🔧 Upgrade Your Power Game!
The Upgraded Battery for iPhone 6S is a high-capacity replacement featuring 11800mAh, 86% more power than the original, and a complete repair kit for easy installation. With smart power management and safety features, this battery ensures longevity and reliability for your device.
Item Dimensions | 15.83 x 8.19 x 0.98 inches |
Item Weight | 50 Grams |
Battery Weight | 50 Grams |
Unit Count | 1 Count |
Battery Cell Type | Lithium Polymer |
Recommended Uses For Product | Iphone |
Reusability | Rechargeable |
Battery Capacity | 3200 Milliamp Hours |
Amperage | 5 Milliamps |
Voltage | 3.82 Volts |
Compatible Phone Models | iPhone 6S A1633 ,A1688,A1700 |
T**R
First timer replacing a battery and was successful. Some tips...
This kit contains everything you need to replace an iPhone 6S battery. The new battery life is great.I was nervous about attempting this myself but given the phone is old and the cheap price for this kit, I figured why not as if I break the phone no big deal. To do the repair, I recommend two sources: Read over the written iPhone 6s Battery Replacement guide from ifixit for an overview and tips, they leave out some stuff like applying adhesive though. Then watch the Youtube video from RickMakes titled 'Replacing the Battery in an iPhone 6s' as he uses an identical kit and does mostly everything you'll need to do.INSTALL TIPS:I recommend draining your old battery completely until your iPhone shuts off automatically before doing the replacement to decrease the chance of fire.BY FAR the hardest part of the procedure is removing the old adhesive strips underneath the old battery. I followed the video but one strip broke while I was pulling it out and when that happens it's a pain as the old battery is tougher to take out. The ifixit guide has tips on what to do if this happens to you. To make pulling out the old strips easier on your first try, the RichMakes video doesn't do it but I recommend following the optional step listed in the ifixit guide of taking out the Tactic Engine, it's quick and easy to remove and doing so should make pulling out the old strips easier as it won't catch on it and rip like it did for me. Doing that and heating up the old adhesive to loosen it are required steps IMO.Do a test install of the new battery without the adhesive strips first so you can see how to place it and plug it in. The battery can move very slightly when placed inside so determine the best location now as once you place the adhesive on and press the battery down, there's no going back.When you remove the adhesive cover for the new battery adhesive strips, double check it's the correct side you pull off. You want to pull off the BLUE SIDE FIRST as the video does, I was in a hurry and pulled the pink side off first. You destroy the strips if you take the pink side off first, I had to order new ones but luckily they are only a couple dollars. Once the adhesive is on, carefully place the battery in the position you determined from the previous step as like I said, there's no going back.
L**E
Phone
Works perfectly
2**S
Much cheaper than a new phone
As seniors living on social security we simply can't afford to replace our phones. My husband put in the battery for me, the only problem he had...one corner of the phone wouldn't snap shut tight like before. Maybe because there was no adhesive added like from the factory. He worked with it a LONG time, I finally put it in the Otterbox and told him it'd be fine. I don't carry my phone around with me like so many do these days. I only pick it up when I need to call someone. Before I replaced the battery...it had to stay plugged in 24/7 and it started shutting itself off. Now it works fine.
L**S
The rest of the story …
I just installed the replacement iPhone 6s battery yesterday, and it seems to be working great today. As long as it holds up, I would give the battery and installation kit five stars. However, be forewarned that installation is not as easy as the Youtube videos you may find make it look. I knocked off one star because I feel that installation could have had better instructions. I'll try to give some additional tips.1) There were no written instructions with the kit. They gave you a card with one of those square barcodes to scan to bring a Youtube video up on the phone. But wait, you are taking the phone apart. Better have another phone handy. There is a written URL that you can type into a computer browser, but it took me to a Japanese web-site that didn't appear to have anything to do with phone batteries … just Japanese text. I was able to search and find the same video on the computer that their barcode brings up on the phone, but as I said, it makes installation appear easier than it really is.2) Using the supplied suction cup and prying tool to open the case is stressful. You have to pull hard on the suction cup and I was expecting the display to crack. I gradually got more and more aggressive with it, and eventually got the display to give enough to allow a thin pocket knife blade to slip under it. Then their plastic pry tool (which is much less likely to slip, scratch or chip the display, or cut your finger).3) When I pry things, I usually start at a corner. In this case, there is extra adhesive at the corners of the iPhone. I was finally able to get the separation started just below the round control button on the display. The video could have mentioned that is the sweet spot for getting started, but didn't.4) Once started, it is pretty easy to pry the display off of the case until you get to the top. If you try to pry the top straight up, you will just snap the pry tool. There are tabs at the top so you have to swing the display away from the case like a hinge. The video shows it done that way, but doesn't mention that you have to "hinge" it open. It does warn you not to hinge past 90 degrees. Good advice, but later, when I had the phone open and was trying to reconnect the display, it slipped out of my hand and fell back to 180 degrees. No harm done except my heart stopped.5) When you remove the "brackets" holding the connectors down, they don't warn you that the sets of tiny screws for each bracket have different lengths. Better watch for that and keep track of where they go.6) The rest of the disassembly went well until I got to battery removal. I got the Command Strip end loose, and very slowly and carefully pulled it straight back just like the video showed. It quickly snapped in half. I did the second one even more slowly and carefully. It snapped too. I suspect that you should apply a healthy upward pull to the battery away from the case while you pull the Command Strips out. Use all four hands (haha). The video doesn't say to do that though. So I had to pry the battery out. I punctured the battery doing that and it emitted a sweet odor. Fortunately, no sparks, smoke, or fire but I got it out of the area just in case.7) Battery installation and re-assembly went well, except I am sure glad I checked operation before snapping the display back on. For some reason, the display was blank. There was no sign of life when I turned the phone on. All the connectors had snapped into place and looked level and fully seated. But I had to disconnect the display and reconnect it before the phone worked. Whew! Test before you snap!8) Kudos to them for including the gasket because prying the case apart destroys the original one. But the video does not cover installing it at all (or removing the old gasket with some king of scraper and your fingernail). It is a very thin, sticky, rubbery gasket that comes sandwiched between two sheets of plastic. Remove the larger piece and be sure the gasket stays on the smaller sheet. Lay the smaller sheet inside the case perfectly centered so that the thin strips of gasket material lay perfectly on top of the tiny little edge of the case. Then press it down onto the case edge, trying not to slip and buckle the plastic sheet which then mis-positions the gasket. Good luck with that. Once perfectly positioned on the little edge around the case and pressed down, you have to peel the plastic off of the gasket, while helping the gasket come off of the plastic, not off of the case edge. Again, use all four hands (haha).9) With battery in place, connectors seated and secured, gasket installed, and the phone operation verified, it's time to snap the case together. You have to get the tabs on top started first with the display angled upward, then hinge the display down onto the case and snap it closed. First I tried to snap the display straight down onto the case. That doesn't work. Try to get it right the first attempt or you could make a mess of the thin, sticky, rubbery gasket. The video shows it being done correctly, but doesn't point out the fact that there are tabs on top to deal with first before hinging the case together.I think this is a quality replacement kit, but the instructions (video) are over simplified. I hope this helps others who dare to be do-it-yourselfers.
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