YouTuber tests Apple Watch’s superior durability with a hammer: Table breaks before you watch

A YouTuber made claims about the age of Apple Apple Watch Ultra To test by repeatedly hitting a hammer with a drop tester, a bowl of nails and a sapphire crystal glass.

Decrox, a channel famous for product durability testing, first tested the Apple Watch Ultra by dropping it from a height of 4 feet. The Apple Watch Ultra has remained largely intact, save for a few scratches with the titanium casing of the strap. Next, the “Apple Watch Ultra” was mixed into a bowl of screws, again, unmarked.

TechRax tested the durability of the ‘Apple Watch Ultra’ sapphire crystal display by hitting it repeatedly with a hammer. In testing, the watch held up repeatedly until it finally cracked after repeated knocks, only after the table first suffered minor damage.

Although the “Apple Watch Ultra” screen was not damaged initially, the watch failed to turn on after repeated strikes. Failure to operate may indicate that some internal components may have been damaged, even if the glass was not broken in the first place. Of course, the test is unrealistic in depicting the typical use case of an “Apple Watch Ultra,” but it will reassure some customers of the robustness of the sapphire crystal display.

The Apple Watch Ultra claims to be the toughest, most durable and dangerous Apple Watch to date, and aims to compete directly with Garmin. In response to the Apple Watch Ultra, Garmin . said Battery life is measured in “months”, not “hours”. The Apple Watch Ultra starts at $799 and starts hitting customers Friday.

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