9/10/2023 0 Comments Tarkan iflash![]() ![]() IPod is now ready to restore & sync using iTunes. Slide battery cable in to the connector and push down the black latch to lock the ribbon in place. Place supplied foam pad on to the chipset, use both if fitting in to a thick caseback. Install iFlash-Quad into iPod, making sure the ribbon is fully home and the black bar is locked down. ![]() Install MicroSD card(s) in to the iFlash-Quad, If not using 4 MicroSD cards then load from slot uSD1 up. iPod is ready to accept the iFlash board. Remove all rubber bumpers and strips from the iPods if any remain after the HDD is removed. Gently lift the black bar to release the ribbon from the HDD. Rest the front and back side by side, be careful to not cause too much stress on the headphone ribbon. I suggest watching some iPod opening videos on the internet.īefore pulling the case apart, release the battery cable – lift the black lock bar -or- gently using even pressure pull up the battery ribbon away from the connector. Then the remaining we charge and measure the self-discharge rate with no load, and with load – the ones which hold charge best we keep to use.Using suitable tools, release the holding clips, making your way around the case till it opens. Our method now is to buy several batteries at the same time, measure the voltage they arrive with – if near/below the cut-off voltage, we throw in the bin. Some of our test iPods which have the original Apple battery from 9/10/12 years ago, we can switch the iPod off – and we can still switch the iPod back on 2 months later with hardly no loss of charge!!! We have an very old 5g which we had not used in close to 8 months, and you know what it still switched on after this amount of time. Most of these batteries barely last 7 days. Good example is standby time, switch the iPod off and leave alone. We buy batteries all the time – 75% of them arrive not able to power the iPod because while in storage they have dropped below the cut-off/minimum voltage, most we can recover by charging – but they just do not hold charge well. Sadly majority of the iPod batteries bought on Amazon/Ebay/etc are in poor condition, the cells used are poor quality, and then the storage conditions are not ideal. Support 13, October 2017 at 11:00 – The reality is that the battery you bought is rubbish.Next mod will be an iPod 5th gen 30GB with a 120GB SSD but that´ll be next month. ![]() Then I used CarbonCop圜loner to restore a previous back-up of my 160GB iPod, almost 130GB of music! so after crossing my fingers everything went smoothly, then to stay in the safe side, I copied the remaining music but album by album until having 200GB (more or less) on the iPod and everything seems to be fine, I´ve noticed some alterations on the albums configuration (mixed songs on different albums and the like, but I´ll check on that someday with time to spare) I haven´t let my iPod to get low battery, but now reading that the EVO850 have some “low power loss prevention” issues, it almost gave me something until I checked the box and I´m using the EVO860 version, and it seems that support have tested them without any issues, so far this my experience, so now I do have an iPod Classic 7th gen 500GB and everything runs nice, the battery is the original the iPod came with. I read some posts about how to install the disk and some differ between them almost being esoteric, so I just opened the iPod classic 7th gen (lucky me!) then I replaced the HD with the iflash-SATA adapter with the SSD on it, then I connected to the MacBook Air, it recognised the SSD and said it needed to be initialised so I did, formatting it HFS+, then iTunes saw the iPod and asked to restore it, so I click yes and iTunes downloaded the last firmware and installed it, then one reboot and it was done. ALEXANDRO BRYAN SOTO MATEOS 18, June 2019 at 6:50 amĪ very happy customer here! Well I used a Samsung 860EVO 500GB mSATA SSD and it worked just right!. ![]()
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