The finding challenges OnePlus’s marketing narrative, signaling potential performance shortfalls that could influence buyer decisions and pressure the brand to improve its thermal engineering.
The video investigates OnePlus’s bold claim that the flagship OnePlus 15’s 360° cryo‑velocity cooling system – a vapor chamber – can be torn apart with bare hands. The presenter lifts the plastic‑back phone’s screen, exposing a massive graphite‑coated vapor chamber hidden beneath, and proceeds to split it, directly testing the advertisement.
Key observations include the chamber’s unusually large footprint but extreme thinness, a design choice that may accelerate heat transfer to the vapor but also reduces the chamber’s thermal mass and efficiency. The plastic back, unlike glass‑back competitors, simplifies disassembly, allowing the reviewer to access and manipulate internal components with minimal tools.
The reviewer quotes, “the vapor chamber of the OnePlus 15 is in fact terrible,” underscoring that the physical test contradicts marketing hype. By demonstrating the chamber’s fragility and questioning its cooling efficacy, the video highlights a gap between promotional language and real‑world performance.
If the cooling system underdelivers, OnePlus risks eroding consumer confidence and ceding thermal‑performance leadership to rivals such as Samsung and Apple, who emphasize robust heat‑dissipation architectures in their premium devices.
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