Replacement dark gray front panel for iPod Classic 7G. Use it for scratched, cracked, dented, bent, worn, cloudy-lens, color-swap, or custom-build front-panel work after matching generation and color.
Product Overview
Choose this faceplate listing to restore the visible fit, finish, or mounting hardware on the iPod Classic 7th Generation.
Use the Compatible Variants table below to confirm capacity, color, case, or order-number fitment.
This is a fit-and-finish part, so choose it by physical damage, color, capacity, and missing hardware rather than by an electrical symptom.
This can also be a customization choice. Faceplates may be offered in custom non-OEM finishes, so buyers may replace a good panel for a custom build or refreshed exterior as long as the model and generation fitment match.
Choose Your Option
This part comes in multiple variants. Confirm your iPod's capacity, case depth, and order number before ordering.
Replacement dark gray front panel for iPod Classic 7th Generation. Fits all dark gray 7G front-panel models.
You're viewing this optionWhat Is Included
Included
Not Included
Center button cap (available separately).
Quick Buying Check
Buy this when
- Use this listing when the original faceplate (dark gray) is damaged, missing, mismatched, or physically worn; diagnose internal symptoms separately.
- The original front housing is cracked, broken, scratched, yellowed, brittle, missing, or cosmetically worn.
- The model, color, order number, and front-panel openings match this listing.
Diagnose first when
- Confirm the capacity before ordering: thin.
- Confirm the capacity match before ordering: 160GB.
Do not buy for
- You have a silver 7G model; use the silver faceplate listing.
- Do not use this part for: Silver 7G models use the silver faceplate listing.
- Confirm the color variant before ordering: Dark Gray.
What Brings People Here
Cleaner front appearance
Buyers use this listing for a cleaner factory appearance, color swap, or custom build after confirming the matching faceplate path.
Specifications & Fitment
Part Details
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Model Number | A1238 |
| EMC | EMC 2173 |
| Condition | Used — factory original Apple part. Normal cosmetic wear expected. |
Customization Options
Compatible Variants
| Order Number | Capacity | Color | Case | Compatible | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MB150LL/A | 120GB | Black | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MB565LL/A | 120GB | Dark Gray | thin | Yes— compatible | Stock match |
| MC040LL/A | 120GB | Silver | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MB147LL/A | 160GB | Black | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MC066LL/A | 160GB | Black | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MC297LL/A | 160GB | Dark Gray | thin | Yes | — |
| MB145LL/A | 160GB | Silver | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MC044LL/A | 160GB | Silver | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MC062LL/A | 160GB | Silver | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MC238LL/A | 160GB | Silver | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
| MC293LL/A | 160GB | Silver | thin | Yes— compatible | Color swap — physically fits, different color from original |
is not compatible with
- Silver 7G models use the silver faceplate listing
- Original 2007 thick 160GB Classic models use a different front route
Cosmetic Failure Signs — When to Replace
This front panel is a cosmetic part — it does not change how the iPod plays, charges, or syncs. Replace it when the damage is physical:
Not every buyer here is fixing damage: matching the original dark gray finish after another repair, restoring a gift or keepsake iPod to clean condition, and finishing a refreshed shell while the case is already open are just as common.
Visible faceplate damage
Use this part for scratched, cracked, dented, bent, worn, or pry-marked dark gray front panels.
Color match
This is the iPod Classic 7th Generation dark gray faceplate route. Apple's black 7G front is commonly described as dark gray or charcoal; use the silver listing for silver models.
Do Not Buy This Faceplate Yet If...
| Situation | Start here instead |
|---|---|
| Variant or capacity does not match this listing | Use the Replacement Faceplate (Silver) listing instead. |
| Liquid, corrosion, or board-side damage changes the diagnosis | Use this faceplate only when the visible fit, finish, or physical damage matches. |
| You see a folder icon, clicking noise, or restore failure | Confirm restore behavior, storage fit, and setup state before ordering this part. |
| A symptom points to a different part | thin. |
Install Overview
Before You Start
Before opening, lock the Hold switch so the orange bar is visible, then confirm the model and variant.
Treat case opening as the highest handling risk. Work around the seams gently and stop if the shell, clips, or internal stack resist.
Do not pull the halves apart or side-load board sockets. Reseat nearby ribbons and connectors before blaming a replacement faceplate.
Confirm thickness, color, screw points, and nearby hardware alignment before pressing the case fully closed.
Repair Guide
Repair guide summary: iPod Classic Front Panel Replacement.
Show all 30 installation steps
This iPod case is unusually hard to open without damaging major components. Its metal faceplate, metal backing, and thirteen metal clips make disassembly especially demanding. Caution: this opening method can significantly damage the iPod beyond its current condition. Keep a few extra plastic opening tools nearby, since they are easy to ruin while opening the case. Confirm that the hold switch is locked before you open the iPod.
Opening this iPod is challenging, so do not get discouraged if it takes a few tries. Watch the plastic opening tool tip angle as you insert it into the iPod; keep it as vertical as possible while still clearing the rear panel edge. Guide a plastic opening tool into the seam between the front and rear of the iPod.
Slide a second plastic opening tool into the seam between the iPod front and rear, keeping the two tools at least 1.5 inches apart.
Working at an angle, carefully slide a putty knife about 1/8 inch into the gap between the two opening tools. You will find thin metal rails running along the inside of the back panel, so work very carefully when inserting the putty knife. After the putty knife clears the rear panel lip, rotate it vertical and carefully but firmly work it straight down through the opening tool gap.
Press on the rear panel behind the putty knife with your fingers to reduce bending. Slowly flex the putty knife so most metal tabs along this side of the iPod release. The idea is to control how the rear panel bends instead of trying to prevent all bending. Any side bend should draw the rear panel lip away from the iPod, not push outward on the curved surface. This also releases as many side clips as possible.
Take the putty knife out, then place it closer to the iPod corner and use the same gentle wiggle method. If possible, do not bend the rear panel corner.
Near the headphone jack, guide a plastic opening tool into the seam between the front and rear of the iPod. It may be easier to flex the putty knife downward carefully to create more room for the opening tool. Be careful not to bend the rear panel corner.
Near the display center, carefully slide a metal spudger into the gap made by the plastic opening tool. A visible bump can form here in the rear panel and is hard to repair. When levering the tab free, pivot the metal spudger on the rear panel edge instead of bending the rear panel outward. With the metal spudger, release the single clip at the iPod top edge.
Near the other top corner, guide a plastic opening tool into the seam between the front and rear of the iPod
On the other side, use the opening tool to start the same case-opening gap. It may help to angle the tool stuck in the top corner to create enough room.
Take the opening tool out of the top corner, then slide it into the seam between the iPod front and rear. Keep at least 1.5 inches between the two tools, as on the opposite side.
Working at an angle, carefully slide a putty knife about 1/8 inch into the gap between the two opening tools. Again, you will find thin metal rails running along the inside of the back panel, so work very carefully when inserting the putty knife. After the putty knife passes the rear panel lip, turn it vertical and carefully but firmly work it straight down through the gap between the plastic opening tools. Press on the rear panel behind the putty knife with your fingers to reduce bending. Flex the putty knife just enough to make sure most metal tabs along this side of the iPod release.
The metal clips near the corners grip the front panel tightly. Release these clips before opening the iPod. Carefully slide a metal spudger into the area beside the stubborn metal clip.
Gently work the metal spudger downward until it is fully seated in the rear panel.
Gently start releasing the clip from the front panel. A visible bump can form here in the rear panel and is hard to repair. When levering the tab free, pivot the metal spudger on the rear panel edge instead of bending the rear panel outward.
Use the metal spudger to apply upward pressure under the front panel until the metal clip releases.
You will find two ribbon cables connecting the rear panel to the remaining iPod assembly. In the following step, take care not to damage these ribbon cables. In this step, grasp the front-panel assembly with one hand and the back panel with the other. Pause for a moment before continuing. Very gently release the remaining rear-panel clips by pulling the tops of the front and rear panels apart, using the iPod bottom as a hinge. Take great care not to damage the ribbon cables joining the two halves.
With a spudger, slide the connector upward where it holds the orange battery ribbon. Lift the locking bar only about 2 mm to release the cable. Move the orange battery ribbon out of its connector.
Set the rear panel beside the iPod, taking care not to strain the orange headphone jack cable.
Raise the hard drive with one hand to expose the headphone jack ribbon underneath. With a spudger, flip up the plastic tab securing the headphone jack ribbon in place. The tab can rotate up 90 degrees, releasing the ribbon cable. Move the orange headphone jack ribbon out of its connector. The rear panel is now released from the iPod.
After opening, check the lower-case clips. If any clip bent upward, press it back down gently so the rear case can close cleanly.
Use the broad, flat face of the metal spudger to press the clip downward. Work carefully so the thin metal rail does not tear away from the rear panel. While shaping these clips, take care not to damage any headphone jack parts.
Set the rear panel on its side on a clean, hard surface. Carefully but firmly press it downward, rolling the full lip edge back into place. You may need to repeat this several times to straighten the sides well. Slightly overcorrecting the case edges inward is better than leaving them too far out, because reseating the front panel will bend the rear panel back into alignment. Once the rear panel is restored to good condition, continue with the iPod repair.
Rotate the hard drive out of the framework, then set it with the connector facing upward. With a spudger, lift the small black locking tab for the orange hard drive ribbon. The tab rotates upward 90 degrees and frees the ribbon cable.
Move the orange hard drive ribbon cable straight out of its connector. If the replacement hard drive did not include rubber mounting brackets or foam padding, transfer those parts from the old drive.
Take out the three Phillips screws that secure the front panel to the metal framework.
Rotate the iPod 180 degrees and take out the 3 Phillips screws holding the front panel to the metal framework on the other edge.
In this step, gently work around the edges of the device to separate the front panel from the gray metal framework. You may meet some resistance, as you will find a mild adhesive used to help hold the two parts together.
Lift the full framework away from the front panel; it carries the screen, logic board, and click wheel. Confirm the click wheel button is seated before reinstalling the framework in the front panel.
The front panel is now released from the iPod.
After This Repair
| Check | What to do |
|---|---|
| Check front fit | Confirm the front housing sits flush and the display, wheel, and button openings are aligned. |
| Watch nearby parts | Close the case without forcing tabs or pinching the display, control, battery, or storage stack. |
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I choose the right cosmetic part?
Match the model generation first, then confirm capacity 120GB / 160GB and color Dark Gray, clip layout, and nearby hardware before ordering.
Will this fix internal electronics symptoms?
No. Housing and trim parts are for fit, finish, color, alignment, or visible damage. Diagnose power, storage, audio, screen, and control faults separately.
How do I confirm this is the right exterior part?
Match the exact iPod Classic 7th Generation model, visible part shape, color or finish goal, and any capacity or case-depth note before ordering Replacement Faceplate (Dark Gray).
Does color change physical fitment?
Color alone does not block fitment when the same model, generation, and part shape match. It will only change the visible finish.
Worth Knowing
- Apple black/front dark models are commonly described as dark gray or charcoal.
- Thin 7G case depth is 10.5 mm / 0.41 in.
Why people land on this part
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