iPhone Basic Current Draw Reference 🔧
Understanding DC Power Supply current draw is one of the fastest ways to diagnose iPhone motherboard faults. Here’s a simple technician reference guide.
🔌 No Power / Short Conditions
• 0.000A → Completely dead
Possible causes: PMIC fault, missing VCC_MAIN, battery connector issue
• 0.001–0.020A → Leakage current
Possible causes: minor short, damaged capacitor
• Instant 2A+ → Hard short
Possible causes: VCC_MAIN short, PMIC/CPU/NAND short
📱 iPhone Boot Current Sequence
• 0.020–0.080A → PMIC startup
• 0.080–0.150A → CPU initialization
• 0.150–0.300A → NAND communication
• 0.300–0.500A → Baseband/peripheral startup
• 0.600–1.000A → Apple logo boot stage
• 0.800–1.200A stable → Device fully ON
⚠️ Common Fault Patterns
• 0.030A stuck → CPU not starting
• 0.070–0.090A stuck → PMIC/CPU communication issue
• 0.120–0.180A stuck → NAND problem
• 0.200–0.350A stuck → Baseband fault
• 0.500A then restart → Kernel panic/reboot issue
• 0.900A stable no display → Display/display IC issue
• 1.5A+ overheating → Main rail short
⚡ Charging Current Reference
• 0.000A → Not charging
• 0.020–0.100A → Tristar/Hydra issue
• 0.200–0.500A → Slow charging
• 0.800–1.500A → Normal charging
• Fluctuating current → Battery/authentication issue
🛠️ Technician Tips
✔ Stable low current = communication issue
✔ Instant high current = short circuit
✔ Restart loop = NAND/CPU/system fault
✔ Normal current but no display = display section fault
✔ Always compare readings with a working board
Important Rails
• VCC_MAIN
• PP_BATT_VCC
• PP1V8
• PP_CPU
• PP_GPU
• PP_NAND
