phone.
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I think you might need to have that professionally repaired. I used to refurbish phones for Motorola but I've never taken anything this advanced apart before. It sounds like you shouldn't have scraped off that conductive adhesive. The digitizer you bought should have been a relatively simple installation but you should have taken your time peeling off the old cracked digitizer. That adhesive is pretty strong and thats why they use it.
You might want to look into getting your hands on some of that adhesive and just replace it all. Sometimes the oils from your skin from handling such a sensitive ribbon cable could have damaged it as well.
P.S. Unfortunately, most of the people here are software genius's, not hardware experts unfortunately.
it's not too advanced. i figure if they at least offer the part as a replacement option on ebay it can't be too hard. and in the mass view, it's only 4 contacts and relatively easy to replace if you have a minor knowledge of electronics.
i keep taping it down firmly and even putting extra tape on top so that the pressure of the case will press down on the pcb to have a firmer connection.
note: i was very careful to observe ESD precautions, so that isn't it, plus there's no semiconductors that could be damaged in the touch matrix.
dudah85 said:
it's not too advanced. i figure if they at least offer the part as a replacement option on ebay it can't be too hard. and in the mass view, it's only 4 contacts and relatively easy to replace if you have a minor knowledge of electronics.
i keep taping it down firmly and even putting extra tape on top so that the pressure of the case will press down on the pcb to have a firmer connection.
note: i was very careful to observe ESD precautions, so that isn't it, plus there's no semiconductors that could be damaged in the touch matrix.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmm... have you tried good old fashion superglue? I mean not neccesarily putting it on the end of the cable where the conductors are, but on the cable right near the conductors to keep it from moving around and then placing a few strips of tape to sandwich the cable with the housing pressing it down tight?
yes i have but i fear what happens if when pressing it down if it gets on the pads, then i'm just totally screwed. it's a tough situation, i wish there was a contact at HTC that could tell me how it's done.
i'm going to also try contacting their support/repair office and see if they can provide any insight.
dudah85 said:
yes i have but i fear what happens if when pressing it down if it gets on the pads, then i'm just totally screwed. it's a tough situation, i wish there was a contact at HTC that could tell me how it's done.
i'm going to also try contacting their support/repair office and see if they can provide any insight.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The superglue option is very risky but it could save your @$$ if you only put very little on the ribbon and then hold it in place untill it dries and then press down once the glue is already dry.
On another note, contacting their support office would probably be your best bet.
Everything you have done, even though not done wrong, it a far greater risk than I would have ever taken... I would have sent it in to be repaired of the digitizer had a crack in it or or the dot matrix got scratched. But thats me.
Unfortunately there aren't too many technicians here on this forum since it is almost completely firmware and not hardware here... Then again, there might be a few. Where I live it's kinda late at night so maybe they're sleeping or something. Lol.
i'm neither a hardware nor a software expertm but i may be able to help... i saw the manual somewhere... www.mdatweak.com/downloads/Wizard_Service_Manual.pdf... try that... maybe it'll help you...

dissecting my hero (pictures)

Look at picture n°3. I think that the gap problem is explained...
exHERO n°1
exHERO n°2
exHERO n°3
Your mad
What's the GAP problem?
How does it explain the gap problem?
Not for me, for people that don't get it, I know, obviously...
Fantastic mate, was just about to do this myself. Could you post a brief guide? How easy is it to get to the screen?
alpha242 said:
Look at picture n°3. I think that the gap problem is explained...
exHERO n°1
exHERO n°2
exHERO n°3
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you please remove the protective shielding too? I want to see what HTC hides under them...
I was expecting to see LOTS of cramped together electronic components but that seems to be well spread out?
Nice high quality pictures. could you maybe make a guide how to disamble the hero? it will be nice
hope you had a spare 500 quid rather than doing this on a contact phone
C45hY said:
hope you had a spare 500 quid rather than doing this on a contact phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Or a Torx driver to just put it back together.
so if i'm interpreting the picture right, the gap which quite alot of us are seeing, is irrelevant really as any dust ingress can't actually get onto the screen due to the seal which the foam forms on the outer case...?
I guess that the screen gap is almost inevitable due to the cut in the seal
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no mate the gap in the screen is further down between the actual touch screen and the outer casing not where you have circled. The gap is to the left where the rubber seal bit is and the part of the ribbon cable you can see is where it actually connects to the touch screen.
Madness but crazy-awsome!
Hi, just got mine today Had a brief luck n there seems to be security stickers n the like all over this guy!
Normally I'd join straight in but gona give this one a miss for a while I think
All the best! (and good luck)
crash_194 said:
no mate the gap in the screen is further down between the actual touch screen and the outer casing not where you have circled. The gap is to the left where the rubber seal bit is and the part of the ribbon cable you can see is where it actually connects to the touch screen.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm pretty sure that IS what he circled. If you look at the screen itself, you can see the padding that would be at the top, just below the rubber seal area.
slyydrr said:
I'm pretty sure that IS what he circled. If you look at the screen itself, you can see the padding that would be at the top, just below the rubber seal area.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No its around the edge of the touch screen so its where the touch screen sits in the frame you can't even see any of that foam when the phone is assembled. You can see the rubber seal on the outer casing on that 3rd picture just compare it to what you can see on your phone.
crash_194 said:
No its around the edge of the touch screen so its where the touch screen sits in the frame you can't even see any of that foam when the phone is assembled. You can see the rubber seal on the outer casing on that 3rd picture just compare it to what you can see on your phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If that were the case, and the area circled was not the part where the rubber seal was, then the rubber seal would be approximately 3/4" below the top of the phone, rather than 3/8" of an inch (approximation). You can see where the speaker is on the white plastic case, and by looking at the outside of the phone, the rubber seal is literally JUST below that. For the rubber seal to be where the clear screen is wouldn't work proportionately.
Similarities to Blackstone like cam etc.
But disassembling seems to be much easier than Blackstone.
Hope we'll get much more spare parts compared to Blackstone.

[How to] Repair the LCD cable clamp you broke while replacing the digitizer

I am certain that I'm getting the post syntax incorrect, let me know and I'll adjust it.
Anywho, I found out too late that when removing the black goo from the LCD's flex cable, you need to:
1. Heat it gently
2. Pull the goo from the INSIDE EDGE to the OUTSIDE EDGE.
3. Not break that paper-thin, fragile, incredibly tiny sliver of plastic that is the difference between an LCD that will turn on and an LCD that will not!
So, I managed to do none of these things. I went ahead and replaced the digitizer and tried various (failed) methods of mitigating the damage I had wrought, finding no help on the internet, only commiseration.
Tonight I had a flash of inspiration, and what the heck, it worked. I carefully used a needle to separate the tiny wire tips protruding from the clamp (my poorly-considered sideways goo-removal bent a few until they touched each other) while wishing I had a microscope, then I prepared a short length of PLASTIC DRINKING STRAW, folded it in half lengthwise ("long-ways"), and gingerly placed it beneath the overlying digitizer cable so that it compressed the LCD cable against the contacts beneath. I put the phone back together, and here I am today.
Now, I probably should have laid a bit of tape over this so that it won't shake free. I'll wait until it shakes free to do that, then report back.
I fully expect this post to elicit discussion of the dozen ways in which to better achieve this repair, and why my method is the worst of the bunch.
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I guess yours isn't the worst fix!
moktarino said:
I am certain that I'm getting the post syntax incorrect, let me know and I'll adjust it.
Anywho, I found out too late that when removing the black goo from the LCD's flex cable, you need to:
1. Heat it gently
2. Pull the goo from the INSIDE EDGE to the OUTSIDE EDGE.
3. Not break that paper-thin, fragile, incredibly tiny sliver of plastic that is the difference between an LCD that will turn on and an LCD that will not!
So, I managed to do none of these things. I went ahead and replaced the digitizer and tried various (failed) methods of mitigating the damage I had wrought, finding no help on the internet, only commiseration.
Tonight I had a flash of inspiration, and what the heck, it worked. I carefully used a needle to separate the tiny wire tips protruding from the clamp (my poorly-considered sideways goo-removal bent a few until they touched each other) while wishing I had a microscope, then I prepared a short length of PLASTIC DRINKING STRAW, folded it in half lengthwise ("long-ways"), and gingerly placed it beneath the overlying digitizer cable so that it compressed the LCD cable against the contacts beneath. I put the phone back together, and here I am today.
Now, I probably should have laid a bit of tape over this so that it won't shake free. I'll wait until it shakes free to do that, then report back.
I fully expect this post to elicit discussion of the dozen ways in which to better achieve this repair, and why my method is the worst of the bunch.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Apparently, it's not such a bad idea after all! I'm just wondering how to adapt it to work on an EVO 4G. There's no ribbon to put it underneath, but I get the idea... one would think those incredibly thin/weak plastic clamps (which should be relatively simple to replace) could be purchases for 10 to 100 times what they are worth (say, $3USD?) and problem solved. I put an HD2 screen in an EVO 4G, worked fine, until I didn't glue it in properly, and it popped out. My g/f brought it back to me, saying that I needed to fix it right! I went back in, and that damned wide flex ribbon cable, just the angle I was at, along with my son jumping about the table I was working at, I inadvertently broke that clamp, in three pieces! Damned frustrating too! I gotta get me a dedicated desk for my PC/CELL/TV repairs... with lights, magnifying glass, and a locked door...
Well folks, I have outdone myself today. I was digging through my old tech to harvest the buzzer motor out of an old Boost Mobile Motorola i425 phone. After ripping it apart for the motor, I decided to pick through the rest of the parts to see if there was anything worth keeping (I bet you know where I'm going with this by now), and after harvesting the speakers, I noticed that the LCD cable looked suspiciously similar to the one on my poor Droid X.
3 hours later, I have fully repaired my Droid X. It was pretty tricky though, but I discovered that if you bend the metal bits at either end of the connector down, you can slide the clamp in and then bend them back upright.
Parts reuse FTW! Thanks Motorola! i425's are apparently $5 on eBay now, btw.
You saved my life (and the one from my Sensation). Such a simple and working idea! Thanks!

Fix for build quality issues.

I just received my HTC One developer edition, and like others, there are some build quality issues, most notably the screen is not lined up with the rest of the front of the phone (ie, you can feel the screen glass grabbing your finger when you swipe down to pull the notifications panel)
It was not too bad of an issue when comparing to others from YouTube, also I bought the phone from HTC, so there is no way for me to exchange it at AT&T.
So I decided to fix it.
- Heat up the screen with a heat gun on low or a hair dryer on high. Make sure you keep on moving the heat source in figure 8 and keep the heat source around 10 inches away from the screen. Do this for around 5 minutes, the phone needs to be hot, uncomfortable to hold, but still you should be able to hold it with your bare hands.
- Protect the screen and back of the phone. Clamp the top of the screen. Wait for the phone to cool. Release the clamps.
This worked wonderfully for me, the screen is now flush with the body, I can't feel it when I run my finger on the edge between the screen and the body.
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I'm going to have to try this--I didn't want to send my phone back to AT&T because that would be a hassle but at the same time I really hated how i could feel the little lip every time I pulled down the notification shade.
Thank god I don't have this issue, this is way too crazy of a fix for me O_O
Good fix thanks for posting. This is what ifixit actually does to remove the screen. Hot air melts the glue so you can take off the screen or adjust it.
A sidenote: If you heat the phone up too much the battery degrades so be careful.
Too bad there wasn't an easy fix like yours to my dev edition defect. No way to solve bleed issues apart from sending it back for a replacement.
Good for you. Self-help never hurts. Cheers!
https://picasaweb.google.com/100693731613176583412/HTCOneM7_dev
inselfyoga
This isn't a fix for all build quality issues.. one fix for the gap inbetween bezel and speaker grills is put a TPU case on it. It will squeeze it together and make the gap go away.
Sent from my HTC One using xda premium
well im on my second one right now you can feel the screen glass grabbing your finger when you swipe down to pull the notifications panel on both of them i don't even know if i should exchange again, but it feel like the screen is about to cut my finger, when swiping down its really anoying
I take it hose clamps are pretty strong? seems like they'd have to be to squish that glass back down. Dont know if my walmart plastic clamp kit will do it Thanks for sharing
...This is a rather extreme fix.
i just pressed mine in really hard with my hands
This is similar to how we fixed the early Nexus 7s. Asus had issues with the left hand side of the screen being proud of the bezel. The fix was to warm the periphery of the screen to re-soften the adhesive and then place heavy books on the screen and leave for a few hours... worked a treat.
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda premium
I think I will try this before I bother with AT&T. I just hate having to deal with them for anything at all.
Thanks for the how to. Worked perfectly!
cachookaman said:
i just pressed mine in really hard with my hands
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
lol just asking for it to crack
This improved things on my "One" as well.
now if I could just get something to close the minor gaps between the speaker grills and the plastic..
I'm thinking about using a bit of krazy glue and working it into the opening and putting my clamps back on until it dries.
This phone will be close to perfect, even if I have to help it along myself
Andrmgic said:
This improved things on my "One" as well.
now if I could just get something to close the minor gaps between the speaker grills and the plastic..
I'm thinking about using a bit of krazy glue and working it into the opening and putting my clamps back on until it dries.
This phone will be close to perfect, even if I have to help it along myself
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Let me know if this works for you. I was thinking the same thing.
Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk 2
billyapd21 said:
Let me know if this works for you. I was thinking the same thing.
Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
WOW...Let me know how that works also. I'm trying to not let the small gap bother me, but i'm worried over time that dirt or moisture will get in there and mess some things up. The issue comes from the speakers not being part of the 1 solid piece of aluminum but are snapped on later. This is why in the drop tests the speakers came off on some of them.
going to grab some toothpicks + krazy glue on the way home and see what can be done about the gaps.
Thanks to the procedure in the OP, my glass is now flush with the speaker grill on the top of the device. Much more pleasant to pull down the notification shade now.
Trying to do the same with the lower speaker grill, but it's not as big a deal as the top one.
Nice. Will have to pick up some clamps from Home Depot...I do definitely feel the overhang when pulling the noti shade. You know over extended use, the grime from our fingers will deposit there. ugh
Hope I dont shatter the screen.. lol.
The top and bottom speaker grills are glued on as well so they might not have let them set long enough causing that seperation. As for the light bleed sheesh , im sure theyre rushing to meet demand, but what good does it do if they deliver an inferior product
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2

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