Ever since we read someone’s first impressions of the Droid 2, I’ve been itching to determine the device torn apart and unfolded. As usual, the oldsters at iFixIt satisfied that longing for gadget gore porn.
In case you’re inquisitive about essentially the mostsome of the most exciting stuff excluding the images, listed below are the teardown highlights in step with iFixIt:
* The Droid 2 has a 3.7V, 1390 mAh Li-Ion Polymer battery, a twin of the single found inside the Droid. But Motorola is advertising a 575 minute usage time for the Droid 2, compared to a 385 minute usage time for the Droid. That’s a claimed 49% improvement while still using an identical battery! Motorola has clearly made significant internal changes.
* Unlike the iPhone 4 battery’s ” Authorized Enterprise Only” pull tab, the Droid 2 has a helpful note stating ” Battery Removal Here.” Thank you, Motorola.
* The Droid 2′s 5 MP rear-facing camera with dual-LED flash supports DVD-quality video recording at 6 more FPS than the original Droid – 30 FPS vs. 24 FPS.
* The Droid 2 uses an analogous 3.7 inch, Full WVGA, 854×480 TFT LCD as the original Droid.
* After de-routing the ribbon cable during the slider mechanism, the keyboard is additionally easily removed from the back of the slider bracket. We believe that you would be able to transplant a Droid 2 keyboard into your old Droid (they appear identical internally), but we haven’t performed complete compatibility testing yet.
* The camera board is truly a separate circuit board that may be easily removed from the motherboard, similar to inside the original.
* We suspect that a TI OMAP 3630 processor is buried beneath an Elpida K4332C1PD package, which appears to be a DDR mobile RAM chip. We’ll have Chipworks investigate this further.
* The Droid 2 has a SanDisk SDIN4C2 8 GB NAND flash package soldered to the most important board. This part wasn’t included inside the original Droid. The Droid 2 only comes with a 8 GB micro SD card, so its storage capacity out the box is similar as the original. We didn’t investigate how Android handles the filesystem being split across two physical devices.
* The TI WL1271B WLAN Bluetooth/FM chip gives the Droid 2 802.11n capability, a substantial upgrade over the Droid’s 802.11g.
Now when you’re just here for the gadget gore, head over to iFixIt for the picture-filled step-by-step breakdown. [iFixIt]
DARwIn-OP learns to skate, contemplates NHL career (video)
NASA pulls the plug at the mainframe computer era



