iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max Rumored to Feature Easier Battery Removal

The batteries inside the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus use an innovative type of adhesive that can be loosened with low-voltage electrical current from a 9V battery, USB-C charger, or another power source. While this change does not apply to iPhone 16 Pro models, it has now been rumored for iPhone 17 Pro models next year.

iPhone 16 Pro battery
According to a blog post today from the leaker known as Majin Bu, who has a hit-or-miss track record with Apple rumors, the electrical battery removal process will be extended to all four iPhone 17 models launching next year, including the iPhone 17, tentatively-named iPhone 17 Air, iPhone 17 Pro, and iPhone 17 Pro Max.

The leaker shared a photo of the new adhesive in four different sizes, which may correspond with the four iPhone 17 models.

In the meantime, iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max batteries still have stretch-release adhesive pull tabs, like many previous iPhone models.

While no other sources have corroborated this rumor yet, the electrical battery removal process expanding to all four iPhone 17 models at least sounds like a reasonable possibility. Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 17 series in September.

Majin Bu accurately revealed the “Desert Titanium” color name for iPhone 16 Pro models seven months before the devices launched, but some of his information has been wrong, including a rumor about an iPad 11 being imminent last year.

From the information I have been able to get, it looks like the entire iPhone 17 series will feature new battery adhesives and will use electrically induced adhesive peel technology.

Full Article: https://t.co/A3y6Z103ss pic.twitter.com/r13FYGRs4q

— Majin Bu (@MajinBuOfficial) October 10, 2024

Related Roundup: iPhone 17Tag: Majin Bu
This article, “iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max Rumored to Feature Easier Battery Removal” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

Related posts

Latest posts

Zotac outsmarts scalpers by selling GPUs directly to gamers

Zotac it taking the issue of RTX 50-series GPU scalpers into its own hands.

DeepSeek AI draws ire of spy agency over data hoarding and hot bias

The Korean national spy agency says DeepSeek’s data collection and overseas storage is a huge privacy risk, and its responses are also deeply biased.

The Galaxy S25 Edge may be even slimmer than we expected

Samsung's forthcoming Galaxy S25 Edge may be even slimmer than we first though, and come close to matching some of the world's thinnest phones ever.

Building the ultimate AI and machine learning PC

Building a PC for AI or machine learning is very different from making your own gaming machine. Here are some top tips so you won't go wrong.

Looks like the Edge Browser can’t be uninstalled after all

Microsoft is making uninstalling the Edge browser a quite convoluted affair.

Apple’s secret Vision Pro controller suggests it’s finally taking VR gaming seriously

Apple may be planning a virtual reality games controller for the Vision Pro, suggesting the company is finally seeing the headset’s potential for VR gaming.

Big tech is dominating my digital life — here’s how I fixed it

I decided there was just too much big tech nonsense in my life so I found some new apps to replace big names like Google, Apple, and Meta.

OnePlus Watch 3: what to expect

The OnePlus Watch 3 is expected to be announced today, February 10. Here's what to expect from the OnePlus 13 maker.

Meta faces lawsuit for training AI with pirated books

Meta is facing a copyright lawsuit for using pirated books to train its AI models.

Samsung might finally end battery size woes with Galaxy S26 series

Samsung is reportedly considering a shift to next-gen silicon carbide batteries, and might ship units as large as 7,000 mAh capacity on the Galaxy S26 series.