Introduzione
Questa guida ti mostrerà come rimuovere in sicurezza l'SSD dal tuo Surface Pro 3. La guida inizia con la rimozione dello schermo e del digitizer, per passare poi direttamente all'SSD. Questa guida non include dettagli su come clonare l'SSD originale sul nuovo.
Strumenti
Ricambi
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Per rimuovere lo schermo, prima ammorbidisci l'adesivo scaldandolo. Puoi usare una piastra riscaldante, un pistola termica o un iOpener. Se necessario, anche un asciugacapelli può funzionare.
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Scalda il perimetro del dispositivo uniformemente finché non è scottante al tocco, e cerca di mantenere questa temperatura per qualche minuto.
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Usa una ventosa o un iSlack per sollevare il vetro fino a creare una piccola fessura tra il vetro e la scocca.
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Infila attentamente un plettro nella fessura creata per tagliare l'adesivo.
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Fai scorrere il plettro lungo i bordi laterali e inferiore del display per tagliare l'adesivo. Se necessario, riscalda ancora i bordi.
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Continua a riscaldare le porzioni dello schermo con la pistola termica.
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Mentre scaldi i bordi dello schermo, usa uno strumento di apertura e dei plettri per fare leva sullo schermo e tagliare l'adesivo.
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Svita la vite Torx T3 da 4 mm che fissa il cavo dello schermo.
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Solleva il connettore per scollegare il cavo.
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Afferra il cavo arancione collegato al connettore argento.
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Tira delicatamente verso l'alto il cavo arancione finché il connettore si libera dalla presa.
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Ora lo schermo è completamente scollegato.
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Delicatamente, solleva leggermente l'SSD e tiralo parallelamente alla scheda per rimuoverlo dal connettore nero.
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Per rimontare il dispositivo, segui le istruzioni in ordine inverso.
17 commenti
How do you replace the screen once the glue is melted?
would assume you heat and put the screen back...
Assuming you havent shattered the screen to oblivion in the process...
Is there a way to copy the files from the ssd card once removed?
yes, you would need an adapter to connect the msata to regular sata and connect to another computer.
How's does the glass thickness compare to the Surface Pro 2? I've replaced a screen on a 2 without destroying it. Now I'm looking to replace an SSD on a 3. I'm wondering if I can expect the same type of removal.
Don’t expect the same removal. the 3 has thin glass, super easy to crack. i wasn’t able to replace mine without damaging the glass.
its much much thinner. it cracks easy. dont ask how i know this
bacon -
I just replaced both my screen and battery. It took four hours and a couple of wrong turns but I was successful learning what to do next time. However, I am not sure I would do it again.
It takes more heat than one imagines - all most too much and made me queasy fearing I was going to damage something. I would say it actually too hot and likely to damage something so be careful and do not prolong the removal. To get started I used a glass top warming/buffet heating tray set to about 200 degrees. I turned the surface pro glass side down before turning it one so it would heat gradually with the tray. I let it heat for 15 minutes. In end, I am not sure it helped or not by starting this way. This was not an easy removal so I shudder to think how worse it would have been if this didn’t help. I used a variable heat gun for the remaining steps. My screen was broken so breaking it further while nerve racking was not going to be catastrophic.
michael jones -
I attempted battery replacement, but during disassembly, i damaged the display by inserting the picks to far, and separating the display circuitry from the glass.
I used a Milwaukee precision hot tool model 1400, which has only a fixed heat setting, but it worked perfectly to soften the adhesive.
(I was very careful to heat the entire glass panel by playing the heat gun over the entire surface so that it would expand uniformly.
Robert Gerlach -
I just broke mine during the heating process as well…. The glue at the corner was so strong that I cant even slip a blade into the edge… Then when keep applying heat using a hair dryer at low tempreture the glass expanded too much and broke……
C Y Wong -
If you have never done this repair, YOU WILL SHATTER THE SCREEN! I've repaired dozens of these over the last several years for my client's and I still shatter them. It's a 98% probability that you will break the glass; it's very thin and shatters easily. Be prepared.
Gregg Stanley -