SSD prices are likely to increase globally due to contamination issues at Western Digital and Kioxia’s NAND production facilities, and Apple devices may be affected (via TrendForce).
Western Digital says that it has lost 6.5 exabytes worth of BiCS 3D NAND flash storage due to use of contaminated materials at two of its plants in Japan in January. The facilities are jointly run by Western Digital and its partner Kioxia, which was previously part of Toshiba. What caused the contamination and when production is expected to resume has yet to be confirmed.
Western Digital and Kioxia are among the world’s leading SSD suppliers, with their joint production amounting to around 30 percent of the entire NAND flash market. TrendForce’s market research indicates that the price of NAND, which is the main component of SSDs, could spike by up to 10 percent starting in the second quarter of 2022.
Western Digital and Kioxia primarily offer SSD and eMMC storage drives for PCs, but iFixit teardowns have shown that Apple uses Kioxia NAND chips in many of its products, including the iPhone 13 lineup, the iPad Pro, and the 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro. Whether any existing Apple products manufactured with Kioxia storage in January will need to be recalled is currently unclear.
Many of Apple’s Mac SSDs have been supplied by Samsung in recent years, but the company has increasingly turned to custom storage solutions, culminating in the proprietary SSD components on Apple’s M1 Macs being soldered in place.
If Apple devices are not directly impacted by contaminated Kioxia hardware, it is still possible that a tightening of supply across the industry could drive up Apple’s costs, but whether the company will absorb these price rises or pass them on to consumers is yet to be seen.
Related Stories
Review: M1 Max MacBook Pro After Three Months
It’s now been a few months since the M1 Pro and M1 Max MacBook Pro models launched in October, and MacRumors video editor Dan Barbera has been using one of the new machines since they debuted. Over on the MacRumors YouTube channel, Dan has shared a three month review of his MacBook Pro to see how it has held up over time and how it’s changed his workflow.
Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube …
Apple Supplier Foxconn Says Shortages Now Easing
Foxconn, the biggest assembler of iPhones, today announced that the component shortages that have constrained the supply of devices over the past two years are now showing signs of easing, Bloomberg reports.
The first quarter of 2022 is said to be experiencing a “major improvement” in parts shortages, and “overall supply constraints” are expected to ease in the second half of the year, a…
MacBook Pro With Next-Gen M2 Chip Coming Next Month, Supply Chain Report Claims
Apple will launch its first MacBook Pro featuring a second-generation M2 Apple silicon processor at its spring event next month, according to a new supply chain report today.
DigiTimes reports that Apple’s supply chain partners kept production lines running during the Lunar New Year holiday for the new MacBook Pro, which is set to launch in “early March,” according to the publication’s…
Nikkei Does Deep Dive Into Apple’s ‘Nightmare Before Christmas’ Supply Chain Issues
At the beginning of October when device production typically ramps up, Apple cut iPhone and iPad assembly for several days because of supply chain constraints and “restrictions on the use of power in China,” reports Nikkei.
In a detailed report on Apple’s iPhone production woes, Nikkei says that Foxconn, Pegatron, and other Apple suppliers ramped down on production for the first time in more …
M1 Mac Users Report Excessive SSD Wear
Over the past week, some M1 Mac users have been reporting alarming SSD health readings, suggesting that these devices are writing extraordinary amounts of data to their drives (via iMore).
Across Twitter and the MacRumors forums, users are reporting that M1 Macs are experiencing extremely high drive writes over a short space of time. In what appear to be the most severe cases, M1 Macs are sai…
M1 Pro vs. M1 Max: Real-World Performance Test
Now that the new MacBook Pro models have been available for a week, we’ve been able to do more in-depth testing. In our latest YouTube video, we pit the entry-level 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M1 Pro chip against the high-end 16-inch MacBook Pro with an M1 Max chip to see just what you’re getting with the upgrade to the M1 Max.
Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos. …
Maxed Out High-End 16-Inch MacBook Pro Costs $6,099
Apple today announced new 14 and 16-inch MacBook Pro models with M1 Pro and M1 Max Apple silicon chips, and the new machines come with higher than expected price tags. The 14-inch model starts at $1,999, while the 16-inch model starts at $2,499. There are upgrades available for the chip, SSD, and memory upgrades depending on the model.
A fully maxed 16-inch MacBook Pro tops out at…
Popular Stories
MacBook Pro With Next-Gen M2 Chip Coming Next Month, Supply Chain Report Claims
Apple will launch its first MacBook Pro featuring a second-generation M2 Apple silicon processor at its spring event next month, according to a new supply chain report today.
DigiTimes reports that Apple’s supply chain partners kept production lines running during the Lunar New Year holiday for the new MacBook Pro, which is set to launch in “early March,” according to the publication’s…
Everything New in iOS 15.4 Beta 2: Face ID Updates, Tap to Pay Code and More
Apple today seeded the second betas of iOS 15.4 and iPadOS 15.4 to developers for testing purposes, and while there aren’t as many new features as we got in the first betas, there are some notable additions and changes worth highlighting.
Tap to Pay on iPhone
With the second beta of iOS 15.4, Apple introduced support for the “Tap to Pay on iPhone” feature that is designed to allow…
Safari Team Asks for Feedback Amid Accusations That ‘Safari Is the Worst, It’s the New IE’
Apple’s Safari and WebKit team has asked for feedback on Twitter amid criticisms of the browser’s bugs and missing support.
Jen Simmons, an Apple Evangelist and developer advocate on the Web Developer Experience team for Safari and WebKit, Tweeted that “Everyone in my mentions [is] saying Safari is the worst, it’s the new IE.” This led her to ask users for feedback, preferably highlighting…
CalDigit’s New Thunderbolt 4 Dock for MacBook Pro Features 18 Ports
CalDigit today introduced its new Thunderbolt Station 4 dock with 18 ports, which it claims is the most on any Thunderbolt dock ever.
The dock features three Thunderbolt 4 ports, with one of them providing up to 98W of pass-through charging to compatible Macs, including the latest 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro. The dock is also equipped with three USB-C ports (3.2 Gen 2), five USB-A ports…
Apple Preparing for Driver’s Licenses on iPhone in iOS 15.4 Beta
One major iOS 15 feature that we are still waiting for is the ability to add a driver’s license or state ID to the Wallet app on the iPhone and Apple Watch in participating U.S. states. Apple’s website says this feature is coming in early 2022.
In the meantime, Apple continues to prepare for the feature’s impending launch. In the second beta of iOS 15.4 seeded today, MacRumors contributor Ste…
Tesla Design Chief on Apple Products: ‘There’s Nothing to Look Forward To’
Tesla design chief Franz von Holzhausen recently commented on Apple’s design principles and product launches, lamenting that Apple doesn’t deliver something “to look forward to.”
During a podcast interview with Spike Feresten of Spike’s Car Radio (via iPhone in Canada and Sawyer Merritt), Holzhausen said that Apple’s devices are “just a continuation” and a “slight refinement on the same…