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Apple Seemingly Avoiding Latest Chip Tech for New iPhones and Macs

Apple is expected to use TSMC's base 2-nanometer N2 process rather than the newer N2P variant for its upcoming A20 and M6 chips, according to the China Times.

apple silicon 1 feature
Apple is rumored to launch the A20 chip with new iPhone models in the fall, and the M6 family of Apple silicon chips in redesigned MacBook Pro models featuring OLED displays later this year. The latest report claims that the company will not move to TSMC's most advanced 2-nanometer manufacturing variant for these chip generations.

TSMC's 2-nanometer family marks the company's transition from FinFET transistors to gate-all-around technology, which is intended to improve power efficiency and performance scaling as chip densities increase. TSMC previously said that its base N2 process will enter mass production in 2026, followed by enhanced variants including N2P and A16 in the second half of the year.

N2P is positioned as a higher-performance version of N2, while A16 is designed for high-power and high-complexity chips, particularly for AI applications and data centers. The performance difference between N2 and N2P is expected to be modest. N2P offers roughly a 5% performance gain at the same power level, but comes at a higher manufacturing cost, which helps explain why Apple is expected to remain on N2 for its A- and M-series chips this year.

Competitors including Qualcomm and MediaTek are expected to adopt N2P for their flagship mobile chips in order to reach higher peak clock speeds. TSMC apparently expects the 2-nanometer generation to have a long lifecycle and potentially scale beyond its 3-nanometer family. Companies including AMD, Google, and Amazon are expected to adopt 2-nanometer processes for future CPUs, GPUs, and AI chips.

Supply availability is also thought to be a factor. Demand for 2-nanometer manufacturing has apparently exceeded expectations, with much of the initial N2 capacity already reserved by leading customers such as Apple. This early capacity allocation reduces the need for Apple to move to N2P simply to secure production volume for future A-series and M-series chips.

Crucially, since N2P only begins mass production in the second half of the year, it likely does not leave enough time for Apple to introduce chips made with the newer technology to its devices. N2 chips are already in production.

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Top Rated Comments

gavroche Avatar
21 weeks ago
This article makes it sound like they won't be available in time, or that it is too high of a risk. If that's the case, the wording of the title making it sound like they just don't want to use it is misleading.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Parowdy Avatar
21 weeks ago
TL;DR

N2P will only be available shortly before the new iPhones release, so Apple can’t use that process.
Apples doesn’t avoid it, that’s just a clickbait statement.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
bodonnell202 Avatar
21 weeks ago
Misleading title - N2P is not going to be ready for high volume production in time to make A20 chips for fall 2026 release. N2P will most likely be used for A21 chips in 2027.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 weeks ago

Crucially, since N2P only begins mass production in the second half of the year, it likely does not leave enough time for Apple to introduce chips made with the newer technology to its devices. N2 chips are already in production.
That's the actual reason. You published the exact same article for N2 and the M5:

https://www.macrumors.com/2024/11/29/apple-orders-m5-chips-from-tsmc/

declaring Apple not using N2 for the M5 for cost reasons despite N2 simply not being available in time to use for the A19 and M5. (No one else has shipped N2 products yet either) And now here's N2 reportedly being used for the M6 exactly as one would predict just based on timing.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 weeks ago

Agreed, and the pricing is probably higher for N2P. Apple already has the lead in ARM performance, so they can afford to hold off, and perhaps this will keep prices closer to pre-RAM-shortage levels.
That is in the article: "The performance difference between N2 and N2P is expected to be modest. N2P offers roughly a 5% performance gain at the same power level, but comes at a higher manufacturing cost, which helps explain why Apple is expected to remain on N2 for its A- and M-series chips this year."
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
The_Gream Avatar
21 weeks ago
Let the other guys pay the big fees. Apple still has some of the best if not the best chips at there.
Qualcomm needs all the help they can get. Last report I read compared Qualcomm’s recent chip to the M4, even though the M5 had been out for a few months.
Apple’s performance cores I think are best in class for clock speed outside over clocked CPUs. Most of the competitors only beat them on multi-core cause they load up like 12-18 cores to Apple’s 6-10.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)