n0face wrote:
Rev wrote:Any tips for ps5 dual sense drift? Tried the reset job, but don't want to try taking it apart to clean it.thanks in advance
Blue Swirl wrote:Wonder how many fully functional pairs of headphones are in landfill because they look a bit ratty.
drumbeg wrote:There's a little side hustle right there if one was so inclined.
Syph79 wrote:Oh and I did fix a Series S with basically no original wires on the HDMI port. It was a crazy repair, which I’m super proud of. However, if bizarrely only works on one monitor in my house and not any of the TV’s. Bringing it back to life is fun and it now my Xbox. Maybe one day I’ll get to the bottom of it. In the meantime, I do have one more that has around half the wires missing, so should be a slightly easier task.
Questor wrote:Trace repair is where I would absolutely give up the ghost - I would enjoy following shorts around the board etc trying to find the issue, but as soon as anything got close to needing trace repair my manual dexterity would say HELL NO!
Syph79 wrote:Syph79 wrote:Oh and I did fix a Series S with basically no original wires on the HDMI port. It was a crazy repair, which I’m super proud of. However, if bizarrely only works on one monitor in my house and not any of the TV’s. Bringing it back to life is fun and it now my Xbox. Maybe one day I’ll get to the bottom of it. In the meantime, I do have one more that has around half the wires missing, so should be a slightly easier task.
This is the console with all the replacement traces all in place and ready for the port to be applied. I’ve used solder mask to protect the wiring from the heat needed to get the port on the board.
The good news is, after a little fine tuning, we’re in business and the console is working as it should.
Had a few spare parts, so this is a Series S for £50. Nice.
regmcfly wrote:Syph79 wrote:Syph79 wrote:Oh and I did fix a Series S with basically no original wires on the HDMI port. It was a crazy repair, which I’m super proud of. However, if bizarrely only works on one monitor in my house and not any of the TV’s. Bringing it back to life is fun and it now my Xbox. Maybe one day I’ll get to the bottom of it. In the meantime, I do have one more that has around half the wires missing, so should be a slightly easier task.
This is the console with all the replacement traces all in place and ready for the port to be applied. I’ve used solder mask to protect the wiring from the heat needed to get the port on the board.
The good news is, after a little fine tuning, we’re in business and the console is working as it should.
Had a few spare parts, so this is a Series S for £50. Nice.
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