Shortly after the Monday release of Amazon's Kindle Fire, popular tech repair site iFixit tinkered with the new device and discovered that a host of tech giants contributed in the overall components assembly of the hottest item in the industry.

On its report, Reuters said on Tuesday that iFixit experts saw first-hand that the new Kindle Fire, which is projected to lure as many as five million buyers by year-end, brandishes inner chip parts supplied by Texas Instruments, Samsung Electronics and Hynix Semiconductor.

According to iFixit technical communication director Miroslav Djuric, Kindle Fire employs a 'Fully Integrated Power Management with Switch Mode Charger' that was engineered by experts from Texas Instrument.

For the gadget's storage capacity, Samsung collaborated with Amazon by supplying the new product with its 8 gigabytes of flash memory chip while Hynix reportedly supplied Kindle Fire with a DDR2 memory chip.

Experts who pried open the device have yet to determined the origin of the CPU powering its core operation, Djuric said, but iFixit has reported that the main component processor has been thought to be hidden behind the gadget's RAM installation port.

Kindle Fire has generated enough interest that experts said virtually match that of iPad's anticipated release, prompting many speculators to declare that the giant online retailer may have come up with a product that could give Apple a little bit of shake.

This early, prospective investors are keeping watch on Fire's market movement, according to ABR Investment Strategy analyst Brad Gastwirth, who added that companies responsible for putting together the 'hot gadget' are now under the radar.

The keen interest, Gastwirth stressed, emanates from the incredible number of units that Kindle Fire is expected to fly off the shelves, pointing out that "three to five million units per quarter could be meaningful for certain component makers."

"For the fourth quarter, three to five million is pretty much baked in but if this grows to significantly more per quarter, it will become very significant to many component companies," the independent tech analyst was reported by Reuters as saying.