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Andrew Rassweiler, IHS:
Amazon Kindle Fire Costs $201.70 to Manufacture
November 21, 2011
Amazon’s Kindle Fire media tablet carries a BOM cost of $185.60,
according to preliminary findings from the IHS iSuppli Teardown Analysis
Service. When manufacturing services expenses are added, the cost
increases to $201.70, as shown in the table below.

This is slightly lower than the IHS
virtual estimate of the Kindle’s cost issued in September of a BOM
amounting to $191.65, and a total of $209.63, when factoring in the
manufacturing and the margin expenses.
Please note that this teardown assessment is preliminary in nature, and
accounts only for hardware costs and does not include additional
expenses such as software, licensing, royalties or other expenditures.
“The Kindle Fire, at a retail price point of $199, is sold at a loss by
Amazon, just as the basic Kindle is also sold at a loss at the current
$79 retail price point,” said Andrew Rassweiler, senior director,
teardown services for IHS. “Amazon makes its money not on Kindle
hardware, but on the paid content and other products it plans to sell
the consumer through the Kindle. This is a similar business model to
wireless companies such as AT&T or Verizon. They sell you a phone that
costs them $400 to $600 or more to make for a price of only $200.
However, they expect to more than make up for that loss with a two-year
service contract.”
Surprise design wins in the Kindle fire include the use of a touch
screen control- integrated source from the previously unknown source
Ilitek and a wireless local area network (WLAN) module from new supplier
Jorjin.
The use of an unfamiliar source for the touch screen controller
integrated circuit (IC) reflects the growing trend of new suppliers
entering the market. Amid booming sales for touch screen devices, IC
suppliers have jumped into the fray to satisfy the increase in demand.
This trend toward employing lesser-known sources is evident in recent
designs including the Vizio tablet, which featured a touch control IC
from EETI—and the Lenovo A60 smartphone, which employed a touch control
IC from FocalTech Systems.
The use of the Jorjin WLAN module also represents a surprise, given that
most tablet designs employ more complex combo solutions from Broadcom or
Texas Instruments. The Jorjin device provides a cheaper approach to
implementing WLAN support, at just $4.50, yielding a $1 savings in BOM
costs.
Texas Instruments Inc. (TI) dominates the Kindle Fire design. Most
notably, TI contributes the applications processor, which provides the
core functionality of the tablet. The TI OMAP4430 processor costs
$14.65, accounting for 7.9 percent of the Kindle Fire’s total BOM.
However, TI also supplies other devices, including the power management
device and the audio codec. This gives TI a total of $24 per each
Kindle, or 12.9 percent of the BOM.
TI’s OMAP4430 applications processor has been identified in an
increasing number of designs dissected by the IHS, including Research In
Motion’s PlayBook RDJ21WW tablet, as well as the Motorola Droid Bionic
XT875 and LG Optimus 3D P920 smartphones. The OMAP4430 is a dual-core
ARM Cortex-A9, 1GHz processor with a IVA 3 Hardware Accelerator and a
SGX540 3D graphics core. The device supports 1080P 2-D and 720P 3-D
graphics, and is produced using 45nm process geometry.
The single most expensive subsystem in the Kindle Fire is the display
and touch screen, at a combined cost of $87.00, or 46.9 percent of the
BOM. Amazon sources the display from two companies: LG Display and E Ink
Holdings. The display uses E Ink’s FFS technology, which LG Display has
licensed.
Improved
production yields and efficiencies have assisted greatly in reducing the
cost of FFS tablet displays. In the same vein, touch screens have made
big strides in cost reduction during the course of 2011.
The Kindle Fire incorporates 8 gigabytes of eMMC NAND flash memory. In
the individual Kindle Fire torn down by IHS iSuppli, the NAND flash was
supplied by Samsung. The eMMC NAND flash is fairly popular with most
manufacturers, as it includes memory management circuitry.
IHS had assumed originally that the Kindle Fire might have as much as 8
gigabits of low-power DDR2 DRAM memory. In fact, the Kindle Fire ships
with only 4 gigabits. This shaved off a few dollars from our previous
cost estimates. Elpida was the supplier of the DRAM in the individual
Kindle Fire torn down by IHS iSuppli.
Together, the NAND and DRAM form a memory subsystem costing $22.10, or
11.9 percent of the total BOM. |