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iPhone and Electronic Repairs at uBreakiFix (Up to 59% Off). Five Options Available.

$50 voucher only valid towards repairs (not valid toward any retail). Can not combine $50 voucher with other offers. Excludes samsung and google. Limit 1 per person. May be repurchased every 30 days. Limit 1 per visit. Must use promotional value in 1 visit(s). Valid only for option purchased. All goods or services must be used by the same person.

Highly trained technicians fix damaged glass screens for iPhones, repair tablets and computers, restore PCs, and replace batteries

Choose from Five Options

  • $22.68 for $50 worth of iPhone, tablet, computer, and game console repairs
  • $12 for tempered-glass screen protector for all iPhone 5 models, 6 and 6+ ($29.99 value)
  • $41.99 for PC restoration ($79.99 value)
  • $36 for battery replacement for all iPhone 4 and iPhone 5 models ($69.99 value)
  • $50.39 for battery replacement for iPhone 6 and iPhone 6+ ($99.99 value)

Gorilla Glass: A Screen’s Shining Armor

The glass on an iPhone is engineered to withstand the stresses of your day-to-day life. Read on to learn about the particular brand behind many products—Corning’s Gorilla Glass.

In order for the glass in your iPhone, tablet, or computer to incorporate a touchscreen, it has to be extremely thin. But thin glass doesn’t hold up against the wear and tear of daily use, so manufacturers of these mobile devices started using glass that’s been chemically treated to be both thin and strong. This is the basic concept behind Corning Inc.’s ultra-resilient Gorilla Glass, named after a gorilla’s inherent toughness and beauty.

As with any glass, the process of making Gorilla Glass begins by melting down a mixture of sand and other chemicals in a furnace. After that, however, automated robotic arms form the molten mixture into 0.5-mm-thick sheets, called aluminosilicate because they contain aluminum, silicon, oxygen, and sodium ions. These ultra-thin sheets can’t resist damage quite yet; to become Gorilla Glass, they have to undergo a chemical process called an ion exchange. Each sheet is dipped into a 752-degree Fahrenheit electrolyte solution, which breaks the bonds of all sodium ions and replaces them with larger potassium ions. The larger ions cause the glass to compress, packing larger atoms into the same space to give a boost of strength akin to Popeye’s biceps after a few cans of spinach.

Gorilla Glass is a relatively new product—it’s only been used in mobile devices since 2009—but Corning has been developing the concept for years. The company began experimenting with chemically strengthened glass way back in 1960. Nowadays, Corning is on its third iteration of the product, Gorilla Glass 3, which is said to be up to three times more damage resistant than Gorilla Glass 2. Gorilla Glass in all its iterations can be found in hundreds of devices, including those made by Apple, Dell, and Motorola.

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