There’s been a lot of discussion about the storage medium being used on the various WP7 devices. Like the HTC HD7 and Samsung Focus, the HTC Surround also relies on an internal microSD card for storage. My curiosity about the location of that internal microSD card ultimately led me to partially disassemble an HTC Surround. 

There are 9 screws to remove from the Surround before you can get to the two PCBs inside, and with it, the microSD card. Four of the screws are tiny phillips heads, the remaining 5 are Torx T-5 screws. Two of the Torx screws are marked with void stickers that must be perforated to unscrew the screws, so be warned. Disassembly is relatively easy though.


Yeah, there are only 6 screws pictured here - one more T-5 on the back in white with VOID written on it, two phillips on the side.

The four phillips screws come out of the sides of the Surround, the Torx are all on the back side. There are three Torx screws holding the bottom piece of plastic in place, which comes off first with some gentle prying. The top part pries off easily after, exposing the two-PCB design of the Surround, and the microSD card slot. It’s under that piece of conductive tape. 

 

Peel it up, and there’s a standard push click-to-release microSD slot. Inside is a 16 GB SandDisk class 4 microSD card. I didn’t have any larger cards laying around, and I’m not sure why you’d go to an 8 GB card unless it was faster, but the usual procedure applies - you lose your data, but after a reset get the card and onboard storage in JBOD. 

There's been a bit of confusion about to what extent Microsoft supports users upgrading storage on their own with a microSD card of their choice. There's a Microsoft knowledge base document now posted about it, but the state of affairs still remains confusing. The long and short of it is that only certain microSD cards meet the requisite performance requirements to be considered compatible with WP7. SD card class refers solely to sequential write performance (the class number refers directly to the speed in MB/s), but says nothing about that all-important 4K random read/write speed. Because WP7 uses onboard flash and the storage card in a JBOD, it's possible that after you fill up the internal NAND and start writing on the microSD part of the storage space, some applications will feel fast, others slow. Interestingly, the card in the HTC Surround is just a class 4 16 GB SanDisk. 

The other interesting thing is that cards initialized on WP7 are locked to a specific device, and moreover, stop being recognized on the desktop - perhaps permanently. I took the card out of the Surround and spent considerable time trying to make it format, first on Windows, then OSX, and finally linux by trying to write  zeros and random data to the disk using dd. This failed, as I only managed to get 'medium not present' errors every step of the way - in fdisk, gparted, every trick I know for really nuking storage. If you decide to upgrade your WP7 device, just be warned that it's probably one-way for your card.

I didn’t go any further with the Surround’s disassembly, but it’s apparent that the SIM card slot and microSD card slot sit atop an EMI shield. Underneath that may well lie the SoC and baseband. There’s also clearly a pigtail running from the board at the bottom up to the top, along with connections from the PCBs to the plastic shields. 

The reason I didn’t hesitate to take this HTC Surround apart is that, honestly, it didn’t work properly. If you’ve been paying attention thus far, you’ve noticed I have two HTC Surrounds in some photos. The reason isn’t that I required two for testing (though that would certainly speed things up), it was that the original device I was given wouldn’t connect to the marketplace, instead constantly giving me an activation error and requiring entry of some six long codes. I later learned this device was improperly flashed or provisioned during manufacturing, and got another one which worked - just in time for our launch piece. Interestingly enough, the replacement device and this device show identical versions of everything in about:

The replacement Surround I’ve been using has worked perfectly thus far, but interestingly enough, performance changed subtly. 

Speakerphone: The HTC Surround's bitter irony Performance and Battery Life
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  • HobHayward - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    It's possible different cell providers include different size microSD cards.

    Also anandtech's spam filter is trying to not let me post this.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    You are correct, fixed :)

    Take care,
    Anand
  • deputc26 - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    I'd like to see this metric included:

    http://lovinitinaz.blogspot.com/2010/11/new-metric...
  • Meegulthwarp - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    I'd really like to see a comparison of the speeds the different class cards give. If installing a class 6 or 10 card vastly improves the performance of the device then I would gladly replace it but if it is only for bigger GBs then I'll pass as I'm quite happy with 8GB right now.

    Orange UK has an option to buy a 16GB card when you are purchasing a HTC Mozart online. Not sure what that's about as the cards aren't user replacable, might phone them up later on to ask.
  • bigboxes - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    that needs to use their headphones.

    *seated at the restaurant next to boxes*

    OMG! Listen to this!
    *giggle*
    Let's play it again, but this time turn it up louder!
    *boxes picks up teen's cell phone and smashes it into restaurant wall*

    This is not going to replace larger sets at home and on the road (on the bus, in the grocery store line, at the restaurant, etc.) you should use headphones.
  • kevith - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    Oh yes, in my country this is already quite trendy among teenagers. It can be realyy annoying.

    Seems like an ok phone though, still I think we´ve only seen the beginning. As before with first desktops, then laptops, the whole race for Mhz and faster hardware can start all over again in a new formfactor, The Pockettop...

    I´m 50 years old, it´s great to have lived half my life before computers entered the scen for home-users. I´m a muscician, and when I think of the things we used to dream, that computers would be able to, and what they actually are capable of today, I feel a little bit as if had been wittnessing the Wright Bros first attempts to fly.

    And now - well, in a short time anyway - maybe a studio-PC to carry in your pocket.

    Wonderful.
  • Nataku - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    i can see some use for this though, not that i want some jerk cranking it up in a bus full of already pissed off people... lol

    (kids learning to dance during break time some where down the hall might be one good application for this)
  • NYHoustonman - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    What the hell is that noise D:
  • banvetor - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    Dear Anand and Brian,

    Thank-you for the excellent phone reviews you are making. I wish to ask one thing though: in your reviews, can you make some points about the usability of each OS when you DO NOT have a data plan?

    I don't know how many of us are out there, but I use a lot my smartphone (music, taking pictures, gps, etc), but I simply have no need for a many-dollar-a-month data plan. I do browse the web and check e-mails also, but only when there is wi-fi... If I have some VERY IMPORTANT e-mail to check, then I pay for the KB of data...

    The most important points would be how dependent on a always-on data connection the OSes are... like the Zune music access, for instance. I have a Nokia N96 right now (planning to switch soon), and I just love that it has a map application that works offline, for instance (I know that no other phone has that, but I highlighted it just to make my point...).

    Thanks once again!
    Leo.
  • Gungel - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    With AT&T you have to get a data plan on your smartphone. Even if you buy a phone off contract, they will add a dataplan once the network checks your IMEI and recognizes it as such. I was on an old $15 a month unlimited data plan grandfathered in when SBC became AT&T. I recently bought an Android phone off contract and got a nice surprise on my next phone bill. The data plan is now $30 and is limited to 2GB a month.

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