An alleged factory-floor video may have blown Apple’s biggest secret just days before launch — showing what looks like an iPhone 17 Pro Max with a hulking camera bar stretching across the entire top of the phone.

The 10-second clip, posted on China’s Weibo social media platform, shows a worker lifting a large silver handset from a row of similar units, revealing a full-width camera island and a redesigned back panel centered on the Apple logo.

The footage is impossible to authenticate, but if real it signals one of Apple’s boldest iPhone redesigns.

Apple has not commented on the video. Invitations have gone out for an “Awe Dropping” event at Apple Park, the company’s headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., on Tuesday, where the iPhone 17 lineup is expected to debut.

The leaked unit’s camera bar looks more Pixel than iPhone, echoing rival designs while housing what rumors say are three main lenses in a triangular cluster flanked by smaller sensors.

Case images and accessory chatter have hinted at the same sweeping rectangle — a dramatic break from Apple’s long-running corner bump.

Sharp-eyed viewers also flagged a large, tinted glass panel inset on the rear that frames the Apple logo and covers much of the back — a look that tracks with recent dummy hardware and accessory mockups.

Color-wise, the video appears to show silver and black, with a third, bronze-like tone teased on nearby packaging. Earlier chatter has pointed to new Pro colors — including orange and navy — but Apple’s final palette won’t be certain until the anticipated unveiling next week.

There’s also the looming wild card: a super-slim “iPhone 17 Air,” long rumored to be Apple’s thinnest phone ever at roughly 5.5mm. If Apple ships it, expect a very different silhouette from the Pro models — and hard choices on battery and camera trade-offs.

Rumors suggest Apple could hold most US prices steady, with a possible small bump on the smaller Pro in exchange for more storage, though nothing is certain until CEO Tim Cook reveals the numbers on stage next week.

Beyond phones, the stage is set for new wearables. Expect Apple Watch Series 11 — and possibly Ultra 3 and a refreshed SE — with health and battery upgrades in the mix.

Companies at time will deliberately use fake prototypes and decoy parts during the manufacturing and testing stages of high-profile products—such as smartphones—to prevent real leaks and trace internal sources of information leaks.

Manufacturers can intentionally let dummies with non-final designs circulate so that competitors and leakers are misled about the product’s true shape and features.

The Post has sought comment from Apple.

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