Cracking Open

Motorola Droid Razr Teardown: Better hardware should anger Bionic buyers

By Bill Detwiler | December 8, 2011, 11:04 AM PST

Thin and stylish the original Motorola Razr flip phone was a huge success. I used a Black Razr for many years, until it broke in 2009. In November 2011, Motorola released the first Razr smartphone–the Droid Razr.

The new Razr has a 1.2GHz TI OMAP 4430 processor, 16GB of internal storage, an 8MP rear-facing camera, a 1.3MP front-facing camera, and a 4.3″ Super AMOLED display (960×540 pixels). It measures 5.15″ (H) x 2.71″ (W) x 0.28″ (D) and weighs 4.48 ounces. The Droid Razr comes with Android 2.3.5 installed, and can be upgraded to Android 4.0. It’s also the first phone to have the latest version of Motorola’s Webtop application. In the US, Verizon sells the Razr for $299.99 (with a two-year contract). I bought our Razr test device (sans contract) from a local Best Buy Mobile location for $799.99 (plus tax).

In this week’s episode of Cracking Open, I show you what’s inside the Droid Razr, and discuss what I learned from my teardown. That basically, the Razr is an upgraded Droid Bionic.

December 8, 2011, 10:34 AM PST | Length:00:03:00

View Transcript

Full teardown gallery: Cracking Open the Motorola Droid Razr

Cracking Open observations

Internal hardware

To avoid damaging our test device, I decided against desoldering all the EMI shields on the Razr’s motherboard. Luckily, our friends over at iFixit did.

For more information on the Droid Razr, check out Deb Shinder’s real-world review, “Motorola Droid Razr: Super model or serial killer?”