| > A wafer cost isn't insignificant. This [0] seems to indicate that in mid 2009, one could get a 300mm silicon wafer for -worst case- ~$120. Likely usable wafer area: 90,000mm^2 Largest Intel i3 processor (Haswell) die area: 181mm^2 Max dies per wafer: 497 Silicon wafer cost per die: * Assuming 0% defect rate: $0.24 * Assuming 50% defect rate: $0.48 * Assuming 99% defect rate: $30.00 Cheapest (Celeron) Haswell on sale at Newegg today: $44.99. Average i3 Haswell price: $140. [1] Unless Reuters is misinformed, or wafer costs have exploded in the past six years[2], the cost of the wafer truly does appear to be insignificant, even if we assume that wholesale prices are 50% of retail prices. [0] http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/07/21/shinetsu-idUSBNG50... [1] https://pcpartpicker.com/trends/price/cpu/ [2] This seems unlikely, as memory and chip costs haven't exploded in the past six years. |
Consider the $0.24/die, and multiply that by 100 to get a 1 TB SSD drive.
Your SSD now has a minimum cost of $24, just for the silicon. That's extremely expensive. You can never sell your SSD for cheaper than that, just to cover the silicon costs of a 1TB drive, never-mind processing, manufacturing, distribution, sales, and profit. And you're competing against 5TB hard drives that sells for $100. (the 16TB SSD meanwhile apparently uses 500 chips..)
This is why wafer costs are like diamonds, instead of aluminum platters.