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Apr 12, 2001
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120644-Liquidmetal_SIM_Pin_500.jpg


Cult of Mac revealed yesterday that Apple had already started testing the manufacturing capabilities of Liquid Metal for one small component of the iPhone 3G -- the SIM eject tool. Atakan Peker the co-inventor of the alloy recognized the metal immediately when he saw it:
"That's my metal," he said. "I recognized it immediately. Take it from an expert, that's Liquidmetal."
Apple reportedly sourced the part from Liquidmetal Technologies as a test of the company's manufacturing capabilities. Not all the iPhone 3Gs shipped with the Liquidmetal SIM tool. European iPhone 3Gs were said to have shipped with regular steel pins.

Meanwhile, other former LiquidMetal Technology executives have speculated that Apple will be building their next iPhone out of the alloy.
“I think they’re going to make the iPhone out of it,” said Dr. Jan Schroers, the former director of research at Liquidmetal Technologies, the first company to commercially develop the space-age technology. ”It’s quite obvious from what Liquidmetal has done in the past and what the technology is capable of.”
According to Schroers, Apple could create intricate seamless enclosures by blow-molding the melted alloy like glass. The resultant structure could be thinner and stronger than existing Apple hardware enclosures.

Article Link: Liquid Metal Used in iPhone 3G SIM Tool, Next iPhone Too?
 
Very interesting! Would the next revision of the iPhone really incorporate this as a major part of the design? I'd think it would take longer before we saw it as the major metal that is used in it. But we'll see! :)
 
IMO - The iPhone is thin enough!

Any thinner and it will feel too flimsy in the hand, even if it is structurally rigid.
 
I had one of these with my 3g, still have it, have used it before.
 
"That's my metal," he said. "I recognized it immediately. Take it from an expert, that's Liquidmetal."

dang bro it's just an apple designed paperclip :D

anywho well if that's apparently it then...not bad work. I really couldn't tell a difference but then again I never had to take out the sim card.
 
if thats the crap they made the SIM removal tool out of, then it's flimsy and i wouldn't want something built from it. Maybe internals, but not externals.
 
Makes sense. Apple is already creating Star Trek devices, might as well use Star Trek technology to make them.
 
So is the iPhone 4's SIM eject tool LIquid Metal? Or do we have to smelt it down and see how much it bounces in a glass tube?
 
Baby steps, Apple :)

I dont know how much this is about making the device much thinner, but more about making it more structurally rigid and resilient to the day-to-day buffeting that a phone gets.

It was suggested that this metal reflects rather than absorbs considerably more kinetic energy than materials like aluminium and stainless steel, would that suggest that it would carry less shockwaves though the phone, to more likely protect that delicate lump of glass wedged inside?
 
shelf life of iPhone is at the max is 3 years (considering software updates for original iPhone) what is the point of making near unbreakable iPhones?

looks cool, does it have purpose?

may be use in macbook/macbookpros
 
Yeah, need to find mine to see if I got that.


shelf life of iPhone is at the max is 3 years (considering software updates for original iPhone) what is the point of making near unbreakable iPhones?

looks cool, does it have purpose?

may be use in macbook/macbookpros

There are all the an*l types that can't take any sign of use. OMG it has a scratch that I can see under a microscope, my life is ruined!
 
The metal's name is just so cool-- how can this thread not have more comments? Here's me adding to it. :D
 
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