Chinese display manufacturer that is named as ‘Beijing Oriental Electronics'(BOE) could miss out on 30 million display orders for the forthcoming iPhone 14 after it changed the design of the 13’s displays of the iPhone to enhance the yield rate, or the manufacturing of non-defective things, as per the announcement from The Elec (through 9to5Mac).
Apple assigned BOE with making iPhone 13 displays previous October, a short-lived deal that terminated earlier this month when Apple caught BOE altering the width of the circuit of the iPhone 13’s display’s thin-film transistors without knowledge of Apple. (Did they imagine Apple would not observe?).
This decision could begin to horrify BOE, meanwhile, as Apple may take the organization off the job of producing the OLED display, especially for the iPhone 14 as well. Following The Elec, BOE sent an administrative to the Cupertino headquarters of Apple to explain the incident and says it didn’t receive an order to make iPhone 14 displays. Apple is expected to announce the iPhone 14 at an event this fall, but The Elec says production for its display could start as soon as next month.
Read More: iPhone 14 series of Apple is about to debut on the 13th of September
In place of BOE, The Elec expects Apple to split the 30 million display order between LG Display and Samsung Display, its two primary display providers. Samsung will likely produce the 6.1 and 6.7-inch displays for the upcoming iPhone 14 Pro, while LG is set to make the 6.7-inch display for the iPhone 14 Pro Max.
Following the MacRumors, BOE formerly only produced screens for refurbished iPhones. Apple later employed the organization to supply OLED displays for the latest iPhone 12 in the year 2020, but its first batch of panels had not succeeded to pass the difficult quality control tests of Apple. Since the start of this year, the output of the BOE has also been distressed by the shortage of the display driver chip.