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I bought a RRoD'd xbox from a friend a year or two ago that had the error 0102. I did the xclamp fix and it worked the first time. About a year went by without issue. About 3 months ago, it RRoD'd again with the same error (0102). I opened it back up, cleaned the thermal paste off and reapplied it. It worked for about a month, then it RRoD'd again (This time it froze a few times before it RRoD'd). I didn't have time to fix it until last Saturday, to which I did the same thing as before. I played for about an hour Sunday, and 5 hours on Monday (It froze about twice), and about 5 minutes today (Tuesday). It froze, so I went to restart my xbox, but when it turned back on, it RRoD'd (0102). Any idea if I am doing something wrong when I'm repairing it, or is it something wrong with the xbox?
When it really gets down to it the solder might start to "sag" after quite a few reflows, flux helps but its not a guarantee.
Thanks so much. One last question, about how much will this all cost?
they just have to spend $10 more each console to make a thicker PCB. that's really it nothing else too it. They have pretty good solder too. the motherboard is a flimsy POS which in turn cracks the solder after heat warping etc.Look at your PC's motherboard and compare to the xbox's motherboard thickness.
hmm... if thats the case, shouldnt we be looking more towards a repair method that involvs somehow making the pcb a bit sturdier. like adding a little extra re-inforcement?
there is no substitute for good equipment, accurate knowledge and proper procedure, and in the end anything else will simply result in failure (maybe not immediately, but eventually) and frustration.
WOW jr is writing a book. lol...
if done properly, with the right amount of washers and the right thickness , the spacing on the washers that are added, should be pretty close to the stand off. That was one thing I checked on my first RROD fix, didnt want it bowed or bent up or pulled down. causing the solder to break again away from the board.
you forgot money, it will result in loss of money too. God I love this place. So much knowledge all over the place
if you have ripped apart a laptop and have you ever noticed that steel brace on the PCB holding the CPU to the board in there? they need that.