I have exhausted every combination I can think of to get the clock to hold the current time after a reboot. If it helps any, this PS3 was running PS3ita 4.65 DEX prior to my disaster. Disabling plugins in cobra is the only thing that makes it behave "normally", as in it will hold the clock settings after reboot. If I apply the CBOMB fix with plugins disabled, the date and time are once again rendered incorrect. My CMOS battery has gained some strength at this point (how?) and holds the time fine (as long as plugins are toggled off in cobra).
Just a little update for anyone following along. I formatted a drive and did a system restore from the XMB , going back to PS3ita 4.65.I set the clock as usual during the setup process (correctly this time), and everything seems normal. Correct time after cold start/reboot. As an experiment (double checking my previous efforts), I then installed webman mod , and boom! the clock was screwed up again, in the future land of Y2.1K and the gargantuan thicket of madness. My advice to anyone reading this is to NEVER mess around and set your clock to a future year and then apply the CBOMB fix. Once I put in the wrong year, it would only let me change it to a year farther in the future... until the year 2100, which cannot be set by normal means in the time and date settings. Maybe
@aldostools will see this and chime in, guiding me to the light. As it stands, my PS3 slim that can do 750mhz on the RSX is kind of stuck back in the stone age, while my CECHL is running Evilnat's overclocked firmware, webman mod, and the CBOMB fix applied without any issues. Oh, the irony.
Be careful,
folks.
Don't be a dummy like PSX_Specter and spin the time and date around carelessly trying to test something out that you don't fully understand. I think if someone with the ability added a CBOMB fix undo button to a menu (any menu, pick one), to undo the CBOMB fix, thereby setting the default factory time or just blanking the values completely, it might not be a bad idea. My humble two cents. I'm only clever enough to be dangerous, obviously, so I'm resisting the urge to start hex editing or copying files in flash without knowing what I'm doing. I bought this particular console already jailbroken, and never got around to making a dump of the flash before my goof.