@@BruceWayne-m8hif youve never soldered anything ever in your life then I would not suggest you try this. But you can always learn by fucking it up 😂 that's the best way to learn
@@royald4089 more than the lack of soldering skills, I found the circuit way too small for me to try to do anything let alone something as intricate as soldering 😂 So I gave up and decided to send it to repair. It costs around $70-100 here in Japan. Shit’s expensive ngl. Appreciate the reply btw ✊
I have a 70xx board which is missing 2 0603 or 0402 resistors just below (on the bottom side) of the connector. Can you please tell the value of these. It goes to the 3rd pin of the connector. The board is nva-001.
I've replaced my motherboard that was a 5pin connector with one that is now a 4pin I've also swapped out the PSU for the 4pin is there anything else I need to change am I right in saying I need a diffrent logic board to match these two new components?
I'm about to do this same solder tonight. I'm not experienced at soldering, but I'm savvy (and lucky) enough that I'm feeling ok at what's to come. I was able to savage 2 broken TB surround sound headphones and made one good working pair using soldering, so... But I just had a question, what is the black stuff you applied to the connector prior to soldering it down? I couldn't find much online, is it necessary? Can I use some kind of substitute? I didn't know if it was something like that grease you put on light bulb tips and other electrics to stave off corrosion...if it is I have some of that.
Nice video bro i am confident I can do this now thank you for saving me $200 to repair it myself. You're the man 💯
Did you manage to do it yourself? I wanna do it myself too but I have 0 soldering experience lol
Yes you just need to be very careful because u can burn the motherboard and then you'll really be screwed
@@BruceWayne-m8hif youve never soldered anything ever in your life then I would not suggest you try this. But you can always learn by fucking it up 😂 that's the best way to learn
@@royald4089 more than the lack of soldering skills, I found the circuit way too small for me to try to do anything let alone something as intricate as soldering 😂 So I gave up and decided to send it to repair. It costs around $70-100 here in Japan. Shit’s expensive ngl.
Appreciate the reply btw ✊
@@BruceWayne-m8h bro that's not expensive at all here in Colorado they were trying to charge me $200 that's why I decided to do it myself
Magical your patience, it looks so easy
At 3:19 the top connector strip has fully come off, is it alright to expose some copper outside of it? Or what is best to do with that?
Yes You could expose some copper around it as it belongs to the same contact as You can see on the green board mask.
I have a 70xx board which is missing 2 0603 or 0402 resistors just below (on the bottom side) of the connector. Can you please tell the value of these. It goes to the 3rd pin of the connector. The board is nva-001.
Any idea where I can buy new connector in uk? I ve been looking for ages to get the right part but nothing come up, will you help what the part called
You´re looking for this connector: www.digikey.co.uk/en/products/detail/te-connectivity-amp-connectors/292231-4/4729772
dang the beat 3:35🥵🙌
What is the black stuff?
I've replaced my motherboard that was a 5pin connector with one that is now a 4pin I've also swapped out the PSU for the 4pin is there anything else I need to change am I right in saying I need a diffrent logic board to match these two new components?
Great show you how video. can you please tell me where to buy that connector part
slt bien arraché le pauvre connecteur, c'est de la résine exposy ??? ou de la colle? . Bonne video de retauration Cdlt.
What is the purpose of this 5v connector?
Does the ps4 works without it if the 12v connector is plugged?
Unfortunately no! The PS4 needs both voltages.
I got mine put back on but still doesnt turn on
You can use a multimeter to see if all the connections work properly maybe some didn’t connect
Any idea where I can buy this part in the US?
Which part?
I'm about to do this same solder tonight. I'm not experienced at soldering, but I'm savvy (and lucky) enough that I'm feeling ok at what's to come. I was able to savage 2 broken TB surround sound headphones and made one good working pair using soldering, so...
But I just had a question, what is the black stuff you applied to the connector prior to soldering it down?
I couldn't find much online, is it necessary? Can I use some kind of substitute?
I didn't know if it was something like that grease you put on light bulb tips and other electrics to stave off corrosion...if it is I have some of that.
The black stuff is non-conductive epoxy and the green stuff is this: ua-cam.com/video/tGsB0-Bf9EE/v-deo.html
@@fairbyteit-service2315 What is the white stuff that is melting?