The Doogee F5 and F3 are finely crafted, but just what goes into the design process? The company behind the F5 and F3 answers that question for us: the Doogee F5 and F3 are constructed by way of 1) CNC cutting and 2) die-casting.
The aluminum alloy used in the Doogee F5 and F3 are first melted under extremely high temperatures in the die-casting process and are then poured into a die-casting machine in which the hot aluminum alloy is molded into the shape of the F5 and F3 back covers. The die-casting process can leave some holes and marks in the aluminum mold, which then warrants the CNC cutting machine to strip away the excess metal fragments. After the stripping, the aluminum cover is cleaned to eliminate small metal fragments that can hang-off the cover, which is why the aluminum cover is sent to the assembly line. On the assembly line, the Doogee F5 and F3 are spray painted by 8 groups of 16 nozzles, which ensures that the spray-painting job is uniform.
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Next in the process is crafting the antenna slots, which, for many manufacturers, can be one of the most difficult parts of the process. The iPhone 4 “AntennaGate” problem was created simply because metal tends to interfere with antenna signals. The Doogee F5 and F3 take into account this complication and provide open antenna slots as a way to offset problems that exist with a premium metal design and stellar signal performance. HTC’s metal One smartphones have proven difficult in this regard in signal performance. Then, the back cover (matte) undergoes a few rounds of spraying, grilling, and drying the paints used.
Finally, the Doogee F5 and F3 undergo a diamond-cutting process whereby the cutting knife, in the shape of a diamond (for which “diamond-cutting” is named), carves out the cameras, volume keys, and speaker.
As can be seen, the Doogee F5 and F3 are crafted with the utmost care in mind. Did you know how intricate the design process was for these two smartphones? Does this change your impression(s) of the F5 and F3?
I just want the F3 limited edition to come out already :'(
What the F did I just read? This is one of the most embarrassing marketing fairytale stories read in a long time.All that matters is the final product not this ‘How it s made’ doogee edition .For the real one we can watch Discovery channel. This place becomes more and more Gizdoogee.com. Cuz this is Doogee we re talking about :all that matters is real and final product not this ‘Once upon a time there was a doogee factory that did nothing ever seen before’ ‘HTC’s metal One smartphones have proven difficult in this regard in signal performance’ WHAT? When was that ? God knows that i ve been using htc one phones in the past years and even for phone calling and guess what?no signal problems. Comparing doogee with htc is laughble and the whole dooging marketing campaign going on in the last days is just sad. Tell your friends to come with something smart if they can :like a smartphone not dumb stories.