The magnet and the charging coil aren’t the same afaik. They’re located together since their functionality is linked, but ultimately they are separate.
I thought that coil was the NFC coil so that the phone could identify the case and accessories. It’s only a few threads, which would be small for an induction coil.
Oh, I see. No, apparently, Apple guards its NFC protocols extremely closely. Only recently have they been (forced to be) more open about how it all works— and to allow third-party access.
I highly recommend a MagSafe-compatible case if you’re thinking of getting into the ecosystem. Even a thin TPU case is enough to keep your phone from docking correctly, if at all.
MagSafe magnets are in the dock, not in the case.
Magsafe has magnets in the phone, the dock, AND the case for a firm connection.
Here’s a pic of my Apple silicone case with no phone inside of it. It’s magnetic.
It’s a conduction ring, too, so that the charge gets from the charger to the phone.
But people who don’t know should be made aware of this that iPhone cases now also contain magnets.
The magnet and the charging coil aren’t the same afaik. They’re located together since their functionality is linked, but ultimately they are separate.
I thought that coil was the NFC coil so that the phone could identify the case and accessories. It’s only a few threads, which would be small for an induction coil.
Oh, I see. No, apparently, Apple guards its NFC protocols extremely closely. Only recently have they been (forced to be) more open about how it all works— and to allow third-party access.
Yeah, the more I look up this, it looks like an NFC loop is part of the MagSafe / Qi 2 protocols.
I highly recommend a MagSafe-compatible case if you’re thinking of getting into the ecosystem. Even a thin TPU case is enough to keep your phone from docking correctly, if at all.