Analysts: iPhone 3G S materials cost only 2% more than 3G

By Tim Conneally | Published June 24, 2009, 2:08 PM

Apple's new iPhone 3GS proved to be a hit last weekend, according to Apple, selling over a million units in its first weekend; and if hardware analysis firm iSuppli's latest analysis is accurate, the 3G S costs 28% less to make than the first generation iPhone did two years ago, and only about 2% more than the iPhone 3G last year.

ISuppli delivers reliable bill of materials reports for consumer electronics products, in which it tears down a device, adds up the cost of each of its components and then estimates the manufacturer's total expense in making the device.

The firm attributes the marginal cost increase to the limited changes to the platform. "From a component and design perspective, there's...a great deal of similarity between the 3G and the 3G S. By leveraging this commonality to optimize materials costs, and taking advantage of price erosion in the electronic component marketplace, Apple can provide a higher-performing product with more memory and features at only a slightly higher materials and manufacturing cost," said iSuppli Teardown Services' Director and Principal Analyst Andrew Rassweiler.

In the iPhone 3G, for example, there are two radios for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, each made by a different company (Marvell and CSR). The 3GS uses a single Broadcom solution for Bluetooth/FM/802.11. The compass features exclusive to the 3GS add chips from AKM Semiconductor and an additional STMicroelectronics accelerometer. After manufacturing costs, iSuppli estimates the 16 GB iPhone 3 GS costs $178.96.

iSuppli teardowns over the years

4 GB iPhone (2007)$246
8 GB iPhone 3G (2008)$174.33
16 GB iPhone 3GS (2009)$178.96
BlackBerry Storm (2008)$203
Palm Pre (2009)$138
HTC Magic/G1 (2008)$143.89

Comments

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While the figures isuppli tends to come up with are interesting, they really don't serve much of any purpose.

The additional cost of the phone is the R&D for the 3.0 OS, testing, marketing and everything else that goes with it. Plus all the phone updates that come down the road.

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"The 3GS uses a single Broadcom solution for Bluetooth/FM/802.11."

The 3gs has an FM radio?

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Yes, but it doesn't use it, like many of the early generation iPods.

In fact, there was an add-on FM receiver and headphones set, which seemed odd, but considering the likelihood that FM radio wouldn't be a high quality audio source, Apple shy away from it.

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They're just waiting for Rockbox to give an alternate firmware where you can actually use it...

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