Google Pixel 5 durability test looks for metal under layers of plastic

 Google's best quality cell phone of it is certainly not a genuine leader, since it's feeling the loss of the best in the class chipset. All things being equal, the Pixel 5 is intriguing to find in an ocean of comparative mirror sandwich gadgets. On its site, Google continues promoting how the telephone is made out of metal, so YouTuber Zach from JerryRigEverything chose to go chasing for that metal, during one of his brand name solidness testing recordings. 

Spoiler alert: what you're contacting when you hold the Pixel 5 isn't metal, beside the force button. The remainder of the telephone has layers of plastic concealing that metal, on the off chance that we disregard the screen which is clearly covered with glass. 

Google considers this a "bio tar" finish, which is most likely an extravagant name for a plastic amalgam. You need to dive pretty deep to discover any hint of metal. Be that as it may, it is there on the off chance that you burrow enough. The remote charging curl is enjoying the good life under the thick plastic layer. 

Anyway, onwards to the testing itself - since there's Gorilla Glass 6 on the screen, there are scratches to be found at level 6 on the Mohs hardness scale, with more profound furrows at level 7. 

At that point... We're set for an unusual land, where batteries smoke and telephones are left in CH3)2CO for 60 minutes. Watch the video above to see the entirety of the trickeries, including whether the Pixel 5 can withstand the celebrated twist test.