Apple’ın iPhone’lara Yaptığı Üst Düzey Sağlamlık Testleri Açığa Çıktı [Video]
Teknoloji dünyasının en bilindik YouTuber’larından Marques Brownlee, ABD merkezli teknoloji devi Apple ile ilgili özel bir çalışma yaptı. Bu çalışma kapsamında şirkete ait bir laboratuvarı ziyaret eden Brownlee, Apple’ın iPhone’lara yaptığı dayanıklılık testini görüntüledi.
Marques Brownlee’nin X’te yaptığı paylaşımlar, Apple’ın iPhone’lara Webtekno kadar olmasa da zorlu testler yaptığını gözler önüne seriyor. Şunu rahatlıkla söyleyebiliriz ki Apple, cihazları zorlama noktasında elinden geleni ardına koymuyor.
Marques Brownlee’nin X’teki paylaşımları:
I recently got to visit some Apple labs where they durability test new iPhones before they come out, and learned a few things (🧵THREAD)
#1: Have you actually seen how they water test phones for IP ratings? (video) pic.twitter.com/Qh3hfmlmdn
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024
#1: IP derecelendirmeleri için telefonlara nasıl su testi yaptıklarını daha önce gördünüz mü?
#2: There's an entire room of machines for water and ingress testing
Level 1: A drip tray simulating rain, no real pressure. IPX4
Level 2: A sustained, low-pressure jet spray from any angle. IPX5
Level 3: High pressure spray from a literal firehose. IPX6
Level 4: Locking the… pic.twitter.com/5R38I6QVmW
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024
Seviye 1: Yağmuru simüle eden bir damlama tepsisi, gerçek basınç yok. IPX4
Seviye 2: Her açıdan sürekli, düşük basınçlı jet spreyi. IPX5
Seviye 3: Gerçek bir yangın hortumundan yüksek basınçlı sprey. IPX6
Seviye 4: Telefonu su altında bekletme + derinliği uzun süre simüle etmek için ek basınç. IPX8
#3: Apparently Apple has also bought and programmed and industrial robot to be their own drop test machine – to simulate hundreds of different drop angles onto different materials
Then they hit it with some ultra bright lights and a high speed camera to watch them back in… pic.twitter.com/EsNJbVQrbO
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024
#4 Ok this one was hard to capture on camera – it's literally shaking everything at computer-controlled frequencies. They can program in the frequency of a certain motorcycle engine or subway car to simulate how well a device will hold up to sustained exposure to that frequency… pic.twitter.com/K981NzQhhk
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024
$5 – Talked to John Ternus – Head of Hardware Engineering at Apple, and it was interesting hearing straight from the top why the iPhone is harder to repair. Take a listen pic.twitter.com/O9QsQOx4SP
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024
#6 Thankfully Apple is still softening their stance on repair – basically sliding slightly on that durability vs repairability spectrum pic.twitter.com/OA3f4JeOQe
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024
#7: Connecting the durability test machines the real world: They may test 10,000+ pre-release phones while testing before the phone comes out pic.twitter.com/8JbhMXEPdY
— Marques Brownlee (@MKBHD) May 29, 2024