Huawei just recently announced its MatePad Edge, a 2-in-1 tablet with a massive 14.2-inch OLED, and it is crammed with a 12,900mAh battery while boasting sufficient firepower to run a truckload of tasks. The company ensures that the internals can handle the majority of the workloads because it has incorporated a superior cooling solution that would put other slates, including the newly released 11-inch and 13-inch M5 iPad Pro models, to shame. Even though the M6 iPad Pro is reported to arrive with a vapor chamber, the MatePad Edge’s two-phase module vapor chamber, paired with a 0.335mm micro-pump liquid cooling film, enables better heat dissipation.
The MatePad Edge’s advanced cooling solution allows the chipset to reach a 28W power limit while lowering temperatures; unfortunately, Huawei’s flagship tablet is 34.3% thicker than the M5 iPad Pro
The internal improvements made by Huawei to its MatePad Edge can be examined by Apple, specifically on how the vapor chamber and liquid cooling film function. However, before we continue, we must mention that the trillion-dollar giant will likely never resort to adopting active cooling fans on the M6 iPad Pro, which are present on the MatePad Edge, and prevent Huawei’s flagship slate from maintaining a dead-silent operation while also being slightly thicker at 6.85mm.
The M5 iPad Pro lineup, on the other hand, is an ultra-slim slates that measure only 5.1mm (the smaller 11-inch model is 5.3mm thick). Despite these dimensions, the M5 SoC manages to punch above its weight class, so one can only imagine how far that performance would go if the Apple Silicon received a little boost thanks to robust cooling. Speaking of cooling, the upgraded solution of the MatePad Edge allows its processor to run at a 28W power limit.
This perk enables the chip to sustain higher clock speeds without running into throttling issues, resulting in the more taxing workloads getting tackled with little to no difficulty. Assuming that Huawei’s latest implementation does not compromise the MatePad Edge’s thickness, Apple can explore this solution for the M6 iPad Pro, but as far as adding fans goes, that is definitely out of the equation.
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