motorola droid turbo lcd panel free sample

This original Droid Turbo LCD screen replacement assembly includes both the touch screen digitizer and the LCD screen pre-attached. If your Motorola Droid Turbo has been damaged for any reason, and its LCD screen is not functioning like it used to, this is the replacement screen is for you! Using this brand new Droid Turbo LCD screen replacement you can repair damages like broken LCD displays, discoloration, dead pixels, scratched touch screen, in a very cost effiective way.

motorola droid turbo lcd panel free sample

Looking at its screen, the Motorola Droid Turbo 2 will not bowl you over with its beauty. It’s got a forehead like Peyton Manning, sideburns like Gen. Ambrose Burnside, and a chin like Jay Leno. But there’s so much more to design than aesthetics, and the phone’s marquee feature is an impressive bit of engineering: the screen is shatterproof. Drop it over and over and over again—face down, corner down, behind the back, under the leg—without fear. Trust me on this. I passed it around a bar full of people in various states of drunkenness and encouraged them to try it. The phone survived.

As mind-boggling as that may seem, there’s a simple explanation: no glass. The top two layers of the screen are plastic, which doesn"t shatter—but plastic does scratch. There other major drawbacks to using plastic for a screen, and making the Droid Turbo 2 required more than simply slapping a slab of plastic on the face and calling it done. "The trade-off (for just a simple plastic screen) would likely be a non-working system after a drop,” says Jason Wojack, Motorola vp of engineering and product architecture.

The first line of defense, of course, is a scratch-resistant layer. Motorola chose a user-replaceable peel-off guard. Motorola calls it the “exterior lens,” and it features a proprietary design similar to third-party screen protectors. Below that is the real top layer: a thicker interior lens of polycarbonate, the same type of material used in shatter-resistant eyeglasses. Though the two components are plastic, it"s hard to tell. The screen just feels like glass.

Even if those top layers don’t break, other parts of the display can fail. That"s why Motorola put a reinforcement system for the capacitive touchscreen under the top two layers of display protection. It’s a dual-layer touch system—also made of plastic—that provides backup if anything damages the top touch layer. The doubled-up touch sensors are laid over a flexible OLED display that bends but does not break.

You"d think Motorola’s engineers destroyed a truckload of phones before nailing the ShatterShield, but Wojack says that wasn’t the case. Developing the screen took a few years, and just like you’d do when trying to design the ultimate BBQ brisket smoker, his team used digital simulations to test each iteration. When it came time to test the design, the tech had to endure more than a 5-foot drop. It was subjected to extreme temperatures, all kinds of chemicals. They also subjected it to the dreaded "sit test.”