| Panic String Fragment | Likely Faulty Component | Confidence | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | ANS2 / NAND | Storage chip or logic board layer separation | High | | SMC PANIC - ASSERT | Power management IC (Tristar/Hydra) | High | | AGX (Apple Graphics) | GPU / RAM under CPU | Medium | | aop (Apple Operation Processor) | Always-on processor (NAND or battery gas gauge) | Medium | | missing sensor(s): mic1, mic2 | Audio codec or charging port flex | Low (flex cable usually) | | SOCD report detected | CPU overvoltage / PMIC instability | High |
A typical iOS panic log (simplified) looks like this: iphone idevice panic log analyzer
the cable firmly to rule out a loose connection from a drop. Replace the component entirely if the restarts continue. Software vs. Hardware Panics | Panic String Fragment | Likely Faulty Component
Armed with the clear diagnosis this tool provides, you can take targeted action. In many cases, a simple software update, battery replacement, or flex cable swap is all that's needed. For deeper logic board faults, you now have the knowledge to confidently take your device to a specialist and explain exactly what's wrong. Hardware Panics Armed with the clear diagnosis this
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