-

These plastic bezels and their “light adhesive” are all that hold the display on to the Galaxy Fold.
It might be delayed for at least a month, but Samsung’s futuristic Galaxy Fold has hit the iFixit Teardown table. How exactly did iFixit get its hands on a phone that has never been for sale and has had all its review units recalled? It’s probably best not to think too much about it. What matters is that we get to see the insides!
Between this teardown and an earlier blog post, iFixit has been building a compelling theory for why the Fold has been dying an early death for some reviewers. The problem, simply, is ingress. While most other smartphones are resistant to the ingress of just about everything, to the point of being watertight, the Galaxy Fold is full of holes.
Traditional slab-style smartphones have their displays bonded to a Gorilla Glass panel, which is then glued onto the front of the phone for a water-tight seal. That doesn’t work for a foldable display that needs to bend and move, so the Galaxy Fold has a plastic display that rests on top of the phone and is held on only with a thin, plastic bezel that is glued along the edge. These bezels aren’t flexible enough to cover the folding area of the phone, though, so they just don’t. The plastic bezel stops before the hinge, so the display edge is just exposed to the world, opening a hole into the device.
Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments
Source: Ars Technica – Samsung’s Galaxy Fold gets torn down, iFixit theorizes why it’s so fragile