Categories: News

You can easily disassemble this repairable smartwatch using just a Phillips screwdriver

The Spectra is a new smartwatch designed from the ground up to be hackable and easy to repair. It was created by Pocuter, a company that has spent the last few years honing an expertise in building small electronics like its tiny Pocuter One computer. What makes the Spectra unique is that it’s repairable, yet with a design that mirrors the Apple Watch which is much harder to get into.

The wearable is now available for preorder through a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign with delivery expected as early as July 2025. Early backers can preorder one discounted to around $209, while full pricing is closer to around $272. The Spectra is the company’s seventh Kickstarter campaign, but also appears to be one of its most ambitious. Three years into developing the prototype it still hasn’t fully finalized the hardware, so while there may be less risk with backing this one, there’s still some.

The Spectra will be available in different colorways, and use a standard 22mm watch band. Image: Pocuter

Powered by an Espressif ESP32-S3 processor “maxed out with 8MB RAM and 32MB executable flash memory,” the Spectra has a 368×448 AMOLED display, a digital crown, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, fitness tracking and environmental sensors, and a microSD slot inside allowing storage to theoretically be boosted to half a terabyte with a memory card. That’s all stuffed inside a CNC milled aluminum frame that the company plans to sell upgrades for, including a stainless steel alternative.

The Spectra’s internal design also prioritizes access to the battery, iFixit discovered, with a mainboard that swings out of the way and the use of spring contacts instead of a cable that needs to be detached. Small devices like wearables and earbuds typically have batteries that are notoriously difficult to swap, but like Fairphone’s Fairbuds, maybe the Spectra will encourage other companies to change that.

iFixit was sent a disassembled Spectra smartwatch, but it’s not known if that’s how the final product will be delivered to all backers. Image: iFixit

The Pocuter team “plans to provide replacement options for every single part,” it told iFixit, which shared just how easy an unassembled prototype of the smartwatch is to build and later disassemble. (Pocuter hasn’t specified if the final watch will be shipped pre-assembled.) Seven Phillips head screws hold it all together, instead of glues and epoxies that often make repairs overly complicated or entirely impossible.

Original Author: Andrew Liszewski | Source: The Verge

Akshit Behera

Share
Published by
Akshit Behera

Recent Posts

Trump administration’s deal is structured to prevent Intel from selling foundry unit | TechCrunch

The deal allows the U.S. to take more equity in Intel if the company doesn't…

5 months ago

3 Apple Watches are rumored to arrive on September 9 – these are the models to expect

We're expecting two new models alongside the all-new Apple Watch Series 11. | Original Author:…

5 months ago

Fujitsu is teaming with Nvidia to build probably the world’s fastest AI supercomputer ever at 600,000 FP8 Petaflops – so Feyman GPU could well feature

Japan’s FugakuNEXT supercomputer will combine Fujitsu CPUs and Nvidia GPUs to deliver 600EFLOPS AI performance…

5 months ago

Microsoft fires two more employees for participating in Palestine protests on campus

Microsoft has fired two more employees who participated in recent protests against the company’s contracts…

5 months ago

Microsoft launches its first in-house AI models

Microsoft announced its first homegrown AI models on Thursday: MAI-Voice-1 AI and MAI-1-preview. The company…

5 months ago

Life 3.0 – Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence by Max Tegmark

A comprehensive review of Max Tegmark's Life 3.0, exploring the future of artificial intelligence and…

5 months ago