Apple A6X

The Apple A6X is a 32-bit system-on-a-chip (SoC) designed by Apple Inc., introduced at the launch of the 4th generation iPad on October 23, 2012. It is a high-performance variant of the Apple A6 and the last 32-bit chip Apple used on an iOS device before Apple switched to 64-bit. Apple claims the A6X has twice the CPU performance and up to twice the graphics performance of its predecessor, the Apple A5X. Software updates for the 4th generation iPad ended in 2019 with the release of iOS 10.3.4 for cellular models, thus ceasing support for this chip as it was discontinued with the release of iOS 11 in 2017.

Apple A6X
The A6X chip used in the fourth-generation iPad
General information
LaunchedNovember 2, 2012
DiscontinuedOctober 16, 2014
Designed byApple Inc.
Common manufacturer(s)
  • Samsung Electronics
Product codeS5L8955X
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate1.4 GHz 
Cache
L1 cache32 KB instruction + 32 KB data
L2 cache1 MB
Architecture and classification
ApplicationMobile
Technology node32 nm.
MicroarchitectureSwift
Instruction setARMv7-A: ARM, Thumb-2 with "armv7s" extensions (integer division, VFPv4, Advanced SIMDv2)
Physical specifications
Cores
  • 2
GPU(s)PowerVR SGX554MP4 (quad-core)
Products, models, variants
Variant(s)
History
Predecessor(s)Apple A5X
Successor(s)Apple A7 (APL5698 variant)
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