BGR
When Apple unveils the iPhone 15 series in September, it’ll be the second entity in the known universe to make iPhones with USB-C connectors. The first was Swiss engineer Ken Pillonel, who gave the world the first USB-C iPhone long before the EU forced Apple to replace its Lightning connector. The same person then gave us AirPods with a USB-C case before Apple. Again, Apple will have to pull off the same switch once the iPhone 15 arrives.
Fast-forward to late July 2023, and Pillonel outdid himself. He created an AirPods Pro case design that lets you replace the battery without destroying the case. That’s the kind of change I’d love to see from Apple.
My biggest problem with AirPods is that they’re not meant to be repaired. Specifically, once the health of the battery is ruined, you can’t have the AirPods earbuds or case serviced. They become useless waste.
Not even Apple can swap out the batteries. What the company will do is throw a discount your way for a new pair of AirPods, which will have to suffer the same fate in a few years.
You can replace the battery of iPhones, iPads, and Macs when the original pack can’t hold a charge. That way, you effectively extend the life of your gadget, save money, and help the environment in the process. But you cannot do that with AirPods.
That’s where Pillonel’s AirPods Pro case comes in. The engineer managed to disassemble a first-gen AirPods Pro case and then recreate it from scratch using a 3D printer and other gadgets.
“Building on the success of my previous projects, which included 3D-printed cases for various AirPods models and custom USB-C parts, I am now addressing the demand for more eco-friendly solutions. Instead of offering just outer shells for the AirPods Pro, I took on the challenge of meticulously modeling every single part of the device, essentially ‘stealing’ the design, and sharing them freely with everyone,” Pillonel said on YouTube.