Wow, that's a lot of disassembly! It would have been nice to see a simple "point" at the screw being removed instead of the back of the hand. I guess watching the vid a couple times will get you in the ballpark, but WOW, that's a lot of work, and I've done this a number of times on a Dell with like 6 screws
this video is BS. this laptop has been disassembled at least a couple of times before, nothing came apart on mine as easy as this. not by a mile, I wish to see a real video of the person struggling on first teardown. look at the square black sticker near the fan, this laptop has been opened before otherwise the sticker would be perfectly in place. use an old slim credit card with the edge dipped in Acetone. the acetone breaks down the adhesive just like it does for nail polish. also a heat gun or hairdryer does wonders to soften the adhesive behind the battery too. you can make the battery as warm as it gets in general operation, which is pretty warm in most cases.
So my daughter has one of these gems. She's in university, and the battery is pooched. This "quick swap" makes all other repairs I've encountered look like a breeze. Thank-you Microsoft for this miracle of modern engineering. I suspect many other bewildered parents will be here soon (or at least those unfortunate enough to wade into the waters of self-repair). The replacement part costs about $100CAN... though the chances you'll make the swap without damaging another component is slim to none. I suspect, in an alternate universe (or perhaps this one), "@Louis Rossmann" is petting Clinton while eloquently disemboweling the "logic" behind foisting such a device upon our youth.
@@insidertrader use an old slim credit card with the edge dipped in Acetone. the acetone breaks down the adhesive just like it does for nail polish. also a heat gun or hairdryer does wonders to soften the adhesive behind the battery too. you can make the battery as warm as it gets in general operation, which is pretty warm in most cases.
This is crazy. I've replaced probably 50 batteries in Lenovo and Dell laptops and never had more than a few screws and ribbons to remove or disconnect. Microsoft clearly wants you to just buy a new laptop if your battery goes bad.
@Emiliano Gustavo Yes, unfortunatelly. You can try to power the board directly or solder the SSD chip into a new board, but the chances of it working are slim.
I replaced the battery with a new one. The new battery charged to 100% and the laptop powered on with the power cable. If I disconnect the power it switched off immediately. I took the board out again and checked everything but it still does it. Any ideas ?
This thing has two batteries one in the base and one in the display. So this is just replacing the one in the base, right? What happens if the other is defective? How do I know which one is causing problems if windows just shows me 0% all the time?
you dont really show the unplugging of each component, like the fan for example, so we cannot really see how you are un-attaching parts. we just see lots of tugging (if we can see past the tweezers). this has resulting in me breaking parts in the laptop. very disappointing in this video and how it was done. lack of care taken, lack of detail, lack of... alot. too bad there is not many videos out there like this...
Wow, that's a lot of disassembly! It would have been nice to see a simple "point" at the screw being removed instead of the back of the hand. I guess watching the vid a couple times will get you in the ballpark, but WOW, that's a lot of work, and I've done this a number of times on a Dell with like 6 screws
this video is BS. this laptop has been disassembled at least a couple of times before, nothing came apart on mine as easy as this. not by a mile, I wish to see a real video of the person struggling on first teardown. look at the square black sticker near the fan, this laptop has been opened before otherwise the sticker would be perfectly in place. use an old slim credit card with the edge dipped in Acetone. the acetone breaks down the adhesive just like it does for nail polish. also a heat gun or hairdryer does wonders to soften the adhesive behind the battery too. you can make the battery as warm as it gets in general operation, which is pretty warm in most cases.
For me it is a completely stupid option by Microsoft, it is not fair that to change a simple battery you have to disassemble the entire device
Yaaa. Bro # why microsoft fuck microsoft
So my daughter has one of these gems. She's in university, and the battery is pooched. This "quick swap" makes all other repairs I've encountered look like a breeze. Thank-you Microsoft for this miracle of modern engineering. I suspect many other bewildered parents will be here soon (or at least those unfortunate enough to wade into the waters of self-repair). The replacement part costs about $100CAN... though the chances you'll make the swap without damaging another component is slim to none. I suspect, in an alternate universe (or perhaps this one), "@Louis Rossmann" is petting Clinton while eloquently disemboweling the "logic" behind foisting such a device upon our youth.
Thanks to this video. I recently changed my battery after 6 years of usage.
I’m scared of bending the battery and causing it to combust how did you get the battery from that nasty adhesive?
@@insidertrader use an old slim credit card with the edge dipped in Acetone. the acetone breaks down the adhesive just like it does for nail polish. also a heat gun or hairdryer does wonders to soften the adhesive behind the battery too. you can make the battery as warm as it gets in general operation, which is pretty warm in most cases.
This is crazy. I've replaced probably 50 batteries in Lenovo and Dell laptops and never had more than a few screws and ribbons to remove or disconnect. Microsoft clearly wants you to just buy a new laptop if your battery goes bad.
Can you please provide link to the specific glue gum that you used to to re-close the laptop? Much appreciated
Thank you for this video👏👏👏👏👏
Great video
Great, but how do you stick (Glue ) the keyboard assembly back down?
Many type of glue gum on market to stick back the keyboard, you can choose the good one
@@iueffendi4942 What glue did you use in this case? please!
thank's for your time! 🍺
Hi, could you give us link to buy the battery? Also how can we check if the battery is suitable for a surface model?
you should post more videos like this! 👏🏻
Se7!!!
Terima kasih!
Kak.. saya cari Shield Plate Battery Surface Pro 3.. mungkin ada jual
Cool content 👍
where did you bought the battery?
You can get on aliexpress
Dimana nih om tempatnya
Ikut nanya juga
Nutup keyboardnya lagi gimana biar rapet kak?
👍👍👍
I need to remove the SSD drive from this model in order to recovery information, do you have a video link about it?
Based on what I see I believe it is soldered to the motherboard
Is the SSD upgradable?
No, it's soldered to the board
@@TheLife48 so is it imposible to recovery information ?
@Emiliano Gustavo Yes, unfortunatelly. You can try to power the board directly or solder the SSD chip into a new board, but the chances of it working are slim.
Hello budy, how are you ?
could you help me i changed the battery and the notebook does not turn on what could it be can you give me some tips?
I replaced the battery with a new one. The new battery charged to 100% and the laptop powered on with the power cable. If I disconnect the power it switched off immediately. I took the board out again and checked everything but it still does it. Any ideas ?
try you power setting while you are connected via charger cable
👏👍👍
Battery link please 🌹
This thing has two batteries one in the base and one in the display. So this is just replacing the one in the base, right? What happens if the other is defective? How do I know which one is causing problems if windows just shows me 0% all the time?
Surface Book has 2 batteries like you said. Surface Laptop (the one in the video) has only 1 battery unit.
My battery died. Sometimes i feel like its not really dead and its something else.
This 's hard
What about the one on the screen?
Which one?
Mine battery only last for less than an hour, I am looking to replace it. I may be wrong, is there another battery behind the screen? Thanks
When I check the battery charges, they shows battery 1 and battery 2
@@micll3229 No battery behind the screen, there is only one battery, the one that you've seen.
Thanks
you dont really show the unplugging of each component, like the fan for example, so we cannot really see how you are un-attaching parts. we just see lots of tugging (if we can see past the tweezers). this has resulting in me breaking parts in the laptop.
very disappointing in this video and how it was done. lack of care taken, lack of detail, lack of... alot. too bad there is not many videos out there like this...