Screen opening is a daily task on any repair bench, and when the tool isn't right, there's always a risk of damaging the display or digitizer in the process. Mechanic CP7 solves this with a heating-free method: you clamp the phone into the frame, then turn the screws to slowly raise the suction cup and separate the screen. Since there's no heating plate involved, you skip the wait for the plate to warm up, and you remove the risk of a burnt flex cable that often comes with heated-plate or hot-air separators.The clamp design is universal, so both iPhone and Android devices fit into it. You squeeze the left and right clamps with one hand to position the phone, then tighten the screws on both sides with the other hand, and the whole device locks in place in under thirty seconds. This step matters a lot for technicians working daily on Samsung, Oppo, Vivo, Infinix, and Tecno devices, where screen sizes and curvatures differ from model to model.Once the phone is clamped in, you set the suction cup on the screen and turn the screws slowly. This gives you a millimeter-precise lift — no jerking or sudden pulling, which brings the risk of blowing out the glass down to zero. Whether it's a curved screen, a flat panel, a watch display, or a standard phone screen, the same mechanism works without any need to adjust temperature settings or wait around.Another useful feature is the flip-screen design. Changing a battery usually means fully removing the screen to disconnect the display flex cable, which raises the risk of cable damage. CP7's flip mechanism lets the screen flip directly with the suction cup still attached, without disconnecting the display cable, so battery replacement goes faster and safer — a real time-saver for shops that handle a high volume of battery change requests every day.For phones with a glass back cover, CP7 includes a built-in blasting pen. This pen efficiently loosens the back glass without any heat, so back cover removal happens with the same tool — no separate heating tool or UV curing setup required.Looking at where this tool fits in the repair workflow, it's used at the first step of screen replacement, digitizer change, battery replacement, and back glass repair. Any time you need case or display access before chip-level or board-level work, CP7 is the entry point for that. Since the operation is fully manual and needs no electricity, it's easy to carry along on field visits or in mobile repair vans — no need to hunt for a power source.The tool is also easy to pick up for newer technicians, since the process is straightforward: clamp, screw, suction, separate. Experienced technicians benefit from the speed when handling high-volume screen opening, which is routine in busy repair centers. Overall, Mechanic CP7 is a practical addition for shops that want a safer, faster screen-opening process without investing in a full heating station at every workbench.