its not recommended since you can lose some of the pieces and/or re-assemble it incorrectly and make the object obsolete.
Eli Whitney's hobbies included taking apart things to see how they worked and then putting them back together. It is rumored that he took apart a watch that belonged to his father while still in his teens and then put the watch back together. Eli Whitney also liked to build things by trial and error.
because being systematic means if you're taking something apart, you need to have a plan for putting it back together
No, it doesn't. The structure of the cube is designed so that you can take it apart and put it back together. Most world-record holders take apart their cubes to lubricate them. So, yes, it is perfectly fine to disassemble to a Rubik's cube.
Engineers will often use reverse-engineering to solve problems. For example, by taking things apart to determine an issue, finding a solution and then putting the object back together again. Engineers know how things work, and so they constantly analyse things and discover how they work.
Fragmentation is breaking apart. Reassembly is putting back together.
Basically you can't. There are so many parts in an iphone that are produced just for that, that you can't get anywhere else. Not much point in buying an Iphone, taking it apart and putting it back together again...
Try un-screwing the back and taking out the battery and putting it back in again.
To do it right, so it will last another 200"000 miles would cost about 1,700 dollars for machine work and all the extra parts. ANd that is you pulling the engine and taking it apart and then you putting it back together and back in the truck.
Try taking the battery out, then putting it back in and turning your phone back on. That should work.
yes u can i used the back of a hamer to "pop" it off
They turn on and off by taking the battery out and putting it back in or if it has a switch then you could use that.
The snapping bow represents Nwoye's spirit. It is much like putting too much load on one's back and breaking it. Instead of crying out in sadness, there is the gentle submission to despair.