My RROD fix


Recommended Posts

OK, I'll see how it go's with just the x-clamp fix, new fans and lapped heat sinks, as you and PiracyX think the towel trick is a really bad idea. I wasn't really looking forward to using a heat gun for anything other than stripping paint anyway.

I'm assuming that the firm I contacted about re-flowing, are just going to use the heat gun method anyway?

Have you got a rough idea of how much re-balling would cost?

I was given a RRoD 360 last year for free from a friend as he bought an elite and said if I could fix it it was mines...

All I did was order the X-Clamp fix & it's still going strong to this day, all I did was put the x-clamp fix on & then do the 2:30 burn-in trick with no fans etc connected until you get the 2 red lights.

I personally wouldn't use the heat gun unless doing the burn-in trick fails :)

I'm assuming that the firm I contacted about re-flowing, are just going to use the heat gun method anyway?

Depends how professional they are. If it's some dodgy company then more than likely. If it's a proper electronics company they'd be using an SMD rework station (check Google images to see what some of these things look like). They're basically the proper kit for the job and it'll heat the underside of the board as well as the area around the chip to professionally reflow the solder without affecting any other part of the board.

If it's a professional job and the price is right, it's worth doing. A professional reflow and xclamp replacement (so the crappy xclamps don't cause the board to warp and break the solder joints again) should ensure a near permanent repair.

Not sure how much a full reballing would cost but it basically involves using a rework station to take the CPU/GPU off, all the old solder balls need to be removed, the chip and motherboard joints cleaned, new solder balls applied and then the new chip affixed to the board. I don't know exactly what it'd cost, but it's probably not that far off what a brand new 360 Arcade costs.

I was given a RRoD 360 last year for free from a friend as he bought an elite and said if I could fix it it was mines...

All I did was order the X-Clamp fix & it's still going strong to this day, all I did was put the x-clamp fix on & then do the 2:30 burn-in trick with no fans etc connected until you get the 2 red lights.

I personally wouldn't use the heat gun unless doing the burn-in trick fails :)

That's pretty reassuring. I'm gonna try and sort it without any heat tricks for now, and take it from there.

Depends how professional they are. If it's some dodgy company then more than likely. If it's a proper electronics company they'd be using an SMD rework station (check Google images to see what some of these things look like). They're basically the proper kit for the job and it'll heat the underside of the board as well as the area around the chip to professionally reflow the solder without affecting any other part of the board.

If it's a professional job and the price is right, it's worth doing. A professional reflow and xclamp replacement (so the crappy xclamps don't cause the board to warp and break the solder joints again) should ensure a near permanent repair.

Not sure how much a full reballing would cost but it basically involves using a rework station to take the CPU/GPU off, all the old solder balls need to be removed, the chip and motherboard joints cleaned, new solder balls applied and then the new chip affixed to the board. I don't know exactly what it'd cost, but it's probably not that far off what a brand new 360 Arcade costs.

Thanks for the info. Re-balling sounds like it would be very expensive, even more than a new console, perhaps? These guys quoted me ?60 or ?70 (I can't remember) just for a relatively simple re-flow.

http://www.creativeit.tv/

That was for a 2 hour turnaround, if I dropped it off and collected it.

Haven't had time to do the lapping tonight, but I got it open and got the heat sinks off. Had a close look at the mobo too, and didn't see any sort of scorch marks.

Should have some pics up tomorrow night.

At ?60/70 you are like ?30 short of just buying a new 360 from Sainsbury:/:/

Exactly!

i bought some bolt set off ebay with heat paste, set me back ?4.00 + ?5.00 on some heat pads.

worked like a charm havent had a problem yet, and i done this months back.. its worth the ?10.00 in my opinion what have you got to loose.

That's what I like to :)ar :) The bolts cost ?3.00 delivered, and I've already got some Arctic Silver and some little ram sinks. But I saw a video ages ago, might have been Systm on revision3, they used a thermal camera to show the inside of a PC, and using ram sinks with sticky pads actually acted as an insulator.

So without using some sort of thermal glue, I probably wont use them.

I am going to try the towel trick now.

Apparently not a good idea, but good luck.

I'm back :woot:

I've done a fair bit of reading about lapping over the last 2 days, and was really wondering if it was wroth doing it at all, but the X-Clamp parts arrived today, so it was time to make a choice.

These are most of the things I've read on the subject.

Link 1

Link 2

Link 3

Link 4

Link 5

Link 6

Link 7

Link 8

And here are some pics of where I am with it so far. :)

I've only used the 400 grit paper so far. It took about 45 mins on the GPU heatsink, and about 25 mins on the CPU heatsink, just to get them flat. That's with regularly rinsing the paper and heatsinks in the shower, and taking lots of photos. (and the odd swig of beer and a smoke break)

You can see from the pics, that the smaller chip on the GPU wasn't even in full contact with the heatsink. I'm not sure if this is because I'd used too much thermal past last time, or because the heatsink was so uneven.

I should have this finished tonight, so I'll post more pics when I'm done. Fingers crossed, it works. :unsure:

f849dc15855065.gif 6318d115857188.gif 5854e715855110.gif

21ea4f15855166.gif 08a63d15855195.gif 17b47715859689.gif

059da215856583.gif 0485dd15856403.gif c6d08615855279.gif

16492415855372.gif ec748815855456.gif ce5a8a15855774.gif

1ab26715855798.gif 2d763c15855822.gif 56017715855843.gif

81937c15855918.gif 53308915855940.gif 93aaf815855977.gif

eea10915856016.gif 7d1d7d15856037.gif 1c38fa15856107.gif

dc505d15856164.gif 29d8ef15856207.gif 9fcb7415856263.gif

Edited by DARKFiB3R
Towel Trick worked perfectly fine.. my 360 is working.. Question is; For how long?

It works for the last time.

What you did was overheat the chips until it resoldered the melted parts.But you did it the wrong way with the towel.Also any "fix" besides reballing is a 2 weeks-1 month fix in 90% of the cases.Keep toweling it until,eventually it dies completely.The only 100% real fix is this one: http://www.gamestop.com/Catalog/ProductDet...roduct_id=67291

Well I didn't manage to get a shine on the heatsink, but that's not really the goal anyway. The goal is to get it as flat as possible, and on that score, I've made a definite improvement. It feels very smooth to the touch, but looks very dull.

Also, I'm a ######. The X-Clamp bolts I bought, only come with enough parts to do one of the chips, I thought I was going to be doing both! But as it's the GPU that's the problem, I think it'll be OK.

a7699515924333.gif dcd47d15924352.gif b9119c15924364.gif

Here you can see the new bolts with the 2 washers on each, and there's also a sprung washer on each, under the mobo.

b4fdbd15924416.gif

This looks like a lot of thermal paste but it was scraped on with a credit card, I also scraped a tiny amount onto the heatsinks, just enough to kind of stain the metal. (the tape is there just to stop me making a mess)

01603615924438.gif 8f5e4515924488.gif

The Talismoon fans didn't arrived yesterday and I got impatient, so I connected the power and video leads, and turned it on. Instant RROD. So I let it sit there without any fans for 3 minutes, shut it off and went to bed.

The fans still haven't arrived today, so I gave it another test without fans and it worked! So I put it all back together and it's been running since 1:30pm (playing burnout) The only thing is, I don't remember it being this loud. I think the fans might be running at full speed constantly!

I'm not confident at all right now.

  • 3 weeks later...

Aaaaaand down she go's :'(

Right in the middle of a game of Dead Space.

Screen just went black, no sound, power still on. Turn it off and on again, gets to the dash and freezes. Try again, Freezes at the globe with corrupt graphics.

No RROD, but no joy. **** YOU MICROSOFT!

Aaaaaand down she go's :'(

Right in the middle of a game of Dead Space.

Screen just went black, no sound, power still on. Turn it off and on again, gets to the dash and freezes. Try again, Freezes at the globe with corrupt graphics.

No RROD, but no joy. **** YOU MICROSOFT!

This was the same thing that happened to my buddy's XBOX. We tried the complete x-clamp replacement, as well as lapping/new thermal paste but still RROD's and does the freeze.

Mind you his was the first gen XBOX so it could be those are just meant to be shoddy. =/

  • 4 weeks later...

Here's a method that may be of some interest to some people.

So I have a launch 360 that red ringed, so I fixed it with the X-clamp method. No problem and worked for about a year.

Just recently It starting freezing and RRODing again, but if I messed with the X-clamp it would work for that gaming session, but die again the next day.

I figured then it had to be some solder point or whatever, so I did some searching around and read about something ridiculous somebody did to revive their 360.

I gave it a try and sure enough, it's been working like a champ for the past 2 weeks.

Interested? Get ready for it:

1. Open up the 360 and strip it down to just the motherboard.

2. Preheat your oven to 450-455 degrees. No higher!

3. Take foil and wrap the capacitors (So they don't leak)

4. Put the motherboard on a cookie sheet on top of foil

5. Put in oven for 10-12 minutes

6. Take out, let cool down, and put it back together

If you're nothing else works, give it a try. What do you have to lose?

Sorry if somebody posted this already. Don't feel like going through every post.

  • 1 month later...

Did the fix to both the CPU and GPU and used a slightly different method of attaching the heatsinks.

Like this pic, but with more washers so that the mobo is actually flush with the washers and raised parts of the inner cage.

testpic5qf9.jpg

Will post pics later.

Hope it lasts a little longer this time. It's definitely quieter, so I know I've done something right lol

Definitely one of the most reliable fixes by the look of things.

I have a 360 that Red Ringed on me a month or so back. Instead of fixing it I just bought a new Jasper Arcade. Might get round to fixing the other one :/

Not sure if I can be arsed though to be honest :p

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I think he means you haven't reviewed previous UFC games. Of course it doesn't matter... Every time you just report on something that involves the President even if just simply what happened you guys usually get accused of being anti-Trump. We live in fun times.
    • So how did you solve the problem? Disabling Secure Boot isn’t a solution.
    • Another devilish issue surrounding these certificates is what can happen with old, unsuspecting PCs that nevertheless have Secure Boot enabled. In my case, it was a Dell with a 3rd-gen Core chip (so about 13 years old). As of the last few weeks, it was suddenly BSOD'g within about 5 minutes of booting. Turns out it was because of MS's "Secure-Boot-Update" scheduled task, which is scheduled to run 5 minutes after login. It's explained in gory detail here (this is not my post, but it was where I found the answer), but the short version is that this legacy system would need fairly elaborate, manual certificate intervention since MS's automatic cert update method cannot work. How to do that is linked late in the thread. https://www.bleepingcomputer.c...od-caused-by-scheduled-task Secure Boot wasn't at all important for this particular PC, so I disabled it to be done with the problem.
    • Winhance 26.06.12 by Razvan Serea Winhance is an open-source Windows enhancement utility designed to help users debloat, optimize, and customize Windows 10 and 11. It provides a user-friendly interface for removing unwanted apps, legacy components, and optional features safely, giving you more control over your system. With Winhance, you can improve performance, reduce clutter, and enhance privacy without the need for a clean install. Beyond basic debloating, Winhance offers extensive optimization tools. Users can tweak power plans, adjust gaming and performance settings, control notifications, and manage Windows Update behavior. Privacy-focused settings allow you to limit telemetry and data collection, while system customization options let you personalize the taskbar, Start menu, Explorer, and Windows themes. Winhance also supports installing or removing software efficiently, including external apps via WinGet integration, streamlining both new setups and daily maintenance. New AI privacy groups have been added for Windows AI, Microsoft Edge AI, and Microsoft Office AI, giving users clearer control over AI-related telemetry and feature usage. In addition, new settings in Gaming & Performance introduce AI taskbar pin toggles, options to remove AI apps, and controls for AI services and scheduled tasks, allowing users to better manage how AI components run in the background and appear in the system. For advanced users and IT professionals, Winhance integrates WIMUtil, a tool for creating custom Windows installation ISOs with automated configuration. You can generate autounattend.xml files, inject drivers, and apply your chosen Winhance settings automatically during installation. Most changes are non-destructive and reversible, with clear explanations in the GUI. Whether you’re optimizing a single PC or managing multiple systems, Winhance delivers a faster, cleaner, and highly personalized Windows experience. The Winhance.Installer.exe includes both Installable and Portable versions during setup. Winhance supports both Windows 10 and Windows 11 64-bit versions. It's regularly updated to ensure compatibility with the latest Windows updates and features. Winhance key features: Debloat Windows – Safely remove unwanted apps, features, and legacy components. Optimize Performance – Tune system settings for speed, responsiveness, and gaming. Privacy Enhancements – Control telemetry, data collection, and notifications. Power Management – Configure power plans and advanced energy settings. Windows Update Control – Adjust update behavior for stability and convenience. Theme Customization – Switch between light/dark mode and adjust system colors. Taskbar & Start Menu Tweaks – Modify layout, icons, and behavior. Explorer Customization – Adjust file explorer appearance and functionality. Software Management – Install/remove Windows apps and optional features. External Apps Installation – Deploy essential apps via WinGet integration. Configuration Management – Save, export, and import Winhance settings easily. Automation with WIMUtil – Create custom Windows ISOs with integrated settings. Autounattend.xml Generator – Automate Windows installations with preconfigured options. Driver Integration – Include current system drivers in custom ISOs. Non-Destructive Changes – Reversible settings with clear explanations in the GUI. Winhance 26.06.12 changelog: Features Builder Mode — build a Winhance config file or autounattend.xml without changing anything on the PC you're sitting at. Flip the new mode switcher to Builder, set everything the way you want it, and save the result as a Winhance config or an autounattend file ready for deployment on other machines. Sponsors & Supporters page — the exit donation dialog is gone. In its place, an in-app page (heart icon or the More menu) recognizes the businesses and individual supporters who keep Winhance free. It works offline and is fully localized. Change History — Winhance now keeps a receipt of everything it does. ChangeHistory.txt records every setting change (before and after values) and every app install or removal, with clear headers for config imports and bulk actions. Open it from the More menu. Hebrew language support — Winhance is now available in 29 languages. New Explorer customizations: desktop icon visibility toggles, This PC folder visibility, an icon cache size setting, and automatic thumbnail cache cleanup. New "All apps view" setting for the redesigned Windows 11 Start menu, and the Windows 11 system tray icons setting is now a dropdown with more control. App-local UI zoom — press Ctrl +/-/0 or use Ctrl+MouseWheel to scale the whole app, just like a browser. New External Apps: EA app, Ubisoft Connect, Battle.net, Rockstar Games Launcher, PowerShell, and Helium Browser. Bug Fixes Layouts no longer clip when the Windows text size slider is set above 100%. Accessibility: Narrator now announces setting names on toggles and dropdowns, previously unlabeled buttons are labeled, and progress updates are announced. Silent updates now respect your custom install location instead of reverting to the default. Cancel in Review Mode no longer clears your app selections. OneNote is now detected correctly for Win32 Click-to-Run installs. Clean Start Menu applies more reliably by also writing the group policy path. WinGet errors are no longer silent — error details now show in the terminal output. Fixed a startup crash on older Windows builds caused by a .NET runtime regression. Config import now converts power setting values correctly and no longer re-applies an already-active power plan. Improvements App icons load noticeably faster and cover almost everything now, including legacy capabilities and optional features — they come from a dedicated, checksum-validated icon repository and are fetched in parallel. Software & Apps polish: per-icon tooltips, extra table columns, an app sort dropdown, relocated search, and a cleaner compact view. A warning now appears when the Connected Devices Platform Service is set to Manual or Disabled, since some Windows features depend on it. Download: Winhance 26.06.12 | 61.5 MB (Open Source) Links: Winhance Website | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Microsoft Windows 11 Pro and Office Home & Business 2024 is still 69% off by Steven Parker Today's highlighted deal comes via our Apps + Software section of the Neowin Deals store, where you can save 69% on Windows 11 Pro + Microsoft Office Home & Business 2024. Upgrade your computing experience with Windows 11 Pro. This cutting-edge operating system boasts a sleek new design and advanced tools to help you work faster and smarter. From creative projects to gaming and beyond, Windows 11 delivers the power and flexibility you need to achieve your goals. With a focus on productivity, the new features are easy to learn and use, enhancing your workflow and efficiency. Whether you're a student, professional, gamer, or creative, Windows 11 Home has everything you need to take your productivity to the next level. New interface. easier on the eyes & easier to use Biometrics login*.Encrypted authentication & advanced antivirus defenses DirectX 12 Ultimate. Play the latest games with graphics that rival reality. DirectX 12 Ultimate comes ready to maximize your hardware* Screen space. Snap layouts, desktops & seamless redocking Widgets. Stay up-to-date with the content you love & the new you care about Microsoft Teams. Stay in touch with friends and family with Microsoft Teams, which can be seamlessly integrated into your taskbar** Wake & lock. Automatically wake up when you approach and lock when you leave Smart App Control. Provides a layer of security by only permitting apps with good reputations to be installed Windows Studio Effects. Designed with Background Blur, Eye Contact, Voice Focus, & Automatic Framing Touchscreen. For a true mouse-less or keyboard-less experience TPM 2.0. Helps prevent unwanted tampering Windows 11 Pro also includes a number of productivity-focused features, such as the ability to snap multiple windows together and create custom layouts, improved voice typing, and a new, more powerful search experience. Personal and professional users will enjoy a modern and secure computing experience, with improved performance and productivity features to help users get more done. Only on Windows 11 Pro If you require enterprise-oriented features for your daily professional tasks, then Windows 11 Pro is a better option. Set up with a local account (only when set up for work or school) Join Active Directory/Azure AD Hyper-V Windows Sandbox Microsoft Remote Desktop BitLocker device encryption Windows Information Protection Mobile device management (MDM) Group Policy Enterprise State Roaming with Azure Assigned Access Dynamic Provisioning Windows Update for Business Kiosk mode Maximum RAM: 2TB Maximum no. of CPUs: 2 Maximum no. of CPU cores: 128 Good to know: Length of access: lifetime Redemption deadline: redeem your code within 30 days of purchase Access options: desktop Max number of device(s): 1 Version: Windows 11 Pro Updates included Click here to verify Microsoft partnership Created with ChatGPT The essentials to get it all done. Microsoft Office 2024 Home is the latest version of Microsoft’s renowned productivity suite, which includes essential applications like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. This version is specifically designed for individuals and families seeking reliable tools for various home tasks, including document creation, spreadsheet management, presentation design, and note-taking. Office Home 2024 is for students and families who want classic Office apps on their Mac or PC. A one-time purchase installed on 1 PC or Mac for use at home or school. Lifetime license for MS Word, Excel, PowerPoint, & OneNote One-time purchase installed on 1 Windows PC for use at home or work Instant Delivery & Download – access your software license keys and download links instantly Free customer service – only the best support! Microsoft Office 2024 Home or Business for PC or Mac includes: Microsoft Office Word Microsoft Office Excel Microsoft Office PowerPoint Microsoft Office OneNote Is it legit? Click here to verify Microsoft partnership Good to Know ONE-TIME PURCHASE INSTALLED ON 1 DEVICE This licensing type will be connected with your Microsoft Account, NOT your actual device. This is a one-use code. The product you are purchasing is NOT MICROSOFT 365. Please read the product details. Redemption deadline: redeem your code within 30 days of purchase Access options: desktop Full versions No subscriptions – no monthly/annual fees Version: 2024 Updates included Here's the deal: This Microsoft Office Pro 2024 + Windows 11 Pro bundle normally costs $448.99, but this deal can be yours from just $134.97, that's a saving of $314. For full terms, specifications, and license info please click the link below. Microsoft Office Pro 2024 + Windows 11 Pro for just $134.97 (was $448.99) Although priced in U.S. dollars, this deal is available for digital purchase worldwide. Support queries If you have queries or need support for any of the Neowin Deals, please use the contact form here. Neowin Deals are managed and sold by StackCommerce who represent Neowin on an affiliate basis. Why we post these deals We post these because we earn commission on each sale so as not to rely solely on advertising, which many of our readers block. It all helps toward paying staff reporters, servers and hosting costs. So for those that keep moaning and complaining, be thankful we're still online for you to even do that. Other ways to support Neowin Whitelist Neowin by not blocking our ads Create a free member account to see fewer ads Make a donation to support our day to day running costs Subscribe to Neowin - for $14 a year, or $28 a year for an ad-free experience Disclosure: Neowin benefits from revenue of each sale made through our branded deals site powered by StackCommerce.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      518
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      95
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!