That iPhone 14 Leaks continue, and this one is a beauty: photos of what appear to be the front glass panels of all four iPhone 14 models leaked on the social network Weibo before being then posted to Twitter. If the images are real, which they appear to be, it’s further confirmation of the differences between the four incoming iPhones, which we’ll see later this year.
The images show four important things: The relative size of the iPhones, the size of the bezels on each model, and the aspect ratios of the displays, or at least enough to make an educated guess as to what the aspect ratios will be. And they also show which models get the notch and which don’t.
iPhone 14 faceplates leaked on Weibo – here are the changes: 1) thinner bezels on the Pro models as reported by other sources 2) aspect ratio is also slightly different on the Pros (19.5:9 to 20: 9); This is confirmed by 9to5Mac’s report on larger displays pic.twitter.com/UtqNcBB9aPApril 28, 2022
iPhone 14 display leaks: what they tell us
Let’s start with the little ones, although “small” is relative in this context: the smallest iPhone 14 will be the size of the current one iPhone 13. The standard iPhone retains the notch, albeit smaller than the first split-display version, and the equally sized iPhone 14 Pro has the new pill-shaped cutout. The Pro also appears to have a thinner bezel.
The other two iPhone 14 models are the iPhone 14 Max and iPhone 14 Pro Max, and they follow the same pattern: while they’re both the same size, the standard model, the Max, gets the notch, while the Pro, the Pro Max gets the pill shaped cutout. That goes in line with previous reports that the camera hardware would differ between the Standard and Pro models.
On Twitter, @saranbyte says the aspect ratio of the Pros displays is very slightly different: it’s not very obvious when looking at the photos, but the Pro models are 20:9 instead of 19.5:9, which was the case in earlier ones Reported by 9to5Mac, the Pro models will have larger displays this year.
We have no way of verifying the accuracy of these images, but if they’re not real, they’re pretty impressive considering how similar they are previous reports.