Guy - I think that's what Casey Neustat tried, and he ended up with a completely dead iPod. Better to send it to Apple or, if the third party supplier
guarantees their work absolutely, send it to them. If you mess it up, that's it.
Wonder if Apple will learn from this and change the design slightly to actually allow for battery replacement by the user? Makes sense to me, though obviously, not as much potential profit to Apple, from those who either give up and buy new iPods, or cough up the $99 to pay Apple for the battery replacement. Customer goodwill is worth a lot too, though. And I think our electronics manufacturers need as much encouragement as possible to STOP manufacturing disposable electronics, full of toxic junk that ends up in our landfills or incinerators (and eventually the air we breathe). As the owner of 4, count 'em, FOUR DVD players in less than a year (only one still functioning), I can attest to the frustration of owning a piece of electronics that will cost more to repair than it will cost to replace! One of the "dead" ones still plays audio CD's, two refuse to play anything. Repair costs typically start at $70 or so. Warranties on these things are often 1 year parts and 90 days labor. Gee...which is the expensive part of that equation? I never buy extended warranties on anything, but with the last DVD I bought a $10 2-year warranty from BestBuy.