iFixit is always at the forefront of disassembling new high-tech toys - especially Apple gear - and at the prices that it charges for replacement parts, it can afford to tear apart expensive gadgets. For those of you who are wondering what the internals of the Nexus One look like, this is your answer.

Here is the Nexus One in between the T-Mobile G1 and the Motorola Droid:
trio

Unlike the iPhone, HTC makes replacing the battery quick and painless:
battery cover

From left to right are the warranty “Void” sticker, the 5MP camera, the LED flash light, and the minuscule speaker:
camera and speaker

Battery lifted:
battery

Getting to the logic board requires some unscrewing, prying, and patience:
top

The screen and the logic board finally separated:
logic board

Perhaps the Nexus One’s most awesome feature, its high resolution 3.7″ OLED screen:
OLED

That big chip inside the orange box is Qualcomm’s 1GHz processor:
Qualcomm

HTC apparently did a sound job assembling the Nexus One. There are no strange bits and pieces that should not be there. Based on this teardown guide, I think that swapping out a damaged screen might not be too challenging even for novices. In the future, I would prefer to see a unibody enclosure (which I expect Apple to adopt for its forthcoming iPhone) because replacing broken parts will be much simpler. Let us put some of these repair depots out of business, huh?

Source: iFixit