Paperclip idea was great except it didn't hold. Make a hook the size of a nickel to loop around the nut, then cinch it with pliers. Flatten it out and trim the ends until it fits enough to screw down. It'll act kind of like a spring. That paperclip will break off pieces of plastic on the cover plate so remove debris before screwing down.
i can't really believe that logitech still sells those flawed headsets, starting from the G930 and evolving into the G230 and G430 and then the G332 and G432
Maybe they are aware of the structural weakness and intentionally designed the headset hinge to break intentionally within a certain period of time, or by accident.
Helped me get to the root of the problem, great vid!
Thank you so much for this video and for including the links to download the 3d printer parts.
thank you brooo! I needed the 3d document, ty
Paperclip idea was great except it didn't hold.
Make a hook the size of a nickel to loop around the nut, then cinch it with pliers. Flatten it out and trim the ends until it fits enough to screw down. It'll act kind of like a spring.
That paperclip will break off pieces of plastic on the cover plate so remove debris before screwing down.
Hey sir. In that provided link it's only for the right side right?? Please provide left one please
Hi, both sides actually use the same part.
@@MegaSafetyFirst okay thanks
i can't really believe that logitech still sells those flawed headsets, starting from the G930 and evolving into the G230 and G430 and then the G332 and G432
Maybe they are aware of the structural weakness and intentionally designed the headset hinge to break intentionally within a certain period of time, or by accident.
The other guess is that Logitech had to design the headset within a certain budget and decided having metal hinges was just too expensive?
@@JohnSmith-he2pg my hyper x clouds cracked around some area after a year of usage, im done with gaming headsets
@@pentiummmx2294 Okay