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While iFixit was busy tearing down the iPhone 7 Plus, the experts at Chipworks opened up an iPhone 7 to take a close look at the chips included on the device's logic board.

The new A10 Fusion chip at the heart of the iPhone 7 is the most significant feature to be examined, with Chipworks noting the chip is indeed manufactured by TSMC with a die size of roughly 125 square millimeters. The iPhone 7 is also confirmed to include 2 GB of memory, compared to the 3 GB found on the iPhone 7 Plus.

iphone_7_a10.jpg

The A10 is also extremely thin, due in large part to the InFO packaging technique used by TSMC which was seen as a major factor in TSMC winning exclusivity for A10 production.
[W]hatever node is being used, the A10 processor is incredibly thin, giving credibility to the reports that TSMC's InFO packaging technique is being used.

The A10 sits below the Samsung K3RG1G10CM 2-GB LPDDR4 memory. This is similar to the low power mobile DRAM as the one we found in the iPhone 6s. Looking at the X-rays we see the four dies are not stacked, but are spread out across the package. This arrangement keeps the overall package height to a minimum. Assembled in a package-on-package assembly with the A10 InFO packaging technique reduces the total height of PoP significantly.
On the cellular modem side, Chipworks found an Intel part that is likely the XMM7360, paired with two SMARTi 5 RF transceiver chips and a power management chip also from Intel.

As we previously noted, Apple is producing two different models of both the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, with models for AT&T and T-Mobile users not including support for CDMA networks. This is apparently a result of a modem supplier split between Intel and Qualcomm, with Intel's current chips unable to support CDMA networks due to licensing issues. iPhone 7 and 7 Plus models with Qualcomm modems can support both GSM and CDMA networks.

Finally, Chipworks notes that flash storage for the iPhone 7 is also being at least dual-sourced, with Hynix and Toshiba chips being found in its two teardown phones.

For the rest of the details on the chips found in the iPhone 7, check out Chipworks' full rundown.

Update: Chipworks has confirmed the A10 Fusion chip is still made on TSMC's 16 nm FinFET+ process and has shared an annotated die shot of the chip.

a10_die_shot.jpg


Article Link: iPhone 7 Teardown Reveals 'Incredibly Thin' A10 Chip With 2GB RAM, Intel Modem
 

Mac 128

macrumors 603
Apr 16, 2015
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It has 3 audio amps!

The iPhone 7 still uses the same Apple/Cirrus Logic 338S00105 Audio Codec as in the iPhone 6S, but the Audio Amplifier has changed to the new 338S00220. (previously 338S1285).

We found not just 2 but 3 Audio Amplifiers - we speculate there is one audio amplifier for for each of the two speakers, and the third amplifier is for the headphone via the Lightning port.

The third Audio amplifier is situated next to the Applications Processor Module with 3 black blobs on it. It was discovered during de-soldering of the A10 applications processor. When the blob was scraped off, it was an ‘oh wow, there are 3 audio amps!’ kind of discovery. Chipworks has a Basic Functional Analysis Report of the Apple/Cirrus Logic 338S1285.
 

Superhappytree

macrumors 6502a
Sep 10, 2015
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2 gb.. Looks like the iPhone 7 Plus is the way to go if you'd ever plan to get one...

Main reason I'm getting one. I was originally going to pre order the 7 as I much prefer the size, but saw an article the day before saying the Plus has 3GB so quickly changed my mind. The double camera is just an added bonus to me.
 
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LordVic

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Sep 7, 2011
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Amazing how far and ahead Apple is in the chip architecture in the mobile world and yet all you have is people complaining about the headphone jack...

The A10 is an absolutely fantastic SoC. But we're starting to hit the law of dminishing returns for mobile phone CPU performance. An A9 to A10 is not likely going to yield significantly large performance gains in everyday life because the A9 itself was already blazingly fast. when your App load times for most normal apps is in the miliseconds, a 10% increase isn't going to be really noticed.

Take away the most commonly used port in the world for audio, and people are going to notice.

So no, it's not amazing that the focus is on a functionality removal, and not an incremental update thats not going to be noticed by most.
 

Ghost31

macrumors 68040
Jun 9, 2015
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The A10 is an absolutely fantastic SoC. But we're starting to hit the law of dminishing returns for mobile phone CPU performance. An A9 to A10 is not likely going to yield significantly large performance gains in everyday life because the A9 itself was already blazingly fast. when your App load times for most normal apps is in the miliseconds, a 10% increase isn't going to be really noticed.

Take away the most commonly used port in the world for audio, and people are going to notice.

So no, it's not amazing that the focus is on a functionality removal, and not an incremental update thats not going to be noticed by most.

...a faster processor is for more than just app load times.
 

decimortis

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Aug 28, 2007
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How so? For the typical user, would that extra 1GB make a significant difference to them?

Probably won't make much of a difference today, but 3GB is a decent bit of future-proofing.
Speaking of future, October 5th can get here ANY day now. I wants my shiny.
 
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TechZeke

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Jul 29, 2012
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2 gb.. Looks like the iPhone 7 Plus is the way to go if you'd ever plan to get one...

I'm not sure why people are so worry about RAM on iOS. 1GB on the 6 was definitely too little, but 2GB is more than enough on my 6S Plus.

What are people doing on iOS with 4.7" screen that requires 3GB of RAM?
 

Waxhead138

macrumors 6502
May 18, 2012
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Not everyone wants a 5.5 iPhone just because it has 3 GB of Ram. 2GB is still adequate for some iPhone users.
It's also a very relative thing based on what you're used to. I've had my 6 since its launch...so I'm still in the 1GB Memory section of Apple world. I have no desire to carry around a 5.5" screen anyway, so that rules me out...but I'm sure that 2gb when I get my 7 will keep me happy for the next year if not 2 years. It will be amazing to me, but maybe not to those who are used to 2gb in their phone.
 
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