I have noticed a lot of people with seemingly wrong information about frags and modchips. The formula is as follows, (please note: this is not a flame just hoping to clear up a lot of misinformation)
1) If your xbox frags by showing no image, restarting 3 times then flashes the eject light the problem is the following - Your LPC, (the 2 rows of hole running next to each other) are not soldered properly, either there is a short between them or a miscontact somewhere.
| QUOTE (EmperorPsiblade) |
Frag means that the MCPX can't find any BIOSes or the motherboard has sustained critical damage....
such as burning off the d0 with a soldering iron (60watts of powah) or dropping a glob of solder onto the mobo....(Edit By AmO - This last part is rare but always possible) |
Also what it means is that your D0 is working perfectly (unless you have soldered to the wrong D0, reconfirm that you have soldered to the correct D0 to potebtially save you lots of problems - dzv)because there is a circuit that is completed by the D0.
2) If you boot your xbox and it just boots normally as if no bios or chip is present (this is very easily apparent with Xenium chips because the Xenium OS SHOULD appear before the flubber animation, this may also be true with chips like the SmartXX and X3, if you have a 3rd Gen modchip or below then it can be tougher to tell, try using an Xecuter bios because it replaces the MS text with Xecuter2, if it doesnt try using the Eject button to turn on the xbox or hold the white button as xbox is booting, if you still see the flubber animation then read on) then the problem lies in your D0. The topside D0 can be a bitch to solder, I know that In MY case even with what seemed like a perfect joint, i still just booted like a normal xbox without the chip. You have 2 options here. Try resoldering the D0 or solder to the bottomside D0 (or LFRAME on v1.6 xbox). The reason that it seems as if the chip is not there is because the D0 creates the circuit for the chip, without the D0 there is no circuit and thus no chip, that is why often people get very confused because everything looks perfect but in fact the problem is just the D0.
| QUOTE (dzv) |
| Many modern chips Ground D0 to LPC pin 2, which happens to be the most difficult LPC pin to solder for novices. If your soldering on LPC pin 2 is not up to par, then the chip may not be able to Ground D0 correctly, even if you have soldered the correct D0 point perfectly. |
I hope this clears up a few issues and if you all have any questions or confusions about what I have said, please let me know. I sometimes word things wierd and people get confused.
AmO