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Apple or Samsung Screen Repair at Screen Savers (Up to 60% Off). 11 Options Available.

Glass-only repair (LCD not included). Appointment required. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift(s). Valid only for option purchased. May be repurchased every 30 days. Merchant's standard cancellation policy applies (any fees not to exceed voucher price).

Professional repair screens on handheld devices, restoring them to full functionality

Smart Device Screen Repair

  • $49 for an iPhone 5, 5S, 5SE or 5C ($89 value)
  • $69 for an iPhone 6 ($109 value)
  • $79 for an iPhone 6 Plus ($159 value)
  • $99 for an iPhone 6S ($159 value)
  • $119 for an iPhone 6S Plus ($220 value)
  • $59 for an iPad 2, 3, or 4 ($150 value)
  • $79 for an iPad Mini 1, 2, or 3 ($180 value)
  • $79 for an iPad Air ($190 value)
  • $69 for a Samsung S5 ($120 value)
  • $55 for a Samsung S3 or S4 ($99 value)
  • $89 for a Samsung Note 3 or 4 ($140 value)

Touchscreens: Power at Your Fingertips

To learn what’s behind the face your smartphone shows to the world, read on.

Most electronic touchscreens—such as the kind on your smartphone, perhaps—rely on electricity. Not just the obvious electricity provided by their power supply, but your electricity, as in the tiny amount that runs through your body or the large amount that runs through your body if you’re a Frankenstein. Capacitive touchscreens are set up to detect any change in the electromagnetic field they produce, such as that created by a bare fingertip. Beneath the glass screen, a network of electrodes stands ready to relay information about the location of the touch to the device’s microcontrollers and translate it into a command.

Another Path: Resistance

There is another, slightly older form of touchscreen technology, which requires the hand to apply not electricity but pressure. This type is known as a resistive screen and is frequently still found at checkout counters and on PDAs. Beneath its surface are two layers of conductive material. Pressure forces the two layers to connect, completing a circuit; different points on the screen will produce a current with different voltage, which allows the system to pinpoint the precise location of the touch. Although these screens are lower-resolution and can’t respond to multiple simultaneous touches, they do have one advantage over capacitive screens: they’ll work even if you’re wearing gloves or oven mitts.

Bonus Points

  • There are plenty of other, less common ways to create a touchscreen. Some devices send ultrasonic waves continually across the screen, which are interrupted upon contact; others, including Microsoft’s Surface tabletop screen, sense changes not in pressure or electric charge but in light.
  • Capacitive screens have also been developed that can register how hard you’re pressing. When you press down harder on anything you’ll notice your fingertip spread out to contact more of the surface. Newer screens take advantage of this fact and track whether you’re contacting an increasing number of capacitors.

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