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Desmontaje del iPad Pro 10.5 "

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Paso 5
iPad Pro 10.5" Teardown: paso 0, imagen 1 de 2 iPad Pro 10.5" Teardown: paso 0, imagen 2 de 2
  • To the naked eye, this display doesn't look all that different from previous generations. And with a resolution of 264 ppi, it's not the first Retina display iPad.

  • All the same, 120 Hz is a blisteringly fast refresh rate for this many pixels, which is probably why it needs four (!) connecting cables. (Its ginormous older brother got by with just two.)

  • The slimmer bezel and True Tone tech also set this display apart—but we're here for the guts. After melting off a couple shields, we find:

  • Intersil ISL24882B TFT-LCD Vref generator/programmable gamma buffer (likely)

  • Parade Technologies DP825 timing controller (likely an upgraded version of Parade ICs we've spotted in previous iPad Pros)

  • Texas Instruments TPS565158 display power management

  • Texas Instruments TMP456 remote/local temperature sensor

A simple vista, esta pantalla no parece tan diferente de las generaciones anteriores. Y con una resolución de 264 ppi, no es el primer iPad con pantalla Retina.

De todos modos, 120 Hz es una velocidad de actualización increíblemente rápida para tantos píxeles, por lo que probablemente necesite cuatro (!) Cables de conexión. (Su hermano mayor ginormous sobrevivió con solo dos.)

El bisel más delgado y la tecnología True Tone también distinguen esta pantalla, pero estamos aquí para las agallas. Después de derretir un par de escudos, encontramos:

Intersil 248828 R703CM

Controlador de tiempo Parade Technologies DP825 (probablemente una versión mejorada de Parade ICs que vimos en iPad Pros anteriores)

Texas Instruments TPS565158

[* black] To the naked eye, this display doesn't look [guide|52599|all that different|stepid=115415|new_window=true] from previous generations. And with a resolution of 264 ppi, it's not the first Retina display iPad.
[* black] All the same, 120 Hz is a blisteringly fast refresh rate for this many pixels, which is probably why it needs ''four'' (!) connecting cables. (Its ginormous older brother got by with just two.)
[* black] The slimmer bezel and True Tone tech also set this display apart—but we're here for the guts. After melting off a couple shields, we find:
- [* red] Intersil 248828 R703CM
+ [* red] Intersil ISL24882B TFT-LCD Vref generator/programmable gamma buffer (likely)
[* orange] Parade Technologies DP825 timing controller (likely an upgraded version of Parade ICs we've spotted in previous [guide|52599|iPad|stepid=115421|new_window=true] [guide|60939|Pros|stepid=127346|new_window=true])
- [* yellow] Texas Instruments TPS565158
+ [* yellow] Texas Instruments TPS565158 display power management
+ [* green] Texas Instruments [link|https://www.ti.com/product/TMP468|TMP456] remote/local temperature sensor

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