The Mi 8 Explorer Edition was advertised by the Xiaomi as the world’s first smartphone with a clear back that offered you a view of the internals. The concept of a clear phone that shows the internals is a unique one, but the Mi 8 Explorer edition immediately set off alarm bells. Anyone’s who has seen the internals of a smartphone will tell you that they don’t look as neatly organized as they did in the Mi 8 Explorer edition. Xiaomi insisted that the components were ‘real’ and refused to comment further.
Xiaomi wasn’t wrong in that regard, technically. The circuit shown on the back of the phone is in the strictest sense of the word, real. However, it isn’t connected to anything and serves no practical purpose. The components on display in the window are stuck on a small secondary board that mounts in the top section of the phone. Its only job is to sit there and look pretty. It was confirmed all the way back in May by Chengming Alpert, an HTC Forum moderator via the following Tweet
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After confirming with an internal source, I translate he’s meaning: “the components are physical things, NOT a sticker. BUT, it’s a piece of board which has nothing to do with phone function. Remove it won’t infect any function of the phone. “
— Chengming Alpert (@ChengmingAlpert) May 31, 2018
Today, new images have surfaced online that show the faux motherboard in its entirety. It becomes very apparent that the board’s purpose is only cosmetic. Here is how it looks:
Xiaomi wasn’t wrong about it being real at least
As you can see, the square slot is where the “Qualcomm Snapdragon” sticker would be. The chip is devoid of any connectors and standard markings one would find on a functional PCB. The Mi 8 Explorer Edition is for all practical purposes, identical to the Mi 8, so you’re better off grabbing the latter to save a few bucks. You can still get the Explorer Edition for style points, though.
Currently, only the HTC U12 Plus has a truly clear back. But that would involve you buying an HTC phone, which is an ordeal in itself. Or you could do what YouTube influencer Jerryrigeverything does and make your own clear phones, but we don’t recommend that as it involves taking apart your phone (which is surprisingly harder than I thought it was).
Source: Android Police