About a week ago, in preparing to run some errands, I plugged my iPhone 4S into the charger in my car so that I could stream Pandora while I drove. Oddly, a āthis accessory may not be supportedā message appeared on-screen; when I unplugged and re-plugged the iPhone to the charger, it didnāt reappear, so I didnāt think anything more of it ā¦ until a half hour later, when the iPhone again alerted me, this time with a ālow batteryā message. For some reason, attempting to charge the battery was instead rapidly draining it; unplugging the phone from the charger restored the normal discharge-via-use rate. But by that point, the ādamage had been done;ā none of the chargers I tried would restore normal operation, and the battery was soon completely drained.
This was my work (Verizon carrier, versus personal AT&T carrier) phone, and it was a Friday, so instead of switching to a different handset right away I ordered a replacement battery (complete with toolset) for $20 from Amazon with free Prime two-day shipping. It arrived mid-day the following Monday, and I set to work on the swap right away. Bafflingly, the battery-plus-tools didnāt come with any installation instructions; fortunately, iFixit came through once again. I recommend that you supplement this writeup with a perusal of their battery-replacement guide, which also includes additional images.
Iāll begin with a couple of views of the patient:
When I opened up the product box, hereās what tumbled out (again, note the lack of an instruction sheet):
The included āpentalobeā and Philips screwdrivers were surprisingly well-made. I also ended up using the plastic tool; I never figured out what the other two metal-constructed tools were for (did I mention that the vendor neglected to include any instructions?).
Read more: Replacing a dead iPhone battery