xboxscene.org forums
Xbox360 Forums => Xbox 360 Hacking Forums => General Technical Hacking Discussion => Topic started by: akula169 on February 02, 2020, 06:38:00 PM
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I've done some searching/browsing, but I'm at wits end on this one.
I have a Xenon that decided to go E79 today, so I figured I'd open it up and try re-flashing it.
Soldered my parallel port programmer wires back into the nand holes and Nandpro started throwing read errors right off the bat.
So I unplug everything. I plug in the xbox (LPT not connected to PC) and the box will not power on - not with the power, eject or a wired controller's big X button.
I unsolder the NAND wires - still nothing. Just for kicks, I soldered the NAND wires back and tried to read with nandpro again - now it says it can't find a programmer (to be expected if there's no power getting to where it needs to be).
I read about others that had similar problems thanks to some solder splashed shorts - and in those cases I read that the power supply light went to red. Mine is still amber when plugging the box back in.
I'm not sure where to start. I'm sure solder splashes are a very very slim possibility, as all I did was reheat the solder from the previous wire install I had - I didn't add any new solder to the board at all.
I also checked all the NAND wire holes on the board for shorts with a multimeter - nothing out of the ordinary.
Anyone have other ideas that might lead me to what's causing the box to not power on?
This post has been edited by akula169: Yesterday, 02:39 AM
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Are you getting a 3.3v/5 volt going through the xbox? Check with a multimeter, I doubt you are going to find you have a 12v going through.
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Try using the quick bridging of pins 44-47 method .. i've recovered "dead" nands this way a couple of times (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
http://www.elitemodscene.com/forums/viewto...p?f=45&t=30
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Somewhere between the bad flash and about six beers, I realize that I had soldered pin 18 to the wrong place.
It is writing now... hopefully it was a bad flash that was causing the power issue.
Thanks for all the suggestions! Appreciated. I'll certainly keep the pin shorting stuff in mind next time - I never did find any of that info in my "jtag won't power on" searches.