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by 57FkMytWjyFu 1395 days ago
You cannot replace the batteries without prying them apart, and Apple by default just tells you to throw them away and buy new ones.

There are rare earth minerals in the speaker drivers.

2 comments

It looks like they recommend recycling them https://support.apple.com/guide/airpods/disposal-and-recycli...

And use 100% recycled rare earth elements according to the tech specs https://support.apple.com/kb/SP856?viewlocale=en_US&locale=e...

1) Your link only mentions the magnets, nothing else in relation to rare earth elements.

2) Plastic is not recyclable in a lot of jurisdictions. Seattle stopped collecting it all together.

3) Most people will not ecycle things. Most people will just throw them in the trash instead of driving to a big box store to drop of headphones for ecycling.

3a) Sure, this behavior is common across electronics (being lazy, throwing away) but when you design an electrical device to never be repaired you are just making things worse.

That's not what they will tell you on the phone. https://youtu.be/RQqk45ps9kg?t=31

"It would cost more than it's worth to like... break it apart, to open it up, and replace the battery" (because we designed them that way)

Have you ever heard of planned obsolescence?

To your second point, the problem isn't that they come from recycled. The problem is that they won't be recycled again.

Have you seen the tear down of the AirPod? The batteries make up the bulk of it.
That's so weird. My headphones are comprised of mostly.... headphones.

And that's not even addressing the issue of the charging curves of lithium batteries that make those batteries fail sooner than they should.