crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

crwdns2933803:08crwdne2933803:0

crwdns2933797:0Arthur Shicrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0

crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Arthur Shi

crwdns2933769:0crwdne2933769:0
crwdns2933771:0crwdne2933771:0
crwdns2933801:0crwdne2933801:0

crwdns2933807:0crwdne2933807:0

[* black] Notably absent from our initial chip findings is the ''[http://www.hisilicon.com/en/Products/ProductList/Balong|Balong 5000|new_window=true]'', HiSilicon's multi-mode networking chipset that is supposed to be the powerhouse of this 5G cell.
-[* black] On a hunch, we coarsely chisel off the extra Samsung LPDDR4 chip to find …
+[* black] On a hunch, we coarsely chisel off the extra Samsung LPDDR4X chip to find …
[* red] HiSilicon Hi9500 GFCV101! This is most likely the Balong 5000 we're looking for.
[* orange] Just to be sure, we pry up the Micron memory chip as well. Sure enough, underneath slumbers the HiSilicon Hi3680 GFCV150, also known as Kirin 980.
[* icon_caution] Our [product|IF317-005-1|hot air station] had the day off. Deal with it.
[* icon_note] It looks like the 5G modem comes bundled with its own block of dedicated LPDDR4X memory—a whopping 3 GB of it, if we've decoded those Samsung package markings in the previous step correctly. Is that a giant data buffer? This is the first 5G modem we've seen in the wild, so sound off in the comments if you know more than we do.