Framework's flagship Laptop 13 Pro shipments are being delayed by one month after the company identified manufacturing issues with the haptic touchpad and custom display, according to Engadget. The delay moves the original late-June delivery window to late July, with some stragglers likely not shipping until August.
Operational Impact
Hardware shipments originally scheduled for late June are now pushed to late July, with a portion of pre-orders expected to be fulfilled by August. Engadget reported that Framework does not see further deadlines slipping and expects to be back on track by September. The delay only affects units that include the new haptic touchpad or display; orders without these components—including mainboards equipped with Intel's Core Ultra Series 3 chips—are shipping on time. This segmentation means logistics operators must handle separate fulfillment streams: delayed assembled laptops versus on-time mainboard and module shipments.
Root Cause
Framework outlined two specific manufacturing faults, according to Engadget. The haptic touchpad suffered a PCB design issue that created unwanted grounding, requiring a redesign. The custom display had a firmware bug that needed correction before mass production could begin. Both problems were caught before the start of mass production, leading to a production hiatus while fixes were implemented.
| Component | Issue | Action Taken |
|---|---|---|
| Haptic touchpad | PCB design causing unwanted grounding | Redesigned PCB |
| Custom display | Firmware problem | Firmware update before mass production |
Customer Options
Pre-order customers can cancel their orders and receive a full refund if they are unwilling to wait, Engadget reported. Additionally, Framework is allowing pre-order customers to modify their RAM configuration after hearing feedback that LPCAMM2 memory is difficult to source from other retailers currently. This flexibility may affect demand forecasting for logistics partners, as some customers may choose to adjust their orders instead of cancelling.
Implications for Logistics Operators
While the delay is at the manufacturing stage, logistics operators supporting Framework's supply chain will face altered shipment windows: outbound freight from Framework's production facilities to distribution hubs must now be scheduled for late July onward, rather than late June. The unaffected product lines (mainboards, repair modules) maintain their original timeline, maintaining steady cargo flow for those SKUs. The possibility of customer cancellations could reduce volume, requiring demand-planning teams to adjust forecasts. Framework's assurance that no further delays are expected offers some stability for Q3 planning.
Watch List
- Framework expects to return to normal production schedules by September 2026; any additional hiccups in touchpad or display supply could push recovery beyond that date.
- LPCAMM2 memory availability remains constrained; logistics partners should monitor if this affects order mix or return volumes.
- The unaffected mainboard shipments may see higher-than-expected demand as buyers opt for the Core Ultra Series 3 platform while waiting for the full laptop.