iPhone 7 Plus Teardown Confirms Longer-Lasting 2,900 mAh Battery and 3GB of RAM

iFixit has published a work-in-progress iPhone 7 Plus teardown that provides a closer look at the smartphone's internal components, including the battery, display, cameras, logic board, and Taptic Engine for the new pressure-sensitive Home button. Interestingly, the smartphone now opens to it side rather than to the top.

iphone-7-plus-teardown
iFixit said the adhesive strip sealing the iPhone 7 Plus is "considerably stronger" than the strip it found in the iPhone 6s Plus, while opening the device revealed lots of glue running along the perimeter of the smartphone. The teardown experts believe the excess glue could be part of Apple's efforts to add water resistance.

The space previously occupied by the 3.5mm headphone jack on older iPhone models now houses the Taptic Engine and a plastic bumper internally covering the cosmetic speaker holes to the left of the Lightning connector. The small plastic piece is likely another waterproofing measure by Apple.

The teardown confirms the 5.5-inch model has a 2,900 mAh battery, which is just over 5% larger than the 2,750 mAh battery in the iPhone 6s Plus. The battery is rated at 3.82V and 11.1Wh of energy. Apple says the iPhone 7 Plus has up to 1 hour longer battery life than the iPhone 6s Plus.

iphone-7-plus-teardown-cameras
The iPhone 7 Plus camera array is as expected, including two separate sensors, two lenses, and optical image stabilization on the wide-angle lens.

Meanwhile, the logic board contains Apple's A10 Fusion chip, 3GB of LPDDR4 RAM from Samsung, and Qualcomm's Snapdragon X12 LTE modem for international markets (iFixit purchased their iPhone from Japan). Flash storage is supplied by Toshiba, while audio chips are supplied by Cirrus Logic.

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Other interesting anecdotes include the continued use of pentalobe screws, rubber gaskets on the SIM tray and around the ring/silent switch for waterproofing, and confirmation that the pressure-sensitive Home button is still removable. Additional photos can be found on the iFixit website.

iFixit said it will start its iPhone 7 teardown following its iPhone 7 Plus and Apple Watch Series 2 teardowns.

Tags: iFixit, Teardown
Related Forum: iPhone

Top Rated Comments

PowerGala Avatar
99 months ago
Such courage... A plastic bumper covering the fake speaker where the headphone jack should be. ;)

Score: 39 Votes (Like | Disagree)
I7guy Avatar
99 months ago
That vibrator is gigantic. And I turn vibrations off. Such a waste of space (imo)
I use BT, headphone jack is a waster of space also.(imo)
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Tubamajuba Avatar
99 months ago
Really impressed that we have all of these engineers on MacRumors offering their wisdom on the headphone jack. So many people on here are apparently capable of engineering the iPhone 7 with a headphone jack- I'm shocked that Apple doesn't start and end their employment search right here.
Score: 17 Votes (Like | Disagree)
twocents Avatar
99 months ago
The engineering that went into this is simply amazing. Literally every bit of space is put to good use
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
bladerunner2000 Avatar
99 months ago
Looks like they could have put in a headphone jack if they wanted.

We all know it was intentional to get people to spend a lot of money on dongles, expensive apple headphones, more dongles and royalties from manufacturers for licensing the lighting port.
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
JoJack82 Avatar
99 months ago
I love how someone is disassembling a perfecting functional iPhone 7 while others are waiting in line to get theirs.
I think a teardown of the phone shared on the internet is much more useful to more people than one extra person getting a phone slightly sooner.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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