"M7" stands for 7mOhms ESR.
Those are the best caps IMO and should be perfectly adequate, if they're installed correctly. Are you sure that they are?
Let me see if I understand you.
Did I get all that right?
- You flip the power rocker. Standby LED goes solid red witohut beeps.
- Means standby circuit is fine and there are no checksum issues.
- You press the PWR touchpad and the console boots.
- Means the power on sequencing completed sucessfully. No shorts, blown fuses, or serious HW failures.
- XMB loads.
- Means the bootloader finished sucessfully. No NAND corruption. No GLOD because of it.
- You can see and hear the menu? Can navigate around?
- Means the controller paired, HDMI/AV are working, no slowdown, artifacting, or freezing to indicate a BGA/Bump defect.
- And then for no reason whatsoever it immediately shuts off, witout any warning. And the standby LED is still solid red.
- Means the PSU didn't die or the LED wouldn't be illuminated.
- Means there was no YLOD or SYSCON error or the LED would be flashing.
- Acts like the SYSCON was issued a shutdown comand, immediately shutting down (not gracefully), except it wasn't. At least not by you, not intentionally.
Regardless, it would be helpful to see the bringup command. I would especially like to see what it records while the shutdown occurs. So hookup the UART, HDMI, a controller, and auth into internal mode. Use the bringup command to start the console. Then switch to HDMI. Navigate around XMB until it shuts off. Then hit enter on the UART to see the string of events that took place. The bootloader and shutdown sequence should be recorded. Post that entire log here.
Please do this exactly.
bringup
wait until console shuts down
press enter on keyboard to make the rest of the log appear!!! (after you perform a bringup command the log will stop at the end of the power on sequence. But there is more information about the bootloader and shutdown state. It will all display, when you press enter.)
copy the entire string. From the moment you press enter on the bringup command, to after pressing enter again after the console shuts down.
I want to see the full powerup and shutdown log, start to finish. All in one string.
So I grabbed a PS3 with YLOD for really cheap at a local store, then I did the Syscon diagnosis and got the following error codes:
===================================
ERR 00: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 01: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 02: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 03: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 04: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 05: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 06: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 07: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 08: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 09: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 10: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 11: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 12: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 13: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 14: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 15: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 16: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 17: 00000000 A0203010 FFFFFFFF
ERR 18: 00000000 A0901001 25E4161F
ERR 19: 00000000 A0802022 25E41430
===================================
So I'm not exactly sure what is the meaning behind that:
A0203010 = BE_INIT OR BE_POWGOOD OR CLOCK ERRORS
The error before that (1001) indicates it was a shutdown (A090) error related with insufficient Filtering on CPU's core voltage (perhaps bad NEC Tokins?)
And then 2022 = DVE Error (IC2406, CXM4024R MultiAV controller for analog out) - Not sure what is the meaning behind that either...
With this sample of errors, would it be reasonable to think that perhaps replacing NEC Tokins on this board would fix this issue?
Could it be PSU fault?
I wish I didn't try to boot it up so many times so I would get more error codes...
Well, I offer you my condolences. I'm just sorry I couldn't convince you to make a proper tool to delid it. 1 hour with a Dremel and you'd have a tool that can delid the IHS safely. You went to much more trouble making the jig to hold the MB and researching the error.I've made a video on my PS3 repair attempt. My channel is a hobby, I do not make money out of it. And please remember I am not a PS3 expert - I am always learning!Tips and comments are always welcome! And sorry for the catching thumbnail!
But the PS3 was indeed drilled at some point LOL!
(Spoiler alert, I've got another PS3 to fix...)
Well, I guess the first one is a good candidate to teach you microsoldering. I've got one too. It's extreemly small. That's currently the limit of my ability. But always room to learn.again, I've got another PS3 coming - I felt sorry for this one so I feel I 'have' to fix one now - so do expect me coming back here!
3010 is bad news. It's still mysterious. It hasn't appeared in any of me and booter's sabotage tests. From anecdotal reports, it's usually related to the CPU. It makes me suspect CPU BGA, but other things have caused it. Like I said, a mystery.
You could try replacing a CPU tokin to see if that has any effect. But if it does, you should expect a false positive. Do not get too excited. It may not last.
DVE pin 31 <-----> RSX pad AK38
DVE pin 32 <-----> RSX pad AA37
DVE pin 34 <-----> RSX pad AM40
DVE pin 80 <-----> RSX pad AJ36
DVE pin 83 <-----> RSX pad AK36
DVE pin 84 <-----> RSX pad AK40
DVE pin 85 <-----> RSX pad AL40
DVE pin 93 <-----> RSX pad AE36
Any, in wiki is mentioned the CXM4024R is used in all this PS3 models/motherboards:@sandungas more specific phat model?
In other words... all the PS3 fats uses the CXM4024R (digital video encoder)Seen on all the PS3 FAT, CECHAxx/COK-00x up to including CECHQxx/VER-00x