Extreme Failures

Post » Thu Sep 24, 2009 8:16 pm

So I've been playing New Vegas for almost a year now, and I've played Fallout: 3 for well over one, and just a few months ago my Xbox.... Failed. I'd been playing the game for a really long time every day (I've literally got nothing better to do with every single one of my friends living at a minimum at 20 miles away, okay?), and my console has held out perfectly for well over 2 years. But just recently, and this was even after the update, my Xbox just failed. I'm talking about the E-74 problem here (PS3 lovers laugh away). And then I called Microsoft to tell them my console had been bricked, which turned out to be over $100. So then I found out about these guys in Pensylvania that specified in my problem and said they'd put a "better" fan to replace my Xbox, all at the expense of $50. I don't know if bigger means better for them, but that stupid fan was bigger and LOUDER, and it pretty much made my Xbox even worse than it was before. I sent it into them 3 TIMES, after every single one of them only lasted about a month. Actually, the last time I sent it in was when it lasted about a week. Until recently when I just got it back, IT DOESN'T WORK!!! Well, I mean it does, but when I got it there was pretty much a free "uncapabiliaty feature" that came free of charge with those guys' [censored] repair and maintanence. I couldn't play any of my disks for about a month because there was something wrong with the ventilation, and I have a a pretty good idea who caused that...


Anyone have any stories like that?
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Susan Elizabeth
 
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Post » Thu Sep 24, 2009 8:30 pm

Well, sort of, I build my own PCs, it makes it easier to send it back to the manufacturer but frankly I doubt his competence.

I'm impressed you've playing F:NV for almost a year, it only came out at the end of October!
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Ben sutton
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 4:06 am

Almost a year? What?
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saharen beauty
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 12:20 pm

almost a year do xbox users age twice as fast?
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noa zarfati
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 6:04 am

New Vegas has barely been out Half A Year.
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Nicholas
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 11:53 am

New Vegas has barely been out Half A Year.

lol. Yah but i have an xbox and i had this problem until i got the newer ones of last year or so and they dont have those problems anymore.
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Nicole Elocin
 
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Post » Thu Sep 24, 2009 10:02 pm

You probably could have fixed the xbox yourself for about 5 bucks.
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Karine laverre
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 7:40 am

You probably could have fixed the xbox yourself for about 5 bucks.

Really i would love hear how to do this. And dont say to smash it with a 5 dollar hammer.
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Dina Boudreau
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 9:07 am

Really i would love hear how to do this. And dont say to smash it with a 5 dollar hammer.

X-clamp fix. It's not 110% sure to work on every single console but it elliminates the 360's main design fault and it has a pretty impressive success rate.

It's what most "repair" "companies" do aswell. The rest probably do the equivalent of the towel trick and then upgrade the cooling (lol)

In a nutshell what happens is the the combination of crappy solder and wimpy cooling on the GPU cause some of the solder joints to crack. On top of it all the stock heatsink's retention thingy (the "x-clamp") warps the motherboard thus pulling it away from the GPU.

What you do is you replace the stock retainers (x-clamps) with screws and nuts to get rid of the warping and then overheat the GPU after reassembly, hopefully causing the solder joints to reflow.
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christelle047
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 12:12 pm

X-clamp fix. It's not 110% sure to work on every single console but it elliminates the 360's main design fault and it has a pretty impressive success rate.

It's what most "repair" "companies" do aswell. The rest probably do the equivalent of the towel trick and then upgrade the cooling (lol)

In a nutshell what happens is the the combination of crappy solder and wimpy cooling on the GPU cause some of the solder joints to crack. On top of it all the stock heatsink's retention thingy (the "x-clamp") warps the motherboard thus pulling it away from the GPU.

What you do is you replace the stock retainers (x-clamps) with screws and nuts to get rid of the warping and then overheat the GPU after reassembly, hopefully causing the solder joints to reflow.

Wow thats pretty legit.
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Lawrence Armijo
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 1:50 am

So I've been playing New Vegas for almost a year now...


had to stop reading here on principle.
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Céline Rémy
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 4:36 am

that happend with my 360 my stupid mum took it to a pc repair shop, had to buy a new one
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Tyrone Haywood
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 5:23 am

Well, sort of, I build my own PCs, it makes it easier to send it back to the manufacturer but frankly I doubt his competence.

I'm impressed you've playing F:NV for almost a year, it only came out at the end of October!


Hahaha guys, I meant to say I'd been playing Fallout in general for almost a year total. Sorry for the confusion :facepalm:
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Charlotte Henderson
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 2:05 pm

had to stop reading here on principle.

I've been playing New Vegas for five years now. I'm serious. :spotted owl:
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GabiiE Liiziiouz
 
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Post » Thu Sep 24, 2009 10:54 pm

I've been playing New Vegas for five years now. I'm serious. :spotted owl:


Alright, now that's just mean.
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Batricia Alele
 
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Post » Fri Sep 25, 2009 3:06 am

In a nutshell what happens is the the combination of crappy solder and wimpy cooling on the GPU cause some of the solder joints to crack.


That's exactly what caused the PS3's YLOD issue. Except it was the PSU that caused the heating. They just have to fit those machines in such small cases that it doesn't allow proper cooling :shrug:
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Claire Jackson
 
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