For a deeper technical understanding of the hardware, the following official and community-driven papers and guides are essential:
Beyond the technical utility, the publication of schematics serves an ethical purpose. It addresses the growing crisis of e-waste by extending the functional life of hardware. When a device is "knowable," it is "fixable." When it is fixable, it stays out of a landfill.
Framework sells standalone mainboards (Intel and AMD variants) that users can repurpose into desktops, NAS devices, or robots. The schematic is mandatory for anyone designing a custom carrier board or enclosure for a repurposed Framework mainboard. framework laptop schematics
Even if you aren't an electrical engineer, this changes the secondary market. Broken Framework laptops will no longer be "parts only"—they will be "fixable." It creates a future where a skilled technician can resurrect a dead board with a soldering iron and a magnifying glass.
The total impact for the Framework Laptop is estimated to be a GWP of 200 kg CO2e and an ADP of 1.7E-02 kg Sb-e. ResearchGate For a deeper technical understanding of the hardware,
Framework's approach to schematics is a cornerstone of its mission to enable a "right to repair," making it an outlier in an industry that typically guards internal designs as trade secrets. While they provide detailed documentation and CAD files to the public, full board schematics are managed through a tiered access model to balance openness with complex intellectual property (IP) licensing agreements.
The availability of schematics is the cornerstone of the "Right to Repair" movement. While having physical access to the hardware is a start, understanding the logic behind the circuitry is what enables true longevity. With these schematics, a technician can trace a power failure to a specific chip rather than guessing. Broken Framework laptops will no longer be "parts
Follow-up: Expansion Card Developer Program or Mainboard Reuse? How Framework Laptop Broke The Hacker Ceiling - Hackaday