One thing that is really clear, pretty much as with the S6 Edge, the S6 is not what you'd call an effortlessly repairable handset. Once more, this handset is fixed with heaps of paste that requires the utilization of the iOpener to move beyond it all. What's more, again the battery is taken cover behind the midframe, making it hard to supplant.
Getting at the battery is feasible - actually its less demanding than for the S6 Edge - yet you will require expert instruments, a great deal of tolerance, and you will without a doubt add a couple of dollars to the swear container, particularly in the event that you happen to break the presentation or tear a link.
Inside the S6 Edge the group ran over a differing cluster of parts, including a great deal of Samsung-marked segments:
- Samsung Exynos 7420 Octa-center 64-bit processor (2.1 GHz quad + 1.5 GHz quad)
- Samsung K3RG3G30MM-DGCH 3 GB LPDDR4 RAM
- Samsung KLUBG4G1BD 32GB NAND streak
- Skyworks 78041 Half and half Multimode Multiband (MMMB) Front-End Module (FEM)
- Avago AFEM-9020 PAM
- Broadcom BCM4773 GNSS Area Center point
- Samsung C2N8AF (conceivably picture processor)
- Avago A7007
- Wolfson Microelectronics WM1840 Sound Codec
- Samsung S2MPS15
- Samsung Shannon 928 RF Handset
- Adage MAX77843 Friend PMIC
- Adage MAX98505 Class DG Sound Enhancer
- Samsung Shannon 600B5D
- STMicro FT6BH touchscreen controller
All things considered, the S6 is simpler to repair than the S6 Edge, yet just barely. Be that as it may that is virtually standard of the course for all current cell phones.


