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Apple/iPad 3

New iPad 3 photos show that it’s thicker than iPad 2 (Rumor)

Summary: New leaked photos purporting to be of the iPad 3 claims that it’s 1-1.5mm thicker than the iPad 2. Another shot shows a larger camera hole supporting rumors of a high-resolution component.

If you’re planning on buying an iPad 3, don’t expect to use your iPad 2 case with it. At least if new leaked photos of the iPad 3 bezel turn out to be real.

Rumor site M.I.C. Gadget has posted new pictures of what it claims to be the forthcoming iPad 3 bezel, compared side-by-side to the iPad 2 bezel.

One of the images (below) shows the best view yet of how the iPad 3 compares to iPad 2 thickness-wise. The site claims that the iPad 3 is 1.0 to 1.5 mm thicker than the iPad 2. It appears from the photo that Apple was able to gain space in the cavity of the iPad 3 by making the top glass thinner.

New photos of the iPad 3 bezel - and yes it's thicker. Jason O'Grady

Another photo purports to show the iPad 3 camera hole which is clearly larger than the hole in the iPad 2, supporting rumors that it’s being upgraded to a higher resolution component. M.I.C. Gadget notes that the new camera might not be 8MP because “production costs are too high.”

New photos of the iPad 3 camera hole. Jason O'Grady

Lastly, a shot from Chinese Weiphone forums claims that an Apple A5X system on a chip will be at the heart of the iPad 3. This varies from previous rumors of the iPad 3 will ship with an “A6″ (quad-core) processor.

iPad 3 with an Apple A5X System on a Chip - Jason O'Grady

Update: MacRumors notes that a date code of “1146″ can be seen stamped on the the A5X, indicating that it was manufactured in the 46th week of 2011, or November 14-20.

MacRumors calls the A5X a “step-wise upgrade to the A5.” Its part number (”S5L8945X”), which was revealed by BGR in February, would support the incremental upgrade theory. The A4 was known to be the S5L8930X, the A5 as the S5L8940X and the new iPad processor is S5L8945X, with “45″ suggesting only a 50 percent upgrade over the A5. Presumably an A6 processor would have a part number of S5L8950X — if the current naming convention was followed. If true, this photo casts serious doubt on the the new SoC being a quad-core.

Apple’s own branding of “A5X,” suggest that it’s more likely an enhanced version of the A5. Perhaps Apple will dub it the “A5 eXtreme?”

So, are you buying?