Apple Patents a New Slimmer Headphone Jack for Future iPhones

A new Apple patent published today by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has revealed a new, shrunken-down “D-shaped” headphone connector, which Apple may use to replace the existing 3.5mm jack in future iPhones with an even slimmer profile, AppleInsider is reporting. The patent filing notes that the “improved” headphone connector would sport all the functionality of a modern 3.5mm TRRS (tip, ring, ring, sleeve) connector, but with a trim profile for much thinner devices.

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Apple’s “D” profile headphone plug is flat on one side, which is said to act as a “keyed feature”, which means it restricts insertion to a matching D-shaped cavity. One of the embodiments specifies a diameter of 2.0mm from the plug’s flat portion to its opposite edge, which is significantly thinner than current connectors. Whether Apple’s new headphone jack standard leads to the demise of the current 3.5mm plug or not, only time will tell.

“For a fairly sensitive electronic part, the headphone connector is constantly exposed to mechanical strain. A flexible elastomer or similar material could help cut down on breakage from repeated insertion and extraction operations.

On the device side, Apple describes a D-shaped receptacle protecting an internal mechanism designed to capture the plug, much like regular jacks. The system can be mechanical or magnetic, while some embodiments allow for a spring-loaded ground contact that doubles as a retention feature”.

Apple’s D-shaped connector patent was first filed for in May 2011.

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Flash
Flash
10 years ago

Dear god no – just get rid of the damn thing, why can’t they just use the Lightning connector? New beats headphones would either be powered off the phone or headphones could power the phone. Then have a small lightning to aux jack adapter cable for none apple headphones. 5 years from now I’m hoping there are no ports on the iPhone – wireless charging and waterproof

hub2
hub2
10 years ago

If iPhones ever get so thin as to require this, then they’re too thin.

To think, we’re just at the cusp of getting rid of one-way-only USB ports, why introduce a new port that offers no new functionality with exactly the same problem just to make it thinner?

ShaBi
ShaBi
10 years ago

Who’s really demanding for thinner phones anyways?

Z S
Z S
10 years ago

Hmm, this would be a hard sell, mostly because of the sheer number of headphones out there. Also, a flat edge on a jack so slender? I’d be afraid it would crack or bend if you turned it. The nice thing about current jacks is that they’re able to be turned.

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