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Desmontaje del iPad Air 3

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Paso 5
iPad Air 3 Teardown: paso 0, imagen 1 de 2 iPad Air 3 Teardown: paso 0, imagen 2 de 2
  • With the 10.5-ification of this Air, the updated display gets Apple Pencil support—but only second-class, leaving the new Pencil 2 exclusively to the Pro line.

  • We also spot some extra adhesive near the top of the screen—aww, Apple you shouldn't have. No, seriously.

  • Responsible for turning your finger pokes into ones and zeroes, we have:

  • Likely Renesas (formerly Intersil) ISL24882B 8-Ch. TFT-LCD reference voltage generator w/ integrated EEPROM (seen in the 10.5" Pro)

  • Parade Technologies DP825 timing controller (previously seen in the 10.5" Pro)

  • Texas Instruments TPS65195 level shifter (seen in the Mini 5)

  • The size is similar, the Pencil support is similar, and the chips are similar to the 10.5" Pro. However, the Air is missing one notable Pro feature—the cool ProMotion 120 Hz display.

Con la nueva pantalla de 10.5 de este Air, la pantalla actualizada recibe el soporte de Apple Pencil, pero solo de segunda clase, dejando el nuevo Pencil 2 exclusivamente para la línea Pro.

También vemos adhesivo extra cerca de la parte superior de la pantalla. Ahh, Apple, no tenías por qué hacerlo. No, de verdad.

Para convertir tus huellas digitales en unos y ceros, tenemos:

Controlador Intersil 24882B (como se ve en el Pro 10.5")

Controlador de temporizador Parade Technologies DP825 (visto antes en el Pro 10.5" )

Convertidor de nivel Texas Instruments TPS65195 (como se ve en el Mini 5)

El tamaño es similar, el soporte para Pencil es similar y los chips son similares al de Pro 10.5". Sin embargo, al Air le falta una característica significativa del Pro: la óptima pantalla ProMotion 120 Hz.

[* black] With the 10.5-ification of this Air, the updated display gets Apple Pencil support—but only second-class, leaving the new Pencil 2 exclusively to the Pro line.
[* icon_note] We also spot some extra adhesive near the top of the screen—''aww'', Apple you shouldn't have. No, seriously.
[* black] Responsible for turning your finger pokes into ones and zeroes, we have:
- [* red] Intersil 24882B (seen in the [guide|92534|10.5" Pro|stepid=172881|new_window=true])
+ [* red] Likely Renesas (formerly Intersil) ISL24882B 8-Ch. TFT-LCD reference voltage generator w/ integrated EEPROM (seen in the [guide|92534|10.5" Pro|stepid=172881|new_window=true])
[* orange] Parade Technologies DP825 timing controller (previously seen in the [guide|92534|10.5" Pro|stepid=172881|new_window=true])
[* yellow] Texas Instruments [https://datasheet.octopart.com/TPS65195YFFR-Texas-Instruments-datasheet-15994572.pdf|TPS65195|new_window=true] level shifter (seen in the [guide|121589|Mini 5|stepid=234249|new_window=true])
[* black] The size is similar, the Pencil support is similar, and the chips are similar to the 10.5" Pro. However, the Air is missing one notable Pro feature—the cool ProMotion 120 Hz display.

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