Ingenious Hacker Revives the Nokia 3310 with a USB-C Charging Port For Just $26

The Nokia 3310 is the closest thing consumer tech has to a cockroach. Built to survive drops, spills, and the passage of time itself, this chunky brick of a phone has been immortalized in memes, internet folklore, and the memories of anyone who lived through the early 2000s. It was the phone you could drop down a flight of stairs and find in perfect working order at the bottom. The one that could take a direct hit from a hammer and still let you play Snake. Even its battery life felt mythical—weeks on standby, days of talk time, all while today’s smartphones barely last till dinner.

But for all its resilience, the 3310 is a relic of a bygone era. The proprietary charging port, once a symbol of Nokia’s dominance, now feels like an artifact from an ancient civilization. Try finding a compatible charger today, and you’ll quickly realize that nostalgia alone isn’t enough to keep this tank operational. That’s where a clever new mod steps in—one that breathes just a little modern life into the legendary handset without compromising its rugged soul.

Designer: Andrea Salvatori

A YouTuber by the name of Andrea Salvatori has designed a USB-C adapter that seamlessly replaces the 3310’s old-school charging module. This isn’t some clunky, solder-heavy hack job; it’s a sleek, drop-in upgrade that fits like it was meant to be there. The process is refreshingly simple: open up the phone, pop out the microphone from the original charging module, install the new one, and screw everything back together. That’s it. No microcontroller trickery, no finicky voltage regulation—the 3310 happily sips power from any standard 5V USB-C source like it was always meant to.

It’s almost surreal to see this fusion of old and new. A phone that once relied on a forgotten charging standard can now share a cable with your laptop, tablet, or modern smartphone. There’s something poetic about plugging a Nokia 3310 into the same charger as a MacBook, as if two entirely different technological eras have found common ground. The best part? It doesn’t just work—it works elegantly. The module retains the spring-loaded contacts of the original design, meaning no loose wires, no risk of breaking delicate components. It’s as close to an official upgrade as you can get without Nokia (or now its parent company HMD) itself stepping in.

Beyond the sheer novelty of it, this mod has practical appeal. If you’re one of the rare few who still owns a 3310—whether for nostalgia, minimalism, or just a desperate need for a phone that won’t shatter on impact—this USB-C upgrade makes keeping it charged effortless. No more hoarding 20-year-old adapters or scouring eBay for questionable third-party chargers. You can toss a single USB-C cable in your bag and know that, should the need arise, your trusty Nokia will be ready to go.

Just to clear the air, we’re talking about the classic 3310 phone from 2000, not the recently refurbished one that rocks a color screen and an (ugh) MicroUSB connector.

Of course, not everyone has the patience or tools to crack open an old phone and swap parts around. That’s why Andrea has made the USB-C module available for purchase. For just €25 ($26.2 USD), you can order one and bring your 3310 into the modern age, no engineering degree required. It’s the kind of upgrade that sparks joy—not because it adds flashy new features, but because it respects the integrity of the original device while making it just a little more practical.

And broadly, this is what I love about the tech community’s ability to come up with the most unique solutions in the search for true consumer-friendliness. Even something as small as replacing the charging port on a device is an apt act of rebellion, because it means doing something that benefits YOU, not the corporate that sold you the device.

We’ve seen mavericks lead the way in the past too, like our friend Ken Pillonel who managed to fit a USB-C on the iPhone and the AirPods YEARS before Apple actually did so. Pillonel even went as far as open-sourcing the circuitry to allow others to perform the same mods. Now all I ask is that someone put Qi2 wireless charging on the back of the Nokia 3310!

The post Ingenious Hacker Revives the Nokia 3310 with a USB-C Charging Port For Just $26 first appeared on Yanko Design.

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