It’s no surprise that the people over at repair guide portal iFixit have already started their ritual teardown of Apple’s new iPad Pro. The new device features a larger 12.9-inch display, the 3rd generation 64-bit A9X chip, and other upgraded internals, but are there any other new surprises inside the iPad Pro?
Immediately the team noticed a different layout for the logic board making things a little different when cracking open the new iPad Pro compared to previous generations:
This isn’t quite what we’re used to! With the logic board situated in the center of the iPad, the display cables connect in the very middle, we can’t even lay the display down while we work… Instead we have to support the weight of the display while taking out a few screws securing the display cable bracket…. Here’s a first in iPad history. We have to remove the logic board EMI shielding to remove the logic board itself.
And here is a list of components iFixit found inside that aren’t publicly detailed by Apple:
- 2 × Broadcom BCM15900B0
- NXP Semiconductors 8416A1 Touch ID Sensor
- Parade Technologies DP695 Timing Controller
- This is likely an iteration of the DP665 LCD timing controller found in the iMac Retina 5K, modified to support the display’s variable refresh rate.
- Texas Instruments TPS65144 (Likely an iteration of the TPS65143A LCD Bias found in the Air 2)
One thing iFixit notes in its teardown is that the speaker boxes for the device take about half the space as the battery cells. “Premium audio means reduced battery life,” the team notes.
One of the iPad Pro’s speakers
We’ll be updating this post as iFixit makes more discoveries of what’s inside Apple’s latest tablet..
Filed under: iOS Devices Tagged: A9x, iFixit, internals, iPad Pro, repair, teardown
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