Once upon a time, there was tech savvy man named Lewis Hilsenteger from Unbox Therapy who had nothing better to do, but test the durability of Apple iPhone. Because of his unique abilities, he won the Internet for a week or so when a video of him bending the iPhone 6 Plus went instantly viral.
Fast forward to the present, Hilsenteger has got his hands on the rear case of the upcoming iPhone 6s and has noticed that Apple has done some work to make it sturdier than the rear case everyone saw on last year's iPhone 6.
Apple, of course, will never admit that it took steps to make the iPhone 6s less bendable compared to the iPhone 6 Plus because it never acknowledged there were any bend-related problems in the first place. But just from looking at the dimensions of the 6s’s rear case, Hilsenteger believes that Apple is determined to avoid another "Bendgate" fiasco this year.
In particular, he takes a look at the thickness of the case right at the spot where the device’s volume buttons are located. This is important because the volume button area was the main pressure point at which the iPhone 6 Plus was most prone to bending. In his measurements, Hilsenteger found that the iPhone 6's casing has a thickness of 1.14 millimeters while the iPhone 6s's case measures in at 1.9 millimeters thick.
Despite this, the thicker shell is actually lighter than the shell of the iPhone 6 by a couple of grams, meaning Apple may have found a way to make the casing thinner without making it heavier to carry around. It is likely that Apple achieved this by using the same kind of Series 7000 aluminum used for the Apple Watch, although nobody has a way of knowing for sure at this time.
Hilsenteger does not perform a bend test on the new iPhone 6s shell but he promises that one is coming soon.
Fast forward to the present, Hilsenteger has got his hands on the rear case of the upcoming iPhone 6s and has noticed that Apple has done some work to make it sturdier than the rear case everyone saw on last year's iPhone 6.
Apple, of course, will never admit that it took steps to make the iPhone 6s less bendable compared to the iPhone 6 Plus because it never acknowledged there were any bend-related problems in the first place. But just from looking at the dimensions of the 6s’s rear case, Hilsenteger believes that Apple is determined to avoid another "Bendgate" fiasco this year.
In particular, he takes a look at the thickness of the case right at the spot where the device’s volume buttons are located. This is important because the volume button area was the main pressure point at which the iPhone 6 Plus was most prone to bending. In his measurements, Hilsenteger found that the iPhone 6's casing has a thickness of 1.14 millimeters while the iPhone 6s's case measures in at 1.9 millimeters thick.
Despite this, the thicker shell is actually lighter than the shell of the iPhone 6 by a couple of grams, meaning Apple may have found a way to make the casing thinner without making it heavier to carry around. It is likely that Apple achieved this by using the same kind of Series 7000 aluminum used for the Apple Watch, although nobody has a way of knowing for sure at this time.
Hilsenteger does not perform a bend test on the new iPhone 6s shell but he promises that one is coming soon.
Comments
Post a Comment