It is reported that it will be presented in two versions: the first is a regular smartphone with 5G support, and the second is a satellite-enabled one. These variants will be modeled as V2366GA and V2366HA, respectively. The V2366GA has recently received approval from Chinese certification platforms such as 3C and MIIT. The V2366HA has now received approval from both 3C and MIIT.
Last week, the Vivo X100 Ultra with satellite connectivity with model number V2366GA received radio certification in China. The 3C certification of the same device shows that it can be shipped with the V8073L0A1-CN/V8073L0E0-CN power supply. The certification shows that the charger supports fast charging up to 80W. The regular version of the device is also expected to support 80W fast charging.
The satellite version of the Vivo X100 Ultra has also been certified by MIIT, which means it will support Tiantong satellite connectivity. This will be the first Vivo phone to support satellite connectivity. Other phones on the Chinese market that support satellite connectivity include the Mate 60 Pro+, Xiaomi 14 Ultra, Oppo Find X7 Ultra, and Huawei P70 Ultra.
Xiaomi 2405AVPB7C is MIIT certifiedXiaomi 2405AVPB7C is MIIT certified
The second image in the image gallery above shows that Xiaomi’s mysterious Tiantong satellite-enabled device with model code 2405AVPB7C has also received MIIT approval. Unlike Vivo’s phone, Xiaomi’s doesn’t support cellular connectivity, but runs on Android. So, there is no clarity on whether it is a smartphone or some other device.
Coming back to the Vivo X100 Ultra, the design of the device has already been revealed through an official poster that recently appeared on Weibo. The Snapdragon 8 Gen 3-powered phone is expected to debut alongside the Vivo X100s later this month in China. The X100s is expected to debut as the world’s first phone powered by the Dimensity 9300 Plus processor. The release of these devices in markets outside of China remains unclear.