Since the beginning of this year, Tesla and Samsung have discussed chip design multiple times and exchanged chip prototypes for Tesla’s upcoming Hardware 4 self-driving computer, the Korea Economic Daily reported, citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
Samsung declined to comment. Tesla did not have an immediate response.
If Samsung wins the order, it is expected to make the chip on its 7-nanometre production process, the report said. Samsung already produces chips in Tesla’s current Hardware 3 computers.
Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk said in the company’s AI Day event in August that Tesla would introduce new hardware for its self-driving computer for its Cybertruck electric pick-up truck in “about a year or so.”
In the chip contract manufacturing industry, Samsung is second to TSMC which had 52.9 per cent of market share compared to Samsung’s 17.3 per cent as of end June, according to analysis provider TrendForce.
READ MORE: Musk says Tesla’s self-driving software update ‘not great’
This article was first published in Asia One . All contents and images are copyright to their respective owners and sources.