Introducción
Internal prerequisite.
Qué necesitas
-
-
Use a plastic opening tool to start to pry the headphone jack out of its recess in the rear case.
-
Then use the opening tool to gently peel the microphone up from the adhesive securing it to the top of the rear case.
-
Remove the headphone jack assembly from the rear case, being careful not to tear the microphone flex cable.
-
-
-
-
Use a pair of tweezers to gently pull the silent switch bracket away from the outer case.
-
-
-
Carefully peel the headphone jack/volume button cables off the adhesive securing them to the rear case.
-
Remove the headphone jack cable assembly from the iPhone.
add: REMOVE adhesive from the mic from the body (black plastic)
The adhesive on the replacement part is far inferior to the original. The cable around the the audio jack and the mic should have adhesive, as the original part does, but it is missing. This makes the reassembly tricky because you need to check that the headphone cable is out of the way when installing the front facing camera and the main logic board. The mic needs adhesive, but none is provided. I used a little superglue will hold the mic in place. Use just enough to hold the mic in place. Once the logic board and grounding clip are installed, the mic will be wedged in place.
My repair was successful, but this replacement part was well below iFixit's normally high standard of quality.
-
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
Cancelar: No complete esta guía.
3 personas más completaron esta guía.
Pay really careful attention to the position of the Microphone on the upper left side of the headphone jack. I managed to break it twice. It is sturdy but it cannot be twisted .
My biggest problem was I didn't quite remember where it fit in, and the images do not clearly show it, so look carefully at that before you remove it.
keitarusm - Contestar
When I took out the old headphone jack assembly the secondary mic was still attached to the housing because there was so much adhesive on it. be very careful when taking the old unit off so as not to remove the adhesive part unless you have more of it.
Nephew - Contestar
As the other comments say, you have to be very careful about removing the secondary (top) mic at the same time as the headphone jack. The secondary mic is tethered very tight to the jack with a flex at the very top of the phone housing, and it is easy to break this connection. This is important to pay attention to if you are following this guide in an attempt to move the headphone jack out of the way for another repair.
cpwittenberg - Contestar
The part is very small but if you are replacing the headphone jack, the mic is part of it. It it's important to know the position of of how the ribbon cable is bent. I used tweezers to pry the mic from the mic box but an exacto blade would had done a cleaner job. I got a good pic but at the time of this comment I was into fixing the phone. ;'D
rhinotek1 - Contestar
There should be a warning in this step. The mic is actually a part of the headphones jack. it is not mentioned in the guide, and when you're pulling out the jack you're ripping off the mic ribbon that sits below the jack.
ducatipatataj - Contestar
Here's another one who tore off the secondary mic. :/ I came here to pop out the headphone jack so I could replace that corner 1.5 mm Philips, in the process of a screen replacement. So now I have another job! I don't mind since it was my own f-up, but I'll add a comment on the other process in order to draw attention to the secondary mic being easy to tear off.
Another problem: strangely, the headphone jack won't fit back in. I'm fearful of pressing too hard, in case something else gets messed up - but in preparation for replacing it, I wanted to practice getting the jack in.
I think the tiny metal part of the frame (with a small circle in it, visible right above the headphone outlet in step 31) is bent, somehow. Any advice for me?? I would appreciate it!
suzanneb - Contestar
Any tips on doing what was done in picture 2?
Sean - Lua Tech - Contestar