Mine was reflowed at 550*C (unlike my C03 which was at 350*C) and seems to have been lasting for quite some time. I used a cheap automotive heatgun which I usually use to fix artefacting GPUs, and so far both my C03 and G04s (yes, 2 of them, both reflowed) are working just fine.
Anyways, I'm not entirely sure it was the RSX that went up dead, but rather the NEC-Tokin caps went short.
Artifacting its when the GPU Die its about to die, due to poor maintenance and heat damage, the substrate also gets damaged in the process, to a point that the GPU won't show any picture, hence the GLOD, not YLOD, reflow only fixes the Substrate temporarily, but the time-frame its unknown, what i observed through the years its, the more heat you give the longer it lasts, but sometimes that isn't the case.
If the GPU shows signs of Artifacting or GLOD then a Chip replacement its advised, but if the console refuses to start due to a YLOD, then yes, you have to replace the NEC Caps, but with reflowing and reballing when the console gives you a YLOD you're actually damaging/fixing the substrate GPU and temporarily restoring the NECs Capacitive properties, so its two birds with one stone.
Btw, reflowing a dead GPU doesn't need 350°C, because the lead free aloy has a tolerance of 217°C, so you are risking damaging the BGA grid in the process, but i bet that the heat-gun doesn't even push 350°Cs of hot air, combined with the ambient temperature that value decreases, so back to the point, next time when you want to "fix" reflow a dead GPU use 150°Cs, this is more than enough heat to fix the GPU substrate.
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