With wrapping questions about fitness comes up. Most likely to break, simply by having the trick mechanisms under his panel, be they more or less complex. As we read in Xataka, CNET conducted tests to verify the reliability of the Motorola Razr.
These tests have shown that after about 27,000 openings and road closures the machine begins to fail, listed under the expectations and wraps by competitors in the market, such as the Samsung Galaxy Fold.
Doubt in resistance returns to the world of wrapping
With FoldBot, a machine made and rolled, made by SquareTrade, because CNET tried to test Razr's resistance. Exactly it was expected to last more than 12 hours, the time required to complete the process and the folding and unchanging of about 100,000 times, the "magic" that makers like Samsung have been able to overcome.
However, Motorola Razr started failing in four hours, not even half of what was expected. At this point, the robot started to have trouble rolling Razr's screen. His hail was not working properly, and it was preventing it from being properly closed.
In the case of Samsung Samsung Fold, the machine has held over 100,000 openings. Motorola did not bring a third of the number to the case
This data coincides with the nearly 120,000 Fold openings it endured in its day and comes from the hand of a specific problem, the rats on Razr's screen, where Motorola's catalog is "normal" due to panel properties.
To keep in mind that the test is inaccessible, because it's still a simple essay. However, he returns to the table doubting how easy it is to break the wrap after a few uses.