Replace iPod Battery
replace ipod battery

5 Steps to Replace iPod battery

It is very easy to replace the iPod  , but be warned that replacing iPod battery process will violate the Apple warranty policy . I do not want to be responsible for damage caused to your iPod as this article.

Step 1 – Find a iPod battery replacement to fits your iPod (as www.battery4.us). You must be sure that the  is Dell Latitude D600 Battery bought for your iPod model! The iPod battery for you will end up in money loss.

Step 2 – Turn off the iPod and put the hold button to on position. You’ll have to take a flathead screwdriver, as thin as possible. Sometimes the online shop actually sends the battery with a tool. In any case, you must pry open the iPod, putting the tool between the plastic and metal, once you feel a clip, ever so gently pry open. Continue around the iPod, curious, open every lock.

Step 3 – You will have to use that tool to take off  from the hardrive. They are stuck together. Once off, disconnect the battery from the motherboard.

Step 4 – Connect the new battery to the board of the iPod (where you disconnected the battery of age) and Dell Latitude D400 Battery place the  in the glue that remained on the hard disk. Make sure the battery is discharged, and the place effectively cable can actually close the iPod. Snap the case back together, you’re going to hear when it’s done!

Step 5 – Power and charge your iPod and give new life to your iPod!

Where to buy Hopes the artcile help you.

 


How to Replace iPod Battery

There are few products more popular than the iPod—except when it comes to battery life. The batteries in early iPods fail after a time (300 to 500 charge/discharge cycles or about two to three years) and just won't hold a charge. Even worse, there's no easy way to change the batteries. Angry owners sued and now Apple has agreed to some restitution ( www.appleipodsettlement.com ).

That's good news if you're the owner of a third-generation iPod: You're eligible for a free battery replacement or (at Apple's discretion) a replacement iPod, providing you still have your proof of purchase and file a claim by September 30, 2005. The news is not so good if you have a first- or second-generation iPod: You can choose between a check for $25 or a $50 store credit to use on Apple products (excluding iTunes). Well, at least that's something. But you're still stuck with your dead battery. What can you do?

The simple (and costly) approach would be to go with Apple's iPod Out-of-Warranty Battery Replacement Program ( www.apple.com/support/ipod/service/battery.html ). Send in your dead iPod along with a check for $99 plus $6.95 shipping and you'll receive an equivalent new or refurbished model with a fresh battery in one to three weeks. Besides paying more than three times the cost of a battery, which can be obtained online for around $30, you're not even guaranteed you'll receive your exact iPod back in the mail.

Why not avoid all of Apple's service fees? You really can replace the battery on your own: We'll show you how. Sure, you'll void the warranty in the process, but isn't that part of the fun?

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