Apple and GTAT have opened a second sapphire manufacturing facility

TECHi's Author Michio Hasai
Opposing Author Appleinsider Read Source Article
Last Updated
TECHi's Take
Michio Hasai
Michio Hasai
  • Words 144
  • Estimated Read 1 min

Apple’s partnership with GT Advanced Technologies isn’t a secret anymore, with the latter expected to provide sapphire crystal to Apple for various purposes related to the company’s iPhone, iPad and iWatch production. And now it looks like GT will have two plants growing sapphire glass for Apple. Analyst Matt Margolis, who recently revealed Apple may mass-produce more than 200 million sapphire display covers this year, found a new SEC filing from GT that provides more details about the retrofitting of a second GT location. The company has transformed its Salem, Massachusetts R&D facility into a manufacturing factory, which can supply up to 20 million additional sapphire screens each year according to Margolis, on top of the estimated 200 million units mentioned before. The Salem plant measures just 50,000 square feet, and it’s significantly smaller than the 1,300,000 square feet Mesa, Arizona, GT plant.


Appleinsider

Appleinsider

  • Words 197
  • Estimated Read 1 min
Read Article

Apple’s much-ballyhooed sapphire plant in Arizona is not its only production facility for the crystalline material, according to a new regulatory filing from manufacturing partner GT Advanced Technologies, as the two companies have also opened a secondary location in Salem, Mass. GTAT used a portion of Apple’s $578 million prepayment to retrofit its Massachusetts facility — previously a research and development laboratory — with new furnaces to match those in Arizona, according to an amended version of the company’s quarterly report. The amendment was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission earlier this week and first noticed by analyst Matt Margolis. The 50,000-square-foot Salem plant is significantly smaller than its Arizona cousin, which measures some 1.3 million square feet. It is unclear if Apple is depending on the Salem facility — which appears to have begun growing sapphire in December — for production, or if the company is simply using it as a testbed. Apple has already been rumored to be exploring an expansion of the Arizona location, which could potentially see it double in size. That could mean the installation of as many as 5,000 furnaces at the site, easily making it the largest manufactured sapphire plant in the world.

Source

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Balanced Perspective

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

TECHi’s editorial take above outlines the reasoning that supports this position.

More Two Takes from Apple Insider

Apple Robotics Is Set to Become Its Next Major Revenue Stream
Apple Robotics Is Set to Become Its Next Major Revenue Stream

Analysts from Morgan Stanley foresee Apple diving into robotics as its next big business, predicting this sector could generate about…

Spotify is accusing Apple of using its power to hinder its competition
Spotify is accusing Apple of using its power to hinder its competition

The problem with Apple releasing its own music-streaming service is that it now has to compete with existing services like Spotify…

The government’s legal war with the tech industry is far from over
The government’s legal war with the tech industry is far from over

The legal war between the government and the tech industry has quieted down in the weeks since the highly-publicized battle…

Future iPhones might have a glass casing instead of an aluminum one
Future iPhones might have a glass casing instead of an aluminum one

Apple is nothing if not a trend-setter, which makes it difficult for the company to continuously differentiate its products from the…