Introduction
The Toniebox is a popular audio player for children over the age of three, with easy-to-understand touch controls and small figurines (Tonies) with integrated NFC that work sort of like cassettes or CDs (remember those?). Why stop at an unboxing when we've got a perfectly good teardown table?
Toniebox, prepare to meet your unmaker.
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The Toniebox is designed as an audiobook player for kids (age three and up), and packs the following features:
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Motion control, via slapping the side or tilting the box
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Small figurines (Tonies) with built in NFC chip
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Soft shockproof shell
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Internal storage for up to 400 hours of audio data
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7 hours battery capacity
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Magnets in the top of the Toniebox, and in the sockets of the Tonies, to keep them stuck together while you tilt and turn the box
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Because we're doing this teardown in Germany, we'll forgo the usual metric and imperial measuring shenanigans and simply give you a banana for scale.
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Each side of this cube measures 3/4 of a banana. (4.7 inches or 12 cm according to the manufacturer, who evidently did not have a banana handy.)
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Placing the banana onto the NFC sensor also doesn't play anything.
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The cover on the bottom is as stubborn as a pickle jar. But hey, we have seen far worse opening procedures! Besides, the rest looks pretty easy.
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A single Phillips screw holds the innards in the foam housing. Just the way we like it.
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Now for the "unboxing".
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The main components lift right out the top of the box. Easy peasy.
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Surrounding it is this black cage, which is also easy to take out and seems to serve mainly for crush protection.
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The squeezable foam bumper comes out last. According to the manufacturer, it's made from sustainable fabrics.
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The battery pack and motherboard are secured with just two standard Phillips screws.
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As printed on the back, the battery pack consists of three NiMH batteries with a capacity of 2,000 mAh.
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The manufacturer states this is a nickel-metal hydride (NiMH) battery pack—chosen because it's a safer technology than lithium-ion, and has almost no memory effect.
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We'll have a look at that motherboard just as soon as these stubborn little cables are unplugged. Let's see what all the noise is about! Onboard we find:
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Texas Instruments C3200R1M2 microcontroller serving as CPU and WLAN Receiver
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ISSI IS25LQ032 flash memory
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A Texas Instruments DAC3100 TI 7BI ANVS G4 Audio Controller
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Battery loading IC
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A TRF7962A RFID Reader to read the NFC chips from the Tonies
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NXP MMA8451 accelerometer for fast forward and rewind functions.
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And a Sandisk Edge 8 GB MicroSD card formatted as Fat32
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And now for the Toniebox's vocal
chordscords! -
Speaker specs: 4 Ω and 3 W. 'Nuff said. We weren't exactly expecting high fidelity audiophile hardware, after all.
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Just four more Phillips screws, and we can remove the cap.
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Inside the cap we find a second PCB, this one responsible for the NFC connection.
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Except for another socket to connect with the motherboard and another crossed out trashcan (WEEE-Symbol), there's nothing to see here.
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Next we inspect the volume control buttons, located (rather appropriately) in the ears of the Toniebox.
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Removing the outer layer of the ears, we find two small buttons.
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Because the buttons connect to the motherboard via a JST plug, we don't need to cut a wire. Lucky us.
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Bonus teardown: We perform minor surgery on the lion figurine and find, as expected, an NFC chip in his stomach.
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That's all, folks! We completely tore down our Toniebox, cut open the lion, and spread everything over the table. Here is our result:
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All the screws are standard Phillips screws and no adhesive was used.
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The box is easy to disassemble and reassemble, without damaging it or leaving any marks.
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Battery pack and flash memory are also pretty common and easy to change.
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The cap on the bottom is held in place by plastic clips, which could break if you open the box repeatedly.
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Some of the plugs sit in their sockets pretty tight and might be hard to unplug without damaging the sockets.
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The headphone jack is soldered to the motherboard.
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86 comments
Hallo.
Das finde ich mal Klasse.
Da muss ich unseren gar nicht mehr aufschrauben!
Und das ganze so detailiert.
Danke.
Großartig! Was verbirgt sich in der Ladestation? Ist da nur ein Halter für den Stecker oder auch eine Lade Elektronik?
In der Ladestation befindet sich lediglich der Stecker vom Netzteil – keine weitere Elektronik.
Vielen Dank für die sehr schöne und ausführliche Anleitung. Mir ist aufgefallen, dass ich die NFC-Chips der Tonies nicht mit meinem Handy (Samsung S6) auslesen kann. Weiß da jemand was genaueres drüber? Auch mit einem RFID Reader konnte ich den Chips keine Informationen entlocken.
Finden wir ebenfalls interessant und haben aber auch noch keine Möglichkeit gefunden, die NFCs auszulesen. Möchtest du hierzu vielleicht eine Frage im Forum stellen, da finden sich eventuell weitere Reaktionen und Beiträge. Danke
Ist ein ISO15693 Chip (vermute einen icode Slix-L)
Kann mit einem Multi-ISO reader ausgelesen werden.
Die tonies sind standardmäßig gesperrt und werden von der Toniebox entsperrt. Versuche, den Tonie kurz auf die Box zu klopfen und dann auszulesen.
Not really. The storage is the Micro SD. The NFC is only giving some kind of authorization I guess to download the file.
StuFF mc -
You’re right. We have corrected it. Thanks for the input :)
Tobias Isakeit -