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Guest Writer: Fixing My Dead PS3

46

The Blinking Red Light of Death.

Published: 12:00, 04/09/2010 by Kris [Halbpro].
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I love getting guest articles, people are always very nice when they email the article over and it’s always nice to see what our community is capable of. This week ashw92 graced my inbox with this article on his PS3′s failure woes and his repair process.

Warning: Attempting the repairs described in this article will void your warranty and your rights under the Sale of Goods Act.

The day has finally arrived, I was well aware it was coming at some point but it doesn’t make it any less difficult. My beloved 60GB ‘Big-Boned’ PS3 has, after 2 years and 10 months of ownership and regular use, become victim to a fatal fault – The Blinking Red Light of Death, as it is affectionately known. For those of you not encyclopaedic on PS3 faults and issues, the BRLOD occurs whilst the console is in use.

The console bleeps at you three times and the red light flashes until the on/off button is pressed at which point it goes back to being on standby. Probably like some of you I’d had my console do this before and always assumed I’d been traversing Little Big Planet or orchestrating the fall of Olympus for far too long that day and she had got too warm.

However this time was a little different, my girlfriend had taken over the reins of the PS3 for the afternoon to partake in some mindless chaos in God of War 3, just as she was removing the second leg of a certain irritating mythological messenger the PlayStation loudly proclaimed its three beeps and sat there, blinking at me.

Irritated and slightly concerned about the PlayStation I let it sit for a couple of hours to cool down and then put it back on and fulfilled my mild paranoia by doing a full backup, which I do every time it seems to be having some problems. The backup took around 2 hours and the slightly overweight console behaved perfectly, assuming the problem was solved I called it quits for the night and thought little more of it.

The next day after getting in from work my Dualshock was plucked from my eagerly awaiting hands once more by my other half. Disappointed at not being able to play myself but glad that I have someone who shares my interests, I sat myself down on the sofa and watched her load up God of War again so she could redo the section that was lost the night before.

The PlayStation started up like it had done hundreds if not thousands of times before and nothing seemed untoward until she attempted to load her save from last night. I knew this time it was not an overheating problem as my rotund friend had been on for little over a couple of minutes so I presumed it was a fault with God of War or the save was corrupt.

I restarted the console again and this time attempted to load up Wipeout HD from my recent PS+ subscription and before I even had the chance to launch the game the blinking red lights reappeared. Clutching entirely at straws I turned it off at the back unplugged all leads and let it sit for half an hour too cool and then turned it back on only to be greeted by the Blinking Red Light of Death before the console even turned on.

So as I said earlier, the day had arrived, the PlayStation had died. I knew in advance that some of my important saves were (in my opinion, foolishly) copy protected meaning I would have to start using Ezio as a killing machine, wreaking havoc in Paradise city and becoming a world famous drummer all over again. This for me was an issue, as much as I enjoyed the games greatly first time through I had put a lot of time and effort into finishing those games and did not want it snatched out from under my fingertips.

I therefore committed myself to making my PlayStation to work again. I had seen the episode of Watchdog where they placed the circuit boards in specially built ovens to repair the faults and so assumed there had to be a DIY version. I scoured the World Wide Web in search of a way to do it myself but some of the things I found were questionable at best until a came across a site by a professional PS3 repairman whose website features step by step videos, text and picture guides along with full support and a help forum to repair all manner of PS3 faults, but at a cost.

To me it appeared much more likely to succeed and more legitimate than a lot of what I had encountered so I bit the bullet and bought it.

The guide cited an expected time to repair at between two and four hours depending on experience so I enlisted my dad’s help and got to work on it at around 1 in the afternoon allowing us plenty of time, or so I thought. After copious amounts of unscrewing and applying gentle pressure we finally had stripped away the case, the power supply, the on/off switch and eject button, the Blu-ray drive, the card reader, the fan and the heat sink leaving us only the circuit board to try to repair. We were advised to use a heat gun on certain areas of the motherboard to melt the solder and then allow it to solidify back in place.

I had my doubts as to whether this would actually work but I thought if nothing else it was a laugh and a bit of father-son bonding. After reading ahead and shooting through the doors at Maplin just as they were trying to shut to get some thermal compound we were ready to put the console back together. A further hour and two leftover screws later we had it in bits again to hunt the location of the spare screw holes. After tracking them down to being beneath the Blu-ray drive she was finally fully assembled with no broken parts, bonus! We had our doubts that a simple and cheap fix such as this would do a job Sony charge a hefty amount for but remained cautiously optimistic nonetheless.

I carried the violated but now dust free 60GB monster through into the lounge and plugged in the HDMI and power cables and flicked the switch at the back. A familiar red standby light reassured me that I had not mortally wounded it to the point where it wouldn’t do a thing. Now for the moment of truth, the single moment that 6 hours of deconstruction, melting and reconstruction had boiled down to.

I dramatically lowered my finger onto the on/off button almost in slow motion and heard the fan whir into life and low and behold I was greeted with the wondrous start up tune of a fully functioning PlayStation 3.

Since that fateful moment my gaming machine has continued to function just fine although now I allow more sensible breaks and power it down more often to keep it cool. So there ladies and gentlemen I have proved that it is possible to bring a deceased PS3 back from the ashes.

Comments:
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  1. I’ve used this method on my own 60GB PS3 and a friends 40GB. Worked both times luckily. I had my doubts about it the first time though. To keep my 60GB cool now I sit a big fan infront of it, it’s loud but works well. Well done ashw92, fixing it is no easy task.

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    • i tried the heat gun thingy
      but i guess the gun wasnt hot enough to melt it
      what does it look like when you melt it

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      • You wont see it. Just make sure the heatgun is set to 350 degrees and swirl it round the CPU, GPU and the other chips for 15 secs each. Check out gilksy’s vids on youtube, he does the best way.

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  2. Yup mine does the angry beep every now and then, I try to use my slim as much as I can but my old fatty is like family. It has a lot of stuff (porn) on it that I need like game saves, music, pictures etc. that are only on the fatty. I think I might give it a Hoover today just for sh*ts and giggles, to be on the safe side (it’s 3 and a half years old !)

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    • MUSIC
      GAMES
      BLU-RAY
      MOTION CONTROL
      PORN

      It really does do everything!

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      • Ive yet to find a ‘Porntube’ that doesnt work with the ps3 browser ;)

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      • I have… one i used to use no longer works because of outdated flash on the browser… oh well!

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  3. I tried to do the same fix, failed (twice), cried a little, watched something called teevee that night, bought a slim the next day. The old girl now resides in her box awaiting the day I try again, if only to unregister the machine.

    i’m glad you managed to fix it though, gives me hope.

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  4. When my 40gb was hit with the BLROD last week, I died inside.

    Too scared to do as you have done. I worry that I won’t be able to put it back together or I’ll manage to use your method but it won’t last very long. Its outwith warranty anyway, but similar to YOURMUMANDME, I am really only concerned about save files – I was a few items away from the FFXIII platinum!

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    • If you can afford it, buy a slim, data transfer then sell the ‘big boned’ bird while she still works. I had ylod the day after i ordered my slim – a blast with the hoover got it working long enough to data transfer and sell to gamestation for £100. lucky

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      • My PS3 won’t even turn on at the moment, a few seconds of the green light before the blinking red one.

        Is there any other way of transferring data? I replaced the hard drive last year to a 500gb one and as I said, its really just save files I’m worried about since I can re-download the games from the PSN.

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  5. I fixed mine with a hair dryer and a fan, much easier, 20 mins lol =D

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  6. Great article. Question: Is this not the same as the YLOD? Your repair certainly sounds so. If you’ve carried out a “reflow” then don’t expect the console to last a long time.

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    • Yes this is the same as the YLOD, he is just calling it by a different name.Never heard anybody use the term BRLOD usually its YLOD though.

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      • Ah, thank god for that. I thought I was going mad! :-)

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      • Me too, i was like ‘There’s a red light of death now!??!?’

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    • It effectively is the same i just didnt get a yellow light at all. Both are just a general hardware failure.

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  7. I’m looking to try this with one of our PS3 60GBs which broke sometime back, and has since been to a certain ‘repair’ company no less than 4 times. (Really should have got our money back, but that’s another story) Want to try it myself just to see how it goes, just a case of finding the time to do it really :|

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  8. nice article. you should write novels :O)

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  9. Shame you forked out for a fix that’s freely available on http://www.yellowlight.co.uk – the famous Gilksy videos and PDF instructions are on there too and wouldn’t have cost you a penny…

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    • Gilksy is on youtube too, i have a 40gig and they are different to the 60 so i had to guess most of it but i had it done within an hour and my ps3 has worked now for bout 4 months

      *NOTE* Backup oftern (just incase) when i fixed it and powered it up quite alot of my saves were corrupt

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      • My fix lasted 4 months. I followed gilksy, was well chuffed when it started working again. Be warned though, 4 months is about the limit. Fix didn’t work 2nd time, just wouldn’t turn on after it. Make sure you back up once a week, i didn’t, for some reason i thought my fix would be permanent, either that or i’d be able to fix again if it did die. Annoyingly i was only 3 spec ops missions away from mw2 platinum, not going through all them again!

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  10. Good to hear it worked out for you.I fixed my 40gb ps3 earlier this year.Though i didn’t use a heat gun as i didn’t have the money to spend on one, instead i used my normal kitchen oven.Stuck the motherboard in it for about 20-25 minutes and its worked ever since.
    Though i did manage to lose the thermal compound i bought so never replaced the old stuff, i will have to go back one day and redo that.

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