 Hello, this is Nick from Laptop Media, and today we will show you how to open the Dell Latitude 13, 7340. To access the internals you have to undo 8 captive Phillips head screws. Then raise the bottom plate with a lever tool in the hinge zone to open a gap. After that, pry the back with a thin plastic tool, and then work your way around the sides and the front. Please remember, it would be of great help to us if you just hit the like button and subscribe to our channel. That would motivate us to make even more and better videos for you. Our laptop has the optional 57 watt hour battery, the default model is a 38 watt hour variant, before removing it detach the connector from the motherboard. You have to pull hard the connector cap to unplug it, apply a bit of pressure with your hand in the zone with a metal shroud to prevent the motherboard from lifting up with the connector. Then undo the 5 Phillips head screws that fix the battery to the base. The optional capacity is enough for 10 hours of either web browsing or video playback. The result is good. To achieve that, you have to apply the balanced preset in the Windows Power and Battery menu and select the optimized power plan in the BIOS. On the left of the cooling fan is placed the W1 slot for optional 4G or 5G connectivity. Part of the cooling as well as the memory and the NVMe drive are covered by a metal shroud. There is a service cap on top of the SSD for easier upgrading. Undo the single Phillips head screw and lift the small metal plate away from the chassis. It has a thermal pad on the inside to cool down the SSD. With that out of the way you can simply pop the big shroud with a plastic lever tool. The memory is solid. At least you get up to 32GB of LPDDR5, 4800 MHz RAM that works in dual channel mode. In terms of storage there is just one M.2 slot for 2230 Gen4 SSDs. The cooling is simple but it seems enough for a laptop with integrated graphics. It has one fan, a single heat pipe, one heat sink and a heat spreader.