Several people have already torn down the new iPad Pro models and photographed their M4 chips and the RAM alongside them. Most teardown I could find were of the 256GB model, but one website (TechInsights) did the 1TB model as well.
The one 1TB teardown I could find showed 2 RAM chips alongside the M4, each labeled D8DNV. The Micron FBGA and component marking decoder shows these are MT62F1G64D4AS-026 XT:C chips, which are listed on both DigiKey and Mouser. These are 64 gigabit (8 gigabyte) chips, as expected, confirming the 16GB of RAM mentioned on Apple's tech specs page.
Looking at the teardowns of lower capacity models, all the pictures I saw (UFD Tech, JerryRigEverything, iFixit) showed 2 chips labeled Z8DMS instead. Some pictures were blurrier than others, but they all seemed to show the same thing in the end.
On the same Micron site, Z8DMS decodes to MT62F768M64D4AS-026 XT:B, also listed on DigiKey and Mouser. But those product listings mentioned a size of 48 gigabits (6 gigabytes), for a total of 12GB of RAM. Not the 8GB mentioned in Apple's specs.
Maybe RAM density per die has increased so much that true 4GB chips wouldn't have enough dies to supply 120 GB/s of bandwidth, kind of like how the 256GB M2 MacBook Air infamously had much slower SSD speeds than the 512GB+ models because it only had 1 NAND chip instead of 2.
Maybe Micron (and Hynix, and Samsung) didn't offer 4GB chips as a standard size for LPDDR5 or LPDDR5X memory, and Apple couldn't justify the cost of commissioning special 4GB chips just for a product line that ultimately sells far fewer units than most other Apple products.
Whatever the answer turns out to be, it's still a shame to see a third of each iPad's memory go unused for the sake of product segmentation. Hopefully this is a sign that M4 Macs will finally start with 12GB of RAM.
The one 1TB teardown I could find showed 2 RAM chips alongside the M4, each labeled D8DNV. The Micron FBGA and component marking decoder shows these are MT62F1G64D4AS-026 XT:C chips, which are listed on both DigiKey and Mouser. These are 64 gigabit (8 gigabyte) chips, as expected, confirming the 16GB of RAM mentioned on Apple's tech specs page.
Looking at the teardowns of lower capacity models, all the pictures I saw (UFD Tech, JerryRigEverything, iFixit) showed 2 chips labeled Z8DMS instead. Some pictures were blurrier than others, but they all seemed to show the same thing in the end.
On the same Micron site, Z8DMS decodes to MT62F768M64D4AS-026 XT:B, also listed on DigiKey and Mouser. But those product listings mentioned a size of 48 gigabits (6 gigabytes), for a total of 12GB of RAM. Not the 8GB mentioned in Apple's specs.
Maybe RAM density per die has increased so much that true 4GB chips wouldn't have enough dies to supply 120 GB/s of bandwidth, kind of like how the 256GB M2 MacBook Air infamously had much slower SSD speeds than the 512GB+ models because it only had 1 NAND chip instead of 2.
Maybe Micron (and Hynix, and Samsung) didn't offer 4GB chips as a standard size for LPDDR5 or LPDDR5X memory, and Apple couldn't justify the cost of commissioning special 4GB chips just for a product line that ultimately sells far fewer units than most other Apple products.
Whatever the answer turns out to be, it's still a shame to see a third of each iPad's memory go unused for the sake of product segmentation. Hopefully this is a sign that M4 Macs will finally start with 12GB of RAM.
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