vyktormvmpay25
Senior Member
I usually change all if I see 1002 after clearerrlog. Is just what I did blind, feel free to follow or not my advice.
Hello everyone, I'll let you know about my nec tokin capacitor repairs. My repairs on my CECHL failed. By wanting to remove the 6.3 v capacitors to replace them with 2.5 v, it no longer worked. I soldered in different ways but nothing changed. After a while, I lost my patience and banged the soldering iron on the motherboard in anger, which caused her death again. So I gave up on this one. On the other hand, I still wanted to manage to repair a console with a Ylod (probably caused by the nec tokin) for my own satisfaction. So I bought another PS3 (CECHK) that I paid very cheaply, with the same symptoms. I proceeded as follows: 1. In order to know if the failure is really caused by the nec tokin, before any disassembly, I applied to the back of the console, a session of 3-4 min with a hair dryer to warm up the capacitors. She started. 2. Despite its instability, I took the risk of flashing it to install a CFW 3. I then installed ps3 tools to access the error log and the diagnosis displayed the well-known errors 1002x29 and 1001x2, at this time there was almost no doubt about the malfunction of the nec tokin. 4. I waited long enough to be sure the capacitors had completely cooled, causing the YLOD. I opened the console but unlike the previous console I didn't want to completely remove the nec tokin, because I'm convinced that even if they no longer have the same numbers of microfarads, they still have a little bit. So I proceeded to the "piggyback" technique 5. I started by placing 2 capacitors (470 uf 2.5 v) next to the first nec OE108 of the RSX and 2 capacitors (470 uf 2.5 v) next to the first nec OE128 of the CELL (top side of the motherboard of course ). I reassembled the console to test and there, no need for a hair dryer to start it, they are stable on the XMB. Second test I launch a game (fantastic four) and I leave the cinematics on a loop (30min), it is always stable. Third test, I launch Motorstorm and barely arrived on the menu, it cuts. So my capacitors are not enough. 6. I dismantle the console again, I realize that one of the capacitors at the level of the CELL was badly welded, I resolder it. I take this opportunity to add 2 other capacitors (470 uf 2.5v) next to the second nec tokin RSX. I reassemble the console and I always test with Motorstorm, I arrive at the menu, I start a game, it works, but unfortunately 3-4 minutes later, it goes out, damn it. 7. I disassemble again, and I decide to add 2 capacitors (bottom side of the motherboard) like this photo at the RSX. I also take this opportunity to add a capacitor (top side) on the second Nec tokin of the CELL. I reassemble the console to test and there drum roll. I run Motorstorm, start a game and leave the game on the graphics engine for 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 mins, no stability issues, yessss. Then I launch a slightly more graphically complex game (Assassin's Creed) and I played for more than 3 hours with no problems. I think I'm on the right track. I'll try with even more complex games like Uncharted 3. Anyway thank you all for your experience.
TY, I snatched it up. It's a bit less expensive than most YLOD consoles. I'll try some tantalizers and see how it goes. I will of course diagnose the issue with an O-scope and read SYSCON errorlog to confirm tokins, before I massacre superior caps out of a blind attempt to guess the issue. As everyone should be doing at this point!For North American folks here (or near the same contient), I spotted what looks like a good deal, a CECHE01 (BC model) with random YLoD, seems likely to be the capacitor : https://www.ebay.com/itm/393953372468
If someone purchase it, fix it, let me know !
Unfortunelatey the shipping to Europe cost more than the console, so I won't do it.
Excuse me. You posted this while I was writing my previous response.Hello, no I don't have an oscilloscope so indeed it's a bit blind but not completely because as I said, before any manipulation, I test the hair dryer and if it starts there chances are it's a nec tokin problem. And then I run the syscon error log which gives me the codes 1001=CPU and 1002=RSX (in general)
Hello and welcome.
In the most polite way I can break this to you, your experiance with the YLOD is very common among those reading the initial tutorial on page 1 and not the rest of this thread. We now know that the "heat test" you performed with a hairdryer does not mean the caps are bad. If it does anything at all, it instead means you have a BGA/Bump defect requiring a reball, or RSX replacment (most likely).
Based on the 200+ pages worth of responses to this thread, I know that you next question will be... "Then why did the heat test work?" "And why did it become stable after adding more caps?"
We have answered those questions ad neaseum. Everything you need to know to catch up to speed can be read here.
In short, it due to Thermomechanical reconnection of the solder joint because of thermal warping. Basically the heat you applied bent the motherboard and the electrical connection is physically being held together by that pressure (like holding 2 wires together). Once that pressure relaxes over the next few weeks, the YLOD will return. Alternatively, heat can temporarily realign the molecular structure of microscopic traces inside the die itself which have become damaged by electromigration. This too, is temporary.
If instead you would rather I point you to only the relevent information to you, then the proper way to diagnose is to read the SYSCON errorlog. It will tell you if you have bad tokins or need a reball. Since your console is jailbroken and currently turns on, you can use PS3 advanced toolbox to dump the errorlog. Full instructions can be found in my tutorial here.
Be aware the YLOD usually returns within 2 weeks when the BGA is at fault. We call this a "false positive." Because it looks like the tantalums repaired the console. People get excited and post happy results. Then it fails again and everyone is sad and confused. Rinse and repeat for 200+ pages and you get some idea of why this thread is so long.
TY, I snatched it up. It's a bit less expensive than most YLOD consoles. I'll try some tantalizers and see how it goes. I will of course diagnose the issue with an O-scope and read SYSCON errorlog to confirm tokins, before I massacre superior caps out of a blind attempt to guess the issue. As everyone should be doing at this point!
Good evening, thank you for these very technical and relevant explanations.Hello and welcome.
In the most polite way I can break this to you, your experiance with the YLOD is very common among those reading the initial tutorial on page 1 and not the rest of this thread. We now know that the "heat test" you performed with a hairdryer does not mean the caps are bad. If it does anything at all, it instead means you have a BGA/Bump defect requiring a reball, or RSX replacment (most likely).
Based on the 200+ pages worth of responses to this thread, I know that you next question will be... "Then why did the heat test work?" "And why did it become stable after adding more caps?"
We have answered those questions ad neaseum. Everything you need to know to catch up to speed can be read here.
In short, it due to Thermomechanical reconnection of the solder joint because of thermal warping. Basically the heat you applied bent the motherboard and the electrical connection is physically being held together by that pressure (like holding 2 wires together). Once that pressure relaxes over the next few weeks, the YLOD will return. Alternatively, heat can temporarily realign the molecular structure of microscopic traces inside the die itself which have become damaged by electromigration. This too, is temporary.
If instead you would rather I point you to only the relevent information to you, then the proper way to diagnose is to read the SYSCON errorlog. It will tell you if you have bad tokins or need a reball. Since your console is jailbroken and currently turns on, you can use PS3 advanced toolbox to dump the errorlog. Full instructions can be found in my tutorial here.
Be aware the YLOD usually returns within 2 weeks when the BGA is at fault. We call this a "false positive." Because it looks like the tantalums repaired the console. People get excited and post happy results. Then it fails again and everyone is sad and confused. Rinse and repeat for 200+ pages and you get some idea of why this thread is so long.
TY, I snatched it up. It's a bit less expensive than most YLOD consoles. I'll try some tantalizers and see how it goes. I will of course diagnose the issue with an O-scope and read SYSCON errorlog to confirm tokins, before I massacre superior caps out of a blind attempt to guess the issue. As everyone should be doing at this point!
I dont agree completly on that statement, if we are assuming the heat applyed to the tokins affects the CELL/RSX located next to them... why we are discarding that the heat applyed to the tokins could affect the tokins themselfs ?We now know that the "heat test" you performed with a hairdryer does not mean the caps are bad. If it does anything at all, it instead means you have a BGA/Bump defect requiring a reball, or RSX replacment (most likely).
I was pretty sure we'd already debunked the heat effect on proadlizers… there were a few pages of back and forth a while ago.I dont agree completly on that statement, if we are assuming the heat applyed to the tokins affects the CELL/RSX located next to them... why we are discarding that the heat applyed to the tokins could affect the tokins themselfs ?
I mean... in the way you are explaining it it looks like the tokins are not affected by heat changes at all... and i dont think thats right
A different story is to try to understand how the heat affects this special "proadlizers", and not only under normal condition but also under "partial failure" conditions caused by the natural wearing of meaterials, random fails caused by small differences on the production, etc...
Long story short, the "self healing" mechanism of these polymer caps vaporizes any failing or damaged areas to maintain all possible electrical characteristics within their tolerances as long as possible. There's nothing left to be "fixed" by heating them.
I'm late for bar trivia, I'll try to remember all the anecdotal stuff I've done to prove it to myself when I get back with a few beers in me.
It's tough for anyone to remember everything at page 245, especially for newcomers, and it's unfortunate that the original post never got updated or amended.
But this same motherboards was fixed later by replacing the tokins ?, in other words... after that heating tests you got a confirmation that the tokins was the culprits ?Before I started poking them with the scope and we had all the new diagnostics, I used to just reball the RSX as the first part of troubleshooting on any console. So, within a subset of reballed RSX consoles that were still not working, I was heating the caps sometimes to check if that worked, and it never did. I did that a few dozen times, I'm sure.
Is pretty much what was reported by a few people before in the thread when they was reporting the console was refusing to turn ON at the first try (on a cold day, etc...)... but they was able to turn it ON after a few tryes (after it was warmed up)
There was a post from someone (i dont remember, sorry) some months ago where it was reported this behaviour accuratelly and it was fixed by replacing the tokins, all i remember is personally i took that report as valid (not a false positive) because i liked how it was explained (actually, i remember i clicked in the "like" button of his post because it was one of the few times someone reported this behaviour so accuratelly, heheh)
Thx, yeah, it was your description of the problems in your E01Maybe this post I made some time ago?
https://www.psx-place.com/threads/r...s-replacement-ylod.25260/page-232#post-323886
The E01 PS3 is running fine since then, at least with PS2 games.
But yes, when cold booting some random YLOD's occurred before replacing the RSX tokins,one or two YLOD's happened while playing NFS Underground 2, but disabling the upscaler solved the problem, after that it worked normally.
This report was a good proof because that problem (refusing to boot when the device is cold) usually happens in electrolitic capacitors... but in this case you fixed it by replacing the tokins (and the tokins are not electrolitic)E01:
Random YLOD's at boot, usually when the weather was cold, after 1~3 tries it worked fine, then started YLODing when playing PS2 games with upscaler on, turning it off solved the problem, the YLOD at boot became more frequent so I decided to replace the caps, after replacing it became more stable, but after 5~10 minutes playing TLoU YLOD's still occur, now with only 1001, PS2 games with upscaler on have no issue, I played more than an hour, here the full logs(1-4 after RSX tokins replaced, 5-31 before replacing)
The console is still working normally btw ? (this would be another proof that your problem was not caused by a bad BGA solder ball)
SoulKilla's board didn't connect the upper copper layer to the + rail of the tokin pad. You couldn't easily wick the solder up the edge. This design has a via to wick the solder up. But it's not enough IMO, it forces too much current through 2 small points. The plated edge should be longer.I've stumbled across this pcb (PS3 TaPol Interface v2): https://oshpark.com/profiles/TimeWalker75a
It says it "Fixes issues in the original TCIB board design by Soulkilla"
What were the issues with the v1 by soulkilla?