But your then losing the ability of going on xbox live, unless you flash retail bios to the chip. It works I guess, but it's stupid without a doubt.
QUOTE(HSDEMONZ @ Mar 11 2005, 08:10 PM)
Many people who've goe the TSOP route and buggered an old motherboard thank god this is possible..
Definately, I can't tell you the # of people that have brough me a system with a bugged tsop. A lot of them needing a retail bios for live. (these arent people that opened up the system to mess around with it either)
QUOTE
If you ask me it would be stupider to try and solder in ANOTHER xbox and risk breaking another one!!
Actually, its not as easy as ppl think to damage the mobo if you know what your doin.
QUOTE(Dindas @ Mar 14 2005, 07:08 PM)
So, i got my solderless adaptor today. I was gonna try the thing that Artifex suggested doing, but i just realized, i don't have the D0 loom thing.
i have a xenium BLUE chip in my xbox solderless and i dont have those blue and black wires even conected to the chip (because i bought the chip used from a friend and all i got was the chip and adapter) and it works fine. cant boot to the original dash (but thats because im missing a critical dash file lol) but before i updated my HDD it could load the original MS dash just fine. does that blue and black wire grounding thing only relate to the 1.6 adapter?
QUOTE(mitch2025 @ Mar 14 2005, 10:00 PM)
i have a xenium BLUE chip in my xbox solderless and i dont have those blue and black wires even conected to the chip (because i bought the chip used from a friend and all i got was the chip and adapter) and it works fine. cant boot to the original dash (but thats because im missing a critical dash file lol) but before i updated my HDD it could load the original MS dash just fine. does that blue and black wire grounding thing only relate to the 1.6 adapter?
QUOTE(thebroken @ Mar 15 2005, 02:50 PM)
i didnt mean it to be mean or a ass i just dont want anyone breaking their xbox
QUOTE(Artifex @ Mar 11 2005, 02:25 PM)
Install the SPICE as usual. Then, take the blue/black d0 loom, and plug it into the appropriate spot on the chip. Now, instead of soldering the blue/black wires to the motherboard, twist them together, so that the exposed wire portions at the end make good contact with eachother. Wrap the end in electrical tape to avoid any shorts.
QUOTE(Gumba @ Mar 16 2005, 01:07 AM)
Hah.