I Was Wrong – The iPhone 17 Will NOT Bend Thanks To Their Genius Redesign

I thought the new iPhone Air was a Bendgate disaster waiting to happen. If the new 17 series’ redesign is true, I could be absolutely wrong.
Ever since the iPhone 6, people have just tried bending iPhones. Something about that relentless pursuit of slimness has resulted in most iPhones being fairly foldable, and Apple’s tried really hard to engineer newer iPhones to resist this ability, trying everything from creating new metal alloys to even infusing titanium into the frame. However, the iPhone 17 series has done something past iPhones have never attempted – changing the design altogether by wrapping the metal frame around the back too.
The latest prototype glimpsed through Unbox Therapy’s hands-on shows an iPhone that’s ditching its glossy vulnerability for something far more rigid. The rear glass panel – once the canvas of fingerprints and micro-fractures – is now demoted to a thin patch at the bottom. That tiny square exists solely to preserve wireless charging. The rest? Pure sculpted aluminum. Not just a frame. A structural, wrapped, contoured slab of metal that curves seamlessly around the back, swallowing the camera island whole like it’s part of the chassis and not a post-hoc bump.
This evolution is far more than cosmetic. It’s a design shift – the likes of which we’ve not seen since the departure of Jony Ive in 2019. The new design transforms the iPhone into a proper unibody construction, adding substantial bend resistance across the mid-section. If that reminds you of the iPhone 6’s infamous “BendGate,” you’re not alone. What’s different here is that Apple seems to be bracing itself – literally – for what could be a generational split between form factors. With the rumored iPhone Air chasing ultrathinness to an almost daring extreme, the 17 Pro Max is positioning itself as the brawnier, more durable sibling.
There’s an elegance in how Apple has engineered the aluminum to flow around the camera cluster. It softens the visual weight of the module while functionally reinforcing it. No more raised islands glued onto glass. Instead, you get a surface where camera lenses look punched out of metal – a precision-crafted effect that’s more Leica than Lenscrafters. Even the flash has migrated, nudged across the triangular array for better spatial balance and perhaps to optimize lighting angles in AR or spatial video.
On the hardware front, the 17 Pro Max is sure to impress too. Under the hood will be Apple’s new silicon, a chip designed to flex across multi-threaded workloads without draining your battery dry. Pair that with what looks like a marginally larger battery and better thermal dissipation, thanks to the metal body, and you’ve got a phone that performs under pressure – whether you’re editing 4K footage on LumaFusion or stitching AR overlays in real time.
Camera upgrades are sure to be significant too. Rumors say that all rear lenses are now 48MP, up from the mix of resolutions in earlier models. The front-facing camera? A sharp 24MP sensor – ideal for sharper video calls or just brutal selfie honesty. Combined with the new layout and sensor improvements, this setup turns the iPhone 17 into a serious imaging device. Apple seems keen to carve out a niche not just for creators, but for those inching closer to immersive media.
Obviously, this is all just speculation, as Apple’s still half-a-year away from actually dropping the new iPhone. That being said, they DID ship a couple of tonnes worth of devices from India and China just as the tariff deadline approached. Could these be the new iPhone 17 units? Or will the 17 only ship around August and September, when Apple formally launches the device? Having a product ship that late would also probably affect its baseline price, which some people speculate could easily cross the $2,000 mark. I guess I’m just happier with my old iPhone 15 Pro for another few years…
Image Credits: Unbox Therapy
Sarang Sheth
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