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Nothing Ear 3 Has Nothing to Hide

In this Article:

  • CT scans of the Nothing Ear 3 show a 12mm dynamic driver with PMI diaphragm, three directional MEMS microphones per earbud, a bone conduction voice pickup unit for call clarity, and a dual-MEMS Super Mic array inside the charging case, all packed into a stem PCB alongside a Bluetooth SoC, battery charge chip, touch sensor, and 55mAh lithium-ion cell.
  • The Nothing Ear 3 supports LDAC codec at up to 990kbps and 24-bit/96kHz hi-res audio for $179, while the AirPods Pro 3 tops out at AAC with no hi-res codec support at $249; the AirPods Pro 3 leads on ANC quality, battery life, IP57 water resistance, and health features including optical heart rate monitoring.
  • Nothing's transparent earbud design makes internal components visible through the shell, but CT scanning reveals what even that transparency cannot show: the spatial arrangement of the microphone array, the wound construction of the 55mAh lithium-ion battery cell, and the full electronics stack on the stem PCB.
4.16.2026

Nothing built its reputation on showing you what's inside. The transparent casings, visible screws, and dot-matrix typography are all deliberate: the internal engineering is part of the product's identity in a way almost no other consumer electronics brand attempts. So it felt fitting to put the Nothing Ear 3 through a CT scanner and see what the transparency doesn't show.

The Ear 3 is Nothing's most capable earbud to date, and at $179 it lands $70 below the AirPods Pro 3. The scans show why the comparison is worth taking seriously.

Earpiece

Each earbud contains a 12mm dynamic driver with a PMI diaphragm and TPU surround, tuned for a wide soundstage and strong bass response. The driver is the largest visible component in the earpiece scan, and its size relative to the overall housing is notable. A 55mAh lithium-ion battery sits alongside it. The top and side cross-sections of the battery show the characteristic spiral of a wound cell, the same basic construction used in batteries many times larger.

Three directional MEMS microphones are distributed across each earbud. Two handle the hybrid ANC array, one facing outward to sample ambient noise and one inward to monitor what reaches the ear canal. The third handles voice pickup for calls. Alongside the microphones, a bone conduction voice pickup unit reads jaw vibrations directly, giving the call processing system a cleaner voice signal in noisy environments by bypassing airborne sound entirely.

The antenna is visible in the scan running along the outer edge of the earpiece housing, positioned to maintain Bluetooth signal clearance away from the electronics.

PCB

The stem PCB scan shows the full electronics stack in a package smaller than your pinky. The Bluetooth SoC handles wireless connectivity and audio processing. A battery charge chip manages power delivery to the 55mAh cell. A touch sensor and touch chip on the lower stem handle gesture controls. Two circular elements at the base of the stem are the charging contacts. The component density on a board this small is more remarkable than anything the transparent shell reveals from the outside.

Case

The charging case carries a 500mAh battery, enough for multiple full recharges of both earbuds. The case scan also shows the Super Mic: a dual-MEMS microphone array built into the case itself, designed to function as a standalone microphone. The two MEMS microphones are visible as distinct components separate from the charging circuitry.

Nothing vs. Apple

The AirPods Pro 3 is a different product with different priorities. Apple's H2 chip delivers what reviewers consistently describe as the best active noise cancellation currently available in consumer earbuds, along with Personalized Spatial Audio, an optical heart rate sensor, and hearing aid functionality. The IP57 water resistance on both buds and case is higher than the Ear 3's IP54. Battery life runs around 8 hours with ANC on versus the Ear 3's 5 to 6 hours.

The tradeoff is the ecosystem and the codec ceiling. AirPods Pro 3 tops out at AAC with no hi-res audio support. The Ear 3 supports LDAC at up to 990kbps and 24-bit/96kHz on compatible devices, which matters on Android and for listeners who want hi-res playback. Most of what makes the AirPods Pro 3 exceptional is locked to iOS.

Nothing Ear 3$179 AirPods Pro 3$249
Driver12mm dynamic, PMI + TPUCustom Apple dynamic
Bluetooth5.45.3
CodecsLDAC, AAC, SBCAAC, SBC only
ANCHybrid adaptive, up to 45dBBest-in-class, 2x Pro 2
Microphones3x MEMS + bone conduction VPU + Super Mic caseBeamforming array
Health sensorsNoneOptical heart rate, hearing aid
Spatial AudioBasicPersonalized with head tracking
Battery (buds)55mAh, 5–6h ANC onUp to 8h ANC on
Battery (total)500mAh case, 24h+30h with case
Water resistanceIP54IP57
EcosystemAndroid + iOS, 8-band EQFull features iOS only
Price$179$249

Visibility beyond transparency

Nothing's design philosophy is that visible engineering = honest engineering. What CT adds is the layer that even a transparent case cannot show: the spatial relationships between components, the construction of the battery cell, the microphone positions relative to the driver, the full electronics stack on a super thin PCB. Turns out there was more to see.

Citations
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