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'Teardown' finds Sony taking a bath on each PS3 |
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Dylan McGrath (11/16/2006 1:16 PM EST) URL: http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=194400596 |
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SAN FRANCISCO Sony is taking a considerable loss of more than $240 per unit on each PlayStation 3 video gaming console, according to a "teardown" analysis conducted by market research firm iSuppli Corp.
The combined materials and manufacturing cost of the PS3 is $806 for the model equipped with a 20-Gbyte hard disk drive (HDD) and $840 for the higher end 60-Gbyte HDD version, according to a preliminary estimate of expenses by iSuppli's teardown analysis service. This total doesn't include additional costs for elements including the controller, cables and packaging, the firm said. Sony is offering the PS3sscheduled to hit U.S. retail stores just after midnight Friday (Nov. 18) at suggested retail prices of $499 for the 20-Gbyte model and $599 for the 60-Byte model. According to iSuppli's analysis, Sony is taking a loss of roughly $307 on the lower-end model and $241 on the higher end model. PS3's nearest rival, the HDD-equipped Xbox 360 console form Microsoft Corp., has a manufacturing and materials total of $323, based on an updated estimate using costs in the fourth quarter, iSuppli said. This total is $76 less than the $399 suggested retail price of the Xbox 360, according to the firm. iSuppli said the size of Sony's loss per unit is "remarkable," even for a gaming console. Given the loss it is taking on each unit, iSuppli said it is no surprise that Sony is steering consumers toward the higher-end model iSuppli (El Segundo, Calif.) said its dissection concluded that the PS3 is "an engineering masterpiece," setting a new standard for computing price/performance, even considering that it is more expensive than Microsoft Corp.'s Xbox 360 gaming console. "With the PlayStation 3, you are getting the performance of a supercomputer at the price of an entry-level PC," said Andrew Rassweiler, teardown services manager and senior analyst for iSuppli. Rassweiler said the PS3 is so costly to produce mainly because of its "incredible" processing power. "If someone had shown me the PlayStation 3 motherboard from afar without telling me what it was, I would have assumed it was for a network switch or an enterprise server," he said.
Some of the more advanced features of the PS3 design, according to iSuppli, include:
According to Rassweiler, prior to PS3, iSuppli's teardown analysis team had seen only three chips with 1,200 or more pins in its five-year history. "The PlayStation 3 has three such semiconductors all by itself," Rassweiler said. "There is nothing cheap about the PlayStation 3 design. This is not an adapted PC design. Even beyond the major chips in the PlayStation 3, the other components seem to also be expensive and somewhat exotic." As an example, Rassweiler cited PS3's inclusion of a power supply that packs 400-wattsyet uses a very compact, low-profile design. At $37.50, this power supply costs about twice as much as an average unit found in a PC, according to Rassweiler. While many of the major components found in the PlayStation 3 were already known, iSuppli's teardown analysis team reported some surprise part selections that the firm noted could boost the fortunes of their suppliers. According to the firm, these include: Sony's difficulties in getting the PS3 to market, including a pushback of several months on the original timetable announced earlier this year, have been well publicized. As a result, Sony is now delivering less than half the number of units that it originally planned. In Japan, where Sony reportedly delivered fewer than the 100,000 units it had promised, initial PS3 shipments sold out in a matter of hours. In the U.S., consumers camped out overnight Wednesday to get a good place in line for the midnight release Friday morning. Sony recently said it has solved its biggest manufacturing hurdle, the volume production of blue laser diodes. A separate teardown analysis conducted by Semiconductor Insights yielded similar findings. Video of that teardown is linked to the story.
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