Lightning 9-pin: Replacing the 30-pin Dock Connector

Section by Brian Klug

With the iPhone 5 and the corresponding iPod lineup refresh, Apple has moved away from the venerable 30-pin dock connector and onto a new 9-pin Lightning connector. The Lightning connector announcement caused a considerable amount of chatter in the Apple ecosystem primarily because of just how ubiquitous 30-pin accessories became in the years that Apple used that as the primary interface for everything iPod, iPad, and iPhone.


The new Lightning Connector

Over years of iDevice upgrades I wager most people have built up a considerable inventory of both 30-pin dock cables, chargers, and Made For i (MFi) accessories. Moving to a completely new interface warrants at the very least the purchase of new cables. Even in my own case this is a friction point, as I managed to snag an extra long 30-pin dock cable Apple uses in their displays for use on my nightstand, and there’s no equivalent at the moment for Lightning. At bare minimum I require three cables — one for the nightstand charger, one for in the car, and one for connecting to a computer. I’m willing to bet most other users are the same. In the days right after the iPhone 5 launch Lightning to USB cables were hard to come by both at carrier stores and Apple stores (one Verizon store told me their entire Lightning cable stock had been recalled), but by now stock of more Lightning to USB cables is getting better but still rather limited.

The new connector is both considerably smaller in overall volume than the old 30-pin, and fully reversible as well. On the Lightning male connector there are 8 exposed gold pads, with the metal support serving as the 9th pin and ground. As best I can tell, these are mapped in a rotational fashion not through the connector but rather so that the bottom left pin maps to the top right pin if looking top down. As an aside, I’ve seen people refer to the 9-pin as 8-pin because of this ground, which is puzzling, in spite of Apple even calling it a 9-pin internally (eg. “IOAccessoryDock9Pin”=1). The old 30-pin pinout had 7 pins dedicated to ground, yet everyone resisted calling it a 23-pin, but I digress.

Lightning of course does away with lots of the signaling that went unused on the older 30-pin adapter that previously accommodated the older iPod touch lineup. Things like 12 volt FireWire charging and data that went away a long time ago, and older analog video out compliance.

Apple calls Lightning an “adaptive” interface, and what this really means are different connectors with different chips inside for negotiating appropriate I/O from the host device. The way this works is that Apple sells MFi members Lightning connectors which they build into their device, and at present those come in 4 different signaling configurations with 2 physical models. There’s USB Host, USB Device, Serial, and charging only modes, and both a cable and dock variant with a metal support bracket, for a grand total of 8 different Lightning connector SKUs to choose from. At present by USB over Lightning I mean USB 2.0.

With Lightning, Apple officially has no provision for analog audio output, analog video output, or DisplayPort. That said special 3rd party MFi members will no doubt eventually get (or may already have) access to a Lightning connector for DisplayPort since obviously video out over a wired interface must continue. For audio output, Lightning implements USB audio output which looks like the standard USB audio class. This has been supported for a considerable time on the old 30-pin adapter, though most accessory makers simply chose to use analog out for cost reasons. I originally suspected that analog line-out would come over the 3.5mm headphone jack at the bottom of the iPhone (thus all the dockable interfaces at the bottom), but the iPod Nano 7G effectively threw that prediction out the window with its headphone jack placement.

Thus, the connector chip inside isn’t so much an “authenticator” but rather a negotiation aide to signal what is required from the host device. Lightning implicitly requires use of one of these negotiation components, and in addition Apple still requires authentication hardware using certificates for every accessory that uses iAP (iPod Accessory Protocol). With Lightning Apple introduced iAP2 which is a complete redesign of iAP, the protocol which allows for playback control, communication with iOS applications, launching corresponding iOS apps, GPS location, iPod out, and so forth.

When it comes to the physical layer of Lightning there’s very little information out there regarding whether the Lightning chip is doing conversion from some other protocol or simply negotiating USB, Serial, or so forth, and then waiting for the host device to route those I/Os over the cable. You can imagine that with DisplayPort there will need to be some active component that multiplexes USB, DisplayPort, and supplies power over the 9 pins, so I suspect some other protocol on top of all this.

The new connector of course necessitates a new cable and new line of accessories. Probably the biggest inconvenience is that with the iPhone 5 there’s now even less of a chance you can snag a quick charge at a friend’s house or in a friend’s car unless they too have an iPhone 5. While that’s not an entirely fair criticism, the reality of smartphone battery life at the moment means that charging whenever or wherever you can is an important factor, and in ecosystems other than iOS land I’m spoiled by the ubiquity of microUSB. Another consideration is what happens in the case where a household has both devices with Lightning and the 30-pin connector — at present it looks like the solution is either multiple cables for the car charger or an adapter.

That brings me to the microUSB to Lightning adapter, which, like the microUSB to 30-pin dock adapter that came before it isn’t available in the USA but is available in Europe and elsewhere. At present the only way to get one of these in the states is to pay considerable markup and buy on eBay or have a friend ship one from abroad (I opted for the latter option, thanks to our own Ian Cutress). It’s unfortunate that Apple won’t sell you one of these stateside but rather forces you into buying cables. The Lightning to microUSB adapter supports both charging and sync/data functionality. I can’t understate that the Lightning to microUSB adapter is tiny, absolutely tiny. I thought the microUSB to 30-pin adapter was small and always at risk of becoming lost in the aether, well the Lightning equivalent is even smaller.

The reason for this disparity is that the EU mandated a common external power supply standard which implements the USB charging specification and uses microUSB as the connector. To skirt this requirement Apple made the original 30-pin dock connector available, and this time around has made a Lightning adapter available as well. The somewhat important and oft-overlooked context here is that Apple had standardized the 30-pin dock connector and its own 5 volt charging signaling before the GSM Association, International Telecommunication Union, or EU decided to implement the USB charging spec, and before even the USB-IF finished the charging spec. There’s a tangent here that’s worth discussing, and it’s how these two differ in signaling that a USB port has more than the standard 500 mA at 5V available from a USB 1.x or 2.0 port.

In the case of the USB Battery Charging 1.2 specification, signaling is actually superficially pretty simple, and boils down to sticking a 200 Ohm resistor across the D- and D+ pins. You can do this yourself and test with an external power supply, it works with almost every new device intended to be used with USB chargers. Apple however needed a 5V charging specification before the industry implemented it, and went with what boils down to two simple voltage dividers that drive 2.8 and 2.0 volts across D- and D+ respectively. If you go shopping around for USB charging controllers, you’ll see this referred to in the open as the Apple voltage divider. Anyways, my long winded point is that the microUSB to 30-pin and Lightning adapters contain a circuit of some kind to accommodate the difference in charging specification and deliver more than the 500 mA at 5V you’d get otherwise. What’s curious to me is that this time around using the Lightning to USB adapter plugged into a simple circuit simulating a USB BC 1.2 charger, I get the same current draw (around 0.8 A at 5V at maximum) as I do with Lightning to microUSB to the circuit.

Of course for accessories with dock connectors that aren’t on a fast replacement cycle (for example cars and AV receivers) users can opt to buy the 30-pin adapter for legacy dock accessories. This adapter of course includes a number of active components to talk with Lightning. While I haven’t tested this myself due to availability reasons, I’ve heard that it works fine with devices from the iPod 4th Generation days with serial iAP, no authentication chip, and analog audio. While video out isn’t supported on the 30-pin to lightning adapter, it sounds like the adapter does handle analog and USB audio out alongside charge and USB data.

Finally the last important angle is what happens for accessories that need to accommodate both older 30-pin devices and those with the new Lightning port. Apple’s guidance is pretty simple, it plainly disallows accessories from including both connectors, and instead wants manufacturers to adopt a modular plug assembly that presents one or the other at a time. The other solution is to simply use USB and the corresponding cable, but for docks that isn’t really a practical solution.

The reality of the 30-pin dock connector from 2003 is that it has been destined for a more modern, compact replacement for some time now. If you look at the actual pinout, a shocking number are devoted to I/O that simply wasn’t used anymore, and inspecting your average dock to USB connector and counting how many pins were actually there really drove home the reality that Apple was wasting a lot of space at the bottom of its devices. Volume gains from Lightning are really what enabled Apple to both redesign the speakerphone acoustic chamber, bottom microphone, and relocate the headphone jack on the iPhone 5.

Battery Life Display: 16:9, In-Cell Touch, sRGB Coverage
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  • name99 - Wednesday, October 17, 2012 - link

    If you want to read non-technical reviews, there are a million other sites you can go to, from NYT and WSJ to Engadget and TheVerge.

    The WHOLE POINT of people reading Anand's reviews is to get tech details we don't get elsewhere.
    Perhaps as a followup you might want to suggest that John Siracusa in future limit his OSX reviews to a single letter-sized page?
  • rarson - Wednesday, October 17, 2012 - link

    No, it's not the "WHOLE POINT," the whole point is that reviews are reviews and tech articles are tech articles.
  • GotThumbs - Tuesday, October 16, 2012 - link

    "Those longing for an HTC One X or Galaxy S 3 sized device running iOS are out of luck. "

    I find it hard to believe there is even one person that is in this group. Apple's walled garden is mostly OS and portal based (Itunes).

    Especially with Apples maps being sub-standard.

    Please stick to facts.
  • A5 - Tuesday, October 16, 2012 - link

    If you don't want any editorial judgement or statements, there are plenty of places where you can just read a spec sheet and benchmark results.
  • Omophorus - Tuesday, October 16, 2012 - link

    I think the opposite is more likely... or at least I fall into that category.

    Mobile computing device aside, Android 4.0+ is shockingly much nicer to use (and this coming from a long time iPhone user) than iOS 5 or iOS6.

    If I could get the iPhone 5 handset, maybe with slightly better anodization, running Android 4.0+ I'd be in hog heaven.

    After playing with an iPhone 5, I really dig the hardware, but found the software woefully lacking.
  • crankerchick - Tuesday, October 16, 2012 - link

    I think you and the original commenter missed what the statement was saying. It said, "HTC One X or Galaxy S3 'sized' device..."

    Specifically, a larger screen iPhone, is where I think they were going with the statement, especially given the context of the paragraph where the statement was made.

    That said, I'm very much in the same camp as you. My number one device would be an iPhone-size and iPhone-build device running Android (but with a few tweaks since we are talking the ideal device). In fact, that is part of the reason I have an iPhone now and my Galaxy Nexus is sitting in a drawer by the bed--it's just too big and battery life is awful. I want a 4-4.2" 720p screen that doesn't have last year's hardware inside. The One S comes closest, but it's not on VZW to my knowledge, and it's still not "the best" hardware available, which you need with Android, especially on a manufacturer's skinned device.
  • perpetualdark - Monday, October 22, 2012 - link

    What about the Incredible 4g? I think this phone was overlooked because of it's proximity to the S3 release and the fact that the market is generally trending toward a nearly 5" display..

    I like this phone because it has the current generation of technology, is pretty darn thin, has a replaceable battery, has the 4" display (ie I am not holding a small tablet to my ear or carrying it in my pocket), and is, more importantly, android.

    Yes, the SLCD display may not be quite what the apple display is on paper, but to be perfectly honest, I have never noticed the differences.. Perhaps in a test environment, or to someone who calibrates displays all day, the Apple display would be better, I just don't see it.

    The s4 processor is not only fast, but plenty efficient, and the battery lasts easily 2 full days of heavy use. I can use it to read a kindle book for 6-8 hours over 2 days, talk a few hours, surf the web a few dozen times, text a few hundred texts, and even play games for an hour or two before I run out of battery. I have yet to go below 40% in one 24 hour period of time with the exception of using it with GPS and maps up.. the gps on 100% burns up the battery fast.

    gig of ram, 8 gigs on board storage, 32 more gigs with the sd card, etc, plenty of storage. 8 megapixal camera on back and a vga camera on front.
    ICS, LTE, Beats Audio, pretty much all the latest in tech..

    No, it can't quite compete with the S3, but it is pretty close to a One X in a 4" package and the closest thing to a One X you can get from Verizon, and honestly the phone that SHOULD be compared to the iphone5, given it is the only one with the current generation of hardware that is the same size. Sure, the iphone5 has an edge on the inc 4g in terms of tech specs, but when you add cost to the mix, the playing field is more level there as well, and to be honest, in real world applications the differences are going to amount to very small percentages.

    What people really want is a phone that fits their needs. Usually the most important things are screen size, OS preference, cost, and battery life. Performance is ONLY an issue when there is a problem with it.. Like when the iphone 4 dropped calls and couldn't do internet when you touched it.. The difference from the S4 to the A6 in real world application is a second or two in loading an app.. if even that.. most of my apps open instantly and with chrome and a good 4G connection I am betting that side by side loading web pages would be nearly identical. Specs are cool when comparing e-peen size but otherwise don't mean much in application.

    Not everyone is interested in big screens for a phone. Not everyone is interested in having a flexible OS. Not everyone is interested in the latest tech. Not everyone wants to spend a fortune on a phone that is, in practice, marginally better than what they have already. Not everyone is interested in bleeding edge technology. Sometimes you are looking for the phone that best suits YOUR needs. For me, that is an android platform, small form factor to fit in my front pocket comfortably as well as in my hand. A processor that was fast but power conservative. A battery that lasted a full day with reserve to spare, and could be used for 2 or 3 days if conserved well, AND could be swapped with a fully charged battery when travelling. I also like a phone that I can drop and scratch and not notice the dings and scratches.. since I put it in my pocket, I don't want to add a bulky case to keep it safe.. (I have dropped this phone dozens of times and 24" away you would never know it). I like to only pay $6.99 for insurance and be able to replace it if lost or stolen or broken for less than $100 ($12 per month for apple with $170 replacement deductible). And I like that I can use ANY micro-usb charger or cable to charge or connect to a computer. I don't have to buy any special adapters to make it work with my existing devices.

    Quite frankly, I think the difference between an android fan and an apple fan is that an android fan will not settle for the one device available to suit his needs, he will shop around to find the RIGHT one. If that happens to be an iphone, that is what he will get. But with dozens of models to choose from that are every bit as good if not better in every way that really matters, the chances of going with an iphone are pretty slim. An apple fan will settle for what is available and try to convince everyone around him that this one device will fit everyone's needs perfectly without exception.
  • crankerchick - Tuesday, October 16, 2012 - link

    I don't follow all the technicals like that, I'm more of an end user when it comes to mobile technology, but I think the trend towards the larger screens is more the MFRs pushing that a selling point (moar moar moar) to cover the fact that they can't fit the latest and greatest and cutting edge (NFC, quad core, LTE, etc) in the chassies of a 4" screen phone.

    Just my hunch. Wouldn't mind being schooled on this by someone in the know.
  • KPOM - Tuesday, October 16, 2012 - link

    I'd agree with that assessment. Apple was one of the last to move to 3G and one of the last to move to LTE because of battery life. The other manufacturers got around it by building thicker phones in the 3G era, and then with the LTE era started putting in bigger screens, which gave them room for bigger batteries (though the larger displays also required more power). It turned out enough people liked the bigger screens.

    Now that the power consumption levels are down, it will be interesting to see if others shrink their screens back down to Apple levels. The Galaxy SIII Mini is a half-hearted attempt, as it lacks LTE and has mediocre specs. But maybe someone else will take the bait.
  • rarson - Thursday, October 18, 2012 - link

    I feel like the iPhone 5 screen is actually too small (and I've heard complaints that the phone is too light, which I sort of agree with as well), but I think the Galaxy S3 is too big. I'm still using a Verizon Fascinate. It's got a bigger screen than the 5, but it's a bit smaller than the S2 and S3, perfect size. Thin but not too thin, and light but not too light. In fact, all I really want is a phone exactly like it, but with more power, better battery life, and maybe a slightly better screen (can't complain too much about the screen I already have).

    When I picked up the Fascinate, I knew it was the phone I wanted (helps that the price was only $50). When the S2 came out, I was excited to see it but disappointed by how much bigger the phone had gotten. I don't want a phone that I have to contort to get into my pocket. Apple's iPhone 5 is great in that respect, but after using this Fascinate for so long, its small size feels a bit cramped.

    I'd love to have the hardware of the Apple phone, but proprietary connectors and iOS are absolutely a no-go for me. I really don't care for iOS at all, because Android is so much easier to use.

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