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Scan of the Month
September 2022

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation) CT Teardown

In this Article:

  • CT scans of the AirPods Pro 2nd generation show a charging case with four new MagSafe alignment magnets, a U1 chip for precise Find My tracking, an outward-facing speaker, and a bistable metal strap replacing the first generation's spring-loaded pin assembly in the lid mechanism.
  • The metal eyelet on the side of the case measures 4 mm deep and 18 mm long with a tail connecting to a metal pad around the Lightning port, suggesting it may also function as a Find My antenna. The visible hinge components are electroplated plastic matched precisely to the aluminum eyelet finish, a difference invisible without a scan.
  • The earbud layout is essentially unchanged from the first generation: battery in the head, logic board behind it, three microphones in the same positions, and the same magnetic seating system. Performance improvements are driven by the H2 chip rather than changes to the physical architecture.
  • 9.27.2022

    The second-generation AirPods Pro arrived in September 2022 with Apple's H2 chip at its center. The H2 brought meaningfully better active noise cancellation, Adaptive Transparency mode, improved battery life, and the processing headroom for personalized spatial audio. The high-level layout of the earbuds, though, looked familiar. We scanned them to find out how much had actually changed compared to the first-generation AirPods Pro, which we've studied on Scan of the Month.

    Charging case

    The case follows the same basic architecture as the first generation: two batteries flanking a central logic board, magnets to hold the lid closed, and a magnet in each charging well to pull the earbuds into position. The new case adds four magnets around the inductive charging coil, which align it with a MagSafe or Apple Watch charger. It also gains a U1 chip for precise Find My tracking and an outward-facing speaker for audio cues and location pings.

    A metal eyelet on the side of the case is nominally a lanyard attachment point. Our scan reveals that it is 4 mm deep and 18 mm long, with a tail that connects to a metal pad around the Lightning port. The geometry suggests it may also function as an antenna supporting the improved Find My capability, though Apple has not confirmed that function.

    The hinge on the back of the case appears to be metal, matching the finish of the eyelet. The scan shows otherwise. The visible hinge components are electroplated plastic with a metal pin inside. Apple matched the electroplated finish to the aluminum eyelet closely enough that the difference is invisible without a scan. The result is a premium appearance at lower cost and weight than solid metal would require.

    One detail in the lid mechanism is worth noting. The first-generation case used a spring-loaded pin assembly to control the lid. The second generation replaces it with a thin bistable metal strap that snaps between two stable positions. Fewer parts, same function, lower assembly complexity.

    Earbuds

    The earbud layout is essentially unchanged from the first generation. A battery sits in the head of the earbud with the logic board positioned behind it. The antenna and charging contacts run through the stem. A large magnet below the battery seats the earbud in the charging case. Three microphones are arranged as before: one at the bottom of the stem for voice pickup during calls, one facing outward at the top of the stem for ambient sound collection used in noise cancellation, and one pointed into the ear canal to tune audio response. The second-generation model adds a sensor along the flat surface of the stem to support the new swipe gesture for volume control.

    The performance improvements Apple advertises, better noise cancellation, longer battery life, cleaner audio, come primarily from the H2 chip rather than from any fundamental change in how the earbuds are built. The physical architecture is an iteration, not a redesign.

    What the scan shows

    The second-generation AirPods Pro are a tightly packaged piece of consumer electronics with meaningful detail work in the case and measured refinement in the earbuds. What the scan makes visible is the continuity with the first generation: Apple changed the chip, updated the case, and left the physical earbud architecture largely intact. The performance gains are real. So is the conservatism of the underlying design.

    For a look at how the third-generation AirPods Pro compare, see our CT teardown of the AirPods Pro 3.

    Citations
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