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Trial production of Apple's long-anticipated foldable iPhone, likely called the "iPhone Ultra," has run into a significant engineering hurdle centered on hinge reliability, according to a known leaker.

Foldable-iPhone-2023-Feature-Iridescent-1.jpg

The leaker known as "Instant Digital" posted on Weibo that the foldable device's hinge is consistently failing to meet Apple's quality control standards under conditions of prolonged, high-frequency opening and closing. The leaker described the mechanical wear issue as one that "must be resolved with absolute perfection; otherwise, progress will simply have to be stalled for the time being."

The hinge has been a key focus of Apple's foldable development for years. Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo first reported that the device would use Liquid Metal components in the hinge mechanism, with Dongguan EonTec serving as the exclusive supplier of the amorphous alloy. Instant Digital subsequently elaborated that the material, also known as metallic glass, features a disordered atomic structure that is more resistant to bending and deformation than traditional metals, and more durable than titanium alloy. This makes it suitable for a foldable's hinge.

Apple has previously used the material only in small components such as SIM ejector pins, so the iPhone Ultra would mark its first major use in a critical mechanical part. A subsequent report in January corroborated the liquid metal hinge plans, noting that Apple has been exploring the material for over 15 years, tracing back to a 2010 licensing deal with Liquidmetal Technologies.

Screen creasing is a concern that has followed the foldable smartphone category since its inception. Instant Digital says Apple has essentially accepted some degree of crease as inevitable, but that test results have demonstrated the device can maintain a visually crease-free state over the long term. That aligns with previous reporting: leaker "Fixed Focus Digital" reported in February that production orders had been placed with a crease depth under 0.15mm and a crease angle under 2.5 degrees. Apple has reportedly pursued eliminating the crease "regardless of cost," with engineering solutions including a dual-layer ultra-thin glass structure designed to spread mechanical stress across multiple layers, and advances in optically clear adhesive to keep display layers in precise alignment.

A follow-up post from the leaker suggested the hinge difficulties are unlikely to push back the device's expected release window somewhat, noting that there is still ample time remaining. That is broadly consistent with earlier reporting: DigiTimes reported in April that production was running roughly one to two months behind schedule, but that a fall 2026 launch remained on track, with mass production planned to begin in July. Apple is expected to announce the foldable iPhone alongside the iPhone 18 Pro models at its September event, though some reports suggest customer availability could slip as late as December.

In a third post, Instant Digital offered a note on the device's experience, suggesting that despite its larger form factor the foldable feels like an iPhone rather than an iPad when in use. The leaker added that the screen size offers limited practical utility for a stylus, casting doubt on whether Apple Pencil support would be a meaningful feature for the device.

The foldable iPhone is expected to feature a 7.8-inch inner display and a 5.5-inch cover display, with an A20 chip, C2 modem, Touch ID power button, and two rear cameras. Pricing is rumored to sit at around $2,000.

Article Link: Foldable iPhone Production Stalls Amid Hinge Issues
 
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Screen creasing is a concern that has followed the foldable smartphone category since its inception. Instant Digital says Apple has essentially accepted some degree of crease as inevitable, but that test results have demonstrated the device can maintain a visually crease-free state over the long term.

Translation:

Crease will definitely be there, like on all foldables, and you better buy AppleCare+
 
Article makes no sense and looks like AI crap

Problems with a timeline, and general errors in logic.

As an example of what would make sense:

"Apple has found a deficiency with the hinge and will postpone production until it's fixed"
or, "Apple has found production issues relating to the hinge, and will stop production until it's fixed"

The way it reads presently would suggest that Apple actually started production of something they may never release, as fixing a major issue to 'obtain perfection', is certainly not guaranteed.

This is all pretty obvious, but wtf (killing time 🙂 )
 
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The screen doesn't have to be foldable. There should be 2 independent screens that perfectly fit together, with no gap, after a fold.

I've seen this in objects 20+ years ago. It wasn't a screen, but some hardware like maybe a ruler that folded. 2 separate components that after a fold are apart by about 2mm, then click together. They are pulled back apart, then folded. If I can remember what objects these were, and can post pictures, I will.

Why can't a technique like this be used?
 
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I still think roll-out phones and tablets have a better future than folding ones.

On the other hand, I can easily see tri-fold phones and tablets in the future, quickly followed by an article from The Onion titled "**** Everything, We're Doing Five Folds".
 
I dunno if this will ever turn into a usable product.

But it’s certainly on pace to be the funniest Apple product launch in years. Maybe ever.
 
I mean it's great that they're working on getting it right, but I thought we solved hinge issues by now. Foldables are a fairly established market by now, right? I mean, Apple of all companies should have mitigated this before it happened.
 
Article makes no sense and looks like AI crap

Problems with a timeline, and general errors in logic.

As an example of what would make sense:

"Apple has found a deficiency with the hinge and will postpone production until it's fixed"
or, "Apple has found production issues relating to the hinge, and will stop production until it's fixed"

The way it reads presently would suggest that Apple actually started production of something they may never release, as fixing a major issue to 'obtain perfection', is certainly not guaranteed.

This is all pretty obvious, but wtf (killing time 🙂 )
I've thought this for a while especially when it comes to the RAM shortage articles because it's just a rinse and repeat naming some current or future models/configurations. Grok rewrite the previous M3U 512 GB Mac Studio article to be about the 256 GB variant. Now write it to be about the upcoming M5U 512 GB variant. Now rewrite that article to include a delay till October. An endless stream of nonsensical articles based on a poor supposition in the original article.
 
I hope this isn't true however a few weeks ago it was reported case manufacturers had been given dummy phone/specs to start designing cases, I cannot see that being the case if Apple were not happy about the hinges to be honest.
 
Folks, don't fall for the tutti-frutti, phoney-baloney, plastic banana, good time, rock-n-roll Apple PR "leaks," designed to build hype. The design has been finalized and locked-in for at least a year. There are always unique issues that appear when manufacturing at scale. Apple likes to spin these into "pushing the cutting edge" to astroturf hype. This is nothing more than working-through typical manufacturing adjustments.
 
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