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InvertedGoldfish

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Was reading about the scratched iPhone


Heard some talk about heat dissipation on another thread

Read the leather case “patina” thread

I’d love to see a iPhone with a natural copper body, just copper and glass, let the copper get that beautiful patena, every one would be different, easy to buff back to new if you like with simple polish rag, dissipates heat well too
 
Imagine your iPhone turning green-cyan after few years of use, now that would be a sight. I already see people here having a thread where they post whose iPhone aged the best

Oh and your hands would probably smell like after you've been handling coins each time after using your iPhone. Those of you who handled coins know that smell
 
I think that’d be sick. Idk why everyone is hating on this idea. He never said “replace all iPhones with copper.” It would be a really cool option and I’d be down to buy one - if you don’t want one, don’t buy one. Problem solved 🤷🏼‍♂️

It's a bad material to build a phone, or anything, with. As stated, it would turn green within a few months, and it's so soft the corner would completely flatten out on the first drop. Thats why brass (zinc+copper) is used for durability instead of copper. Bronze (tin+copper) if it's exposed to weather.

Brass would be a decent material. I think it looks too much like yellow gold, which I can't stand, but it would be durable.
 
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Copper is pretty soft, and it tarnishes when exposed to moisture and salt.

Aluminum is fine and apple should just stick to it.
Brass or bronze would be a nice-looking phone, but it would be heavy and prone to tarnishing. There are aluminum-magnesium alloys that might be lighter than whatever aluminum alloy Apple is using now.
 
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Perhaps not pure CU but an alloy combined with MG, to resist oxidation, but then curious of the low density and high chemical reactivity. Then there’s AU.
 
In addition to the other good points, a fair % of the population experiences an allergic reaction with prolonged exposure to copper. Stainless steel and titanium are far safer, which is why those metals are often used for implanted medical devices. And while some folks can also get an allergic reaction to aluminum, it's rarer and the oxidation layer prevents it.
 
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