Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster


A reported hardware failure affecting Apple's new in-house C1X 5G modem in the iPhone Air has surfaced online, marking the first known real-world incident involving the company's own baseband technology.

Apple-5G-Modem-Feature-16x9.jpg

The iPhone Air is the first iPhone model to ship with the Apple's internally designed C1X 5G modem, replacing Qualcomm's X75 modem used across the iPhone 16 lineup. The transition to Apple-designed modems follows years of development after Apple acquired Intel's smartphone modem business in 2019 and began building its own baseband engineering teams and intellectual property portfolio with the goal of reducing reliance on Qualcomm and increasing efficiency.

A newly reported incident was first documented in a support thread on Reddit spotted by Wccftech, where the user "itstheskylion" described waking up to find the device had completely lost cellular reception. According to the user, the phone displayed no signal bars and diagnostics indicated a hardware-level cellular problem.

The device had reportedly been kept in a case since purchase and showed no signs of physical damage. The user said that multiple troubleshooting steps were attempted, including restarting the device, performing a soft reset, and resetting network settings, but none restored cellular connectivity. The user also reported using a dual-SIM configuration with two different carriers, with neither connection functioning, which suggests the issue was not related to a carrier outage or network-specific disruption.

Baseband hardware failures are uncommon in modern smartphones due to extensive factory testing and validation processes, but large-scale production inevitably includes a small percentage of defective units. Apple has historically replaced and collected devices that exhibit unusual behavior for internal analysis, particularly when new technologies are involved. At present, there is no evidence that the issue is widespread or indicative of a broader reliability concern.

As Apple prepares for the next generation of iPhones, real-world reliability data from early deployments of the C1 and C1X modems is likely to be closely monitored internally as part of the company's ongoing development work. The C1X is expected to come to the iPhone 17e next month, while the iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone 18 Pro Max, and foldable iPhone are rumored to feature Apple's next-generation C2 modem.

Article Link: Apple's C1X Modem Faces First Reported Failure in iPhone Air
 
I don’t have an iPhone air but part of me wants this to end up being another “antenna-gate” type thing. Anything to wake Apple up. Lately, their products just seem to fall flat with very tiny incremental updates and kinda jank (iOS/siri issues) and just mid out of the gate. Just nothing exciting and nothing that doesn’t have a bunch of issues.
 
Last edited:
Just another reminder to never buy first-gen tech, from any company. No exceptions!
Really? Because of one single reported failure? Also the C1X isn't quite first gen (though I agree it's close)... it's an evolution of the C1 that was released earlier in the year.

The real question is how often his happens in general, regardless of it being an Intel modem, Qualcomm, or this new C line.
 
Really? Because of one single reported failure? Also the C1X isn't quite first gen (though I agree it's close)... it's an evolution of the C1 that was released earlier in the year.

The real question is how often his happens in general, regardless of it being an Intel modem, Qualcomm, or this new C line.

It's not specific to this. I stick by what I said; ignore first-gen tech. Simple.

Do whatever you want, of course, but I prefer to let the early-adopters deal with the issues.
 
We’re really reporting failures of individual handsets now?
I think they did that because it’s the iPhone Air being the first model with that modem. I agree with you, though. This really shouldn’t be news worthy, unless there was a proven track record with multiple instances of failure specific to and confined to the new modem verified by Apple. Of course this article will result in non Air users jumping on the logical fallacy bandwagon to condemn the Air (once again) and or say one should never buy first gen etc.
 
I don’t have an iPhone air but part of me wants this to end up being another “antenna-gate” type thing. Anything to wake Apple up. Lately, their products just seem to fall flat with very tiny incremental updates and kinda jank (iOS/siri issues) and just mid out of the gate. Just nothing exciting and nothing that doesn’t have a bunch of issues.
It's our fault for turning the tech cycle into entertainment. It was never supposed to be exciting beyond the possibilities it introduced and they've all played out long ago.
 
My wife has a 16e and I have a 13 mini, both running 18.7.x. At a restaurant in semi-rural Mexico, I had more cellular bars on my 13 than she did. At that point, I began to wonder about Apple’s modem. She often has worse connectivity than I do.
Having less bars than you doesn’t really mean anything, in and of itself. I have the 16e and 2 iPhone Airs and haven’t had any modem / service issues.
 
My wife has a 16e and I have a 13 mini, both running 18.7.x. At a restaurant in semi-rural Mexico, I had more cellular bars on my 13 than she did. At that point, I began to wonder about Apple’s modem. She often has worse connectivity than I do.

I had a 16e for about 6 months when my wife had a 15, and our experience was the opposite; in some difficult areas I actually kept a barely usable signal when she would drop completely... but when I say barely, I mean barely lol. I think modem comparisons are so incredibly difficult b/c there are seemingly unlimited factors that play into them at any given moment. 🤷‍♂️
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.