I think I ruined my ps3 even more. I replaced all the nec caps with tantalums and bridged them and now I get an immediate ylod. I was trying to do what a video was doing and scratched the pcb to expose some copper so I can solder them easier. I dont know if I soldered them incorrectly or if I used the incorrect wire to bridge them( I got the wire from a crappy 3rd party gamecube controller ). I dont know what I'm doing anymore to be honest, this is all a headache.
Welcome!
First would you pleas provide us with a few things?
- Model of PS3 (you can find this on the back sticker. It should say something like CECHA01 for a Phat model, or CECH2001A for a slim model, etc.)
- Was the console sealed? Do you know if has been serviced before? What's the history of the console? If you don't know, when you opened it up, did it look like it had been worked on before? Most importantly, does it look like it has been reflowed before? Is there any flux residue in the RSX region?
- Type of YLOD (the original one, before you attempted this mod). For example, from when you press the power button to hearing 3 beeps, how much time elapses? less than a second, 1-2s, 2-10s, 10s-5mins, randomly occurs, only in games, or only in intense games.
- The model number of the capacitors you used (or a link to the product you bought if you don't know).
- Use a multimeter set to resistance and measure the resistance bewteen +/GND rails. Please provide us the RSX and CPU side resistances. This is kind like a PS3 health meter...
- 0-1 Ohm = Dead or nearly so. You may have a Short (double check soldering). The RSX/CPU could be dead. Or there could be defective BGA affecting the resistance. Flux residues reduce this resistance, so be sure to clean it off thoroughly!
- 1-2 Ohms = Not good, but not dead yet.
- 2-3 Ohms = Normal wear and tear, nothing out of the ordinary.
- 3+ Ohms = Very Healthy, like new!
As others mentioned you need to use a larger bridge wire. The NEC/TOKINs are internally connected from positive rail to positive rail, and that is where all the current that feeds the processors goes. When you use a thin wire, you are basically forcing all that current through a tiny pipe. It'll burst (literally vaporize) and cause an instant YLOD like you described. Or it's also possible you bridged the +/GND rails. So double check your soldering for a short. Be sure to check the Resistance from #5 above before and after so you know if your work is good.
Okay, and now for the truth. Youtube is currently behind on the state of this fix. Everyone was too excited by the "narrative" that this is the true problem and reballing is a waste of money. "Haha! The truth has been the tantalums all along..." and so on. It's a great story that gets lots of clicks, likes, subscribers, and so on. Trubble is, it was a red herring (BS). It is in fact only going to work for a small percentage of YLODs and reballing is still needed something like 90% of the time. All that was discovered in this thread was another possible cause. One that accounts for maybe 3% of the YLOD out there. The reason the console works after installing the Tantalums, is the same reason it works after heating the caps. Thermomechanical reconnection of the microscopic BGA defect by warping the board. It will relax over the next 2 weeks and then the YLOD returns. It looks like you repaired the console, makes for a great video, and has a satisfying narrative - "Don't waste $$$ on reballing! Tantalum has been the problem all along!" But they were wrong. The video doesn't show what happens to the console 2 weeks later. You don't get the full picture until it happens to you!
...And that's what brings you here!
So, where do you go from here? To know if your console can be fixed using this method, you need to check the SYSCON error codes to diagnose the problem first. I made a
windows tutorial here. If your NEC/TOKINs need replaced you'll get a 1002 error. If you need a reball, you 'll get a 3034. It does get more complicated than that, but those are the basics. If there is a 3034 in the errlog, then even if you fix the tantalums the YLOD will return. Unless the console has been reflowed previously. It's possible the reflow fixed the 3034 and we are just seeing an old error in the log. So this is why we need to know the console's work history.