NO NO, I don't see any real evidence of the crappy screen, digitizer being a major source of troubles at all, how do the other makers go about it? Samsung is a respected brand but do make spares available to repair businesses and nobody but nobody is going to take a product in warranty to a 3rd party repair business and pay for the repair. They will go to the original makers seeking repairs under the warranty. When they get refused as many Apple customers have reported, then they go to the 3rd party repairers as a last ditch resort to getting their expensive pride and joy working again. Who wants to lay out £1,000 on a new 256Gb i12 phone and after 11 months it develops a fault and Apple say its been exposed to water etc and say a repair is out of the question, buy a new one?
You don't see that because you haven't worked in the e-repair trade. I have personally bought some of these cheap-arse parts, and learned the lesson the hard way. Parts for Apple, Samsung, LG, even my Nokia 521. A few of them worked okay... but even the batteries... something you'd think would be hard to fuck up, as they're all made in a few dozen factories in China... yup. Poor load-handling capability, shorter than advertised capacity... even if you install the BMS board from the old battery on the new.
I have also bought a lot of used pwns off fleaBay... and have found the hard way that half the time when someone is unloading a phone there, it's because they put some cheap-arse part on it and it sucks now.
You are a sane, sensible person with a clue aboot what you want, and aboot the value of real quality. More than half the people who buy fApple are utter fuckwits who only care aboot being seen with a Apple product... and
they a certain crowd of them will buy shite parts to piece one together rather than just pay the price of new.
The counterfeit parts trade is massive... and even people in Apple's own supply chain are not above reproach.
Not just Samsung; that's old news:
https://9to5mac.com/2019/12/18/iphones-made-from-rejected-parts/Being the top of the heap means everybody and his asshole brother wants a piece of your pie. When it's your turn to ride that wave, let me know how you'll handle it.
mnem
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I still think you are missing the point, you say
"Not just Samsung; that's old news" and then go on to link to an article about iPhones being made from rejected parts, as if that is what I was implying when I said
"Samsung is a respected brand but do make spares available to repair businesses"What I meant by that statement is that Samsung not only offer a full repair service and its fully priced and includes water damage, but they sell genuine parts to other repair shops as well. That is something that Apple don't do and won't do hence all the court battles with Apple going on globally. You referred to a link earlier regarding 3rd party approved repairers, dig a little deeper than the scratching the surface, and it becomes apparent that have signed up a handful of companies, but some of those companies have come forward and complained that they are only allowed to do certain things, battery swaps, charging ports etc and even then they are kept waiting for the replacements parts.
You mentioned that you have purchased
"cheap-arse parts", why did you do that? Because you could not get access to genuine new Apple parts, you just proved precisely my point, except that I'm not necessarily advocating that spare parts should be made available to the public, but should be available to repair businesses and manuals etc.
The counterfeit parts trade is massive... and even people in Apple's own supply chain are not above reproach. This is true and is in the main part because the counterfeiters are well aware that is a massive demand for parts that are like hens teeth (non-existent). Nature does not like a vacuum and does all it can to neutralise it. Make the parts available at reasonable cost and suddenly it becomes less attractive to counterfeit parts.