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'iPhone Ultra' Could Be Industry's Most Repairable Foldable

The leaker "Instant Digital" today revisited their February design report on the foldable iPhone, claiming the device's internal design will make it the easiest-to-disassemble and easiest-to-repair foldable phone in the industry.

Foldable iPhone 2023 Feature Iridescent 1
In a new post on Weibo, Instant Digital said the device's "incredibly rigorous underlying engineering logic" has "truly paid off," and predicted that teardown videos will vindicate the earlier claims once the device ships. The leaker described the internal component stacking as "logical yet elegant," and said the design eliminates the complex ribbon cable routing that typically complicates disassembly in competing foldables, achieving instead what they called "a truly high level of modularity."

The comments appear to be a callback to Instant Digital's February 2 report, which offered several design details about the foldable iPhone, including volume buttons relocated to the top edge of the device, Touch ID and Camera Control on the right side of the device, an iPhone Air-style camera plateau, a single punch-hole front-facing cameras, and just two color options. That report also touched on the device's internal design language, which the leaker now suggests is even more significant than readers initially appreciated.

At that time, Instant Digital explained that the device's motherboard is apparently located on the right side of the device. As to not run cables across the screen to the left side for the volume buttons (where they are located on all other iPhone models), Apple is said to have decided to run them directly upwards, which maximizes internal space.

The internal structure purportedly features an innovative stacked design, with the space being almost entirely dedicated to the display and battery. It is also said to feature the biggest battery ever used in an iPhone.

Instant Digital has reported on the foldable iPhone for quite some time. The leaker previously claimed the device will be around $2,000 at launch, that it will be eSIM-only, that Apple's foldable displays were nearing production in March, and that the device will ship in three storage capacities. Most recently, the leaker said Camera Control is seen internally as a key feature of the foldable iPhone.

The foldable iPhone, rumored to be called the "iPhone Ultra," is expected to launch alongside the iPhone 18 Pro and ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max in the fall. The device is said to feature a 7.8-inch inner display and a 5.5-inch cover screen, the A20 chip and C2 modem, ‌Touch ID‌, and two rear cameras.

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Top Rated Comments

Happy_John Avatar
4 weeks ago

It’s all the EU’s fault!
They’re demanding phones that are easy to repair and have surely forced Apple to spend billions on development costs.
So if the iPhone Foldable ends up being as expensive - or even more expensive - than the competition, you know who to direct your anger at.

Sustainability, sure. But please, not at an extra cost.

/s
Yep forcing corporations to focus on benefits to consumers is just communism.

USB-C is far worse for the world than proprietary connectors.

Not having to scape adhesive goo off the inside of cases ruins the satisfaction of repairing your own property.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
con2apple Avatar
4 weeks ago
It’s all the EU’s fault!
They’re demanding phones that are easy to repair and have surely forced Apple to spend billions on development costs.
So if the iPhone Foldable ends up being as expensive - or even more expensive - than the competition, you know who to direct your anger at.

Sustainability, sure. But please, not at an extra cost.

/s
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
lepetitnicolas Avatar
4 weeks ago
Nokia 3310 owners trying to remember when was the last time they had to repair their phone. It could flip but wasn't a flip phone. It was smart but wasn't a smartphone. It was just the best phone EVER and it even had snaaaaake !!!!!! SSSNNAAAKE !!!!!

Attachment Image
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
contacos Avatar
4 weeks ago
I actually prefer on the spot express replacements than repairs 🤗

I am also on my 3rd Foldable, using 2 simultaneously right now and so far I have not had a single issue with any of them. One of them even survived an unexpected desert sand storm in Oman showering me in sand from above.

Just like with any device it's also about luck. I still remember when a friend got his iPhone 5 or so back in the day and it slipped out of his pocket while he was tying (?) his shoe and the screen shattered from like a 10 cm drop on the first day
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
4 weeks ago
“It’s our least annoying glue ever! We think you’re really going to love these proprietary screws!”
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Happy_John Avatar
4 weeks ago
Designed to be repairable is one side of the coin.

The other aide of the coin is availability of replacement parts.

The Mac Pro 6,1 had no issues with its design as regards repairability - the issue was availability of parts, especially GPU cards. It’s not hugely difficult to replace the storage module in a current Mac Studio, the problem is getting a storage module.

Designing a phone to be easily repairable is not much use if parts are not easily available at appropriate prices. If parts are difficult to source or highly expensive, the phone will become ewaste and simply be replaced, irrespective of how well it is designed.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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