GPU Cooling To Fix RRoD

[Rbz] fixed his friend’s Red Ring of Death stricken Xbox 360 by improving the GPU cooling. Because an overheating GPU is a common cause of the failure, he first tried to replace the thermal compound for better heat conductivity between the chip and the heat sink. This helped a bit but within two hours the problem was back. Troubled by the heat discoloration on the bottom of the DVD drive, he removed it and screwed a cooling fan to the GPU heat sink. That did the trick, so he moved the drive to the outside of the case with the aid of a longer SATA cable. It’s not pretty, but it worked.

64 thoughts on “GPU Cooling To Fix RRoD

  1. Ya know, to get my new sneakers (cool new green converses) to work, I had to remove them from their box too(although I don’t think it was a heating issue, more like a hard to walk otherwise issue).

    Would you like me to write up that “hack” for ya?

  2. it ain’t pretty, but if it works it works. however, that thing should never be vertical. ever. unless you’re in the market for new game disks XD
    what i cant figure out is, how did he burn up his jasper unit so badly? mine have barely even gotten warm after hours of modern warfare…

  3. Interesting… Instead of putting my DVD outside the case I put a fan outside of the case and just drilled vent holes through. Doesn’t do too much… I need to drill bigger holes and get a better fan though. I don’t get RROD though, it just freezes every 30 min or so. So it may not even be the same issue.

    No matter, I bought a second 360 that works still.

  4. Instead of adding a fan and removing the disk drive…

    Replace the thermal paste and reassemble leaving the left side of the xbox without its plastic shell. The case will cool much better.

  5. thats a really crappy way to fix RROD. The best way is to reflow it and use the hybrid fix. Even better than that is to reball it with leaded soldering balls.

    I just spent over $2000 getting all the equipment needed to properly do stuff like this.

  6. Legal or not, the main reason is that most users will just endure the POS instead of returning it to the stores en masse, or even not buying until something radically changes according to reviews.

  7. That’s a good idea. But it doesn’t look nice. Just get a empty factory case and put the drive in there. Then bolt the two together so they don’t get pulled apart. Then any one who walks into your living room say “WHAT THE FUCK! WHY DO YOU HAVE 2 360’S?”
    lol

  8. lol laminar, if you turned 360 degrees you’d still be looking at the xbox. I’ve replaced the x-clamps, applied new thermal paste, directed one fan to pull from the GPU and maxed out fanspeed on a few 360s and while they did last a while, the RRODs always came back in about 6mo to a years time. Oh well… better than spending $2000 on a ball grid array reflow setup to fix a $200 game system. :D

  9. I have a first-run 360, use it regularly, and I’ve never had any problems with it, RRoD or otherwise. So overall it isn’t a POS…just in many cases evidently. While obviously Microsoft could have done a lot better to prevent those issues, I still think it’s a solid console overall.

    A quick and dirty hack, but if it works, why not? I wonder if you could get your hands on an old HD-DVD 360 enclosure and put the DVD drive in that to match the aesthetics.

  10. Actually celeb, I think those people replying were trolling too.

    Anyway, a more permanent fix would be to reflow, but any home made reflow station is definitely run the risk of ruining the xbox anyway.

    Try cutting the temperature sensor trace “google it” and see if it still red rings. I bet it does.

  11. You’re right, that is a Jasper unit. Microsoft said these were the “RRoD-proof” units that would end all the problems and create world peace. Mine certainly runs cooler than my old Xenon box (that has RRoD’d many times and is fixed with the Hybrid mod) but I guess it isn’t RRoD-proof after all.

  12. Absolutely terrible fix.

    DeadlyFoez: why on earth would you waste that kind of cash on reflow/reball equipment just to fix 360’s.

    It is actually VERY simple to reflow these semi-professionally. It cost me and my partner around $200 for the equipment to do it.

  13. deyjavont: And what might that be? Aside from here and there work, I see no use for a reflow machine besides the xbox 360 market at the current moment in time. Please feel free to let me know, I am up for people to throw money at me for easy repairs!

  14. Got a newer unit (with built in heat pipe) that red ringed recently. Used hotair re-work station, to get it working for now.

    Done this with 4 boxes over the years (for friends), they only last about 1 year before the red ring appears again. Hope this issue is fix in future GPU gens.

  15. 75% of them just need quality heat compound and they work fine.

    i make plenty of cash fixing 360s without buying $2000 reflow equipment. here is the secret:

    1. go to craigslist and buy a broken 360 for $50
    2. add quality thermal compound
    3. if it works, sell it (or give it to your buddy as a wedding gift) if not, repeat step one switching the word “buy” to “sell” <—-read as "profit!"

  16. @McSquid: If any part of the BGA is loose that wont help. I’m sure you do make money doing that, like people who sale shitty outdated computers to ignorant morons in local shops and online for new machine prices.

  17. When my xbox was dying due to the gpu overheating I did the same thing, but I also two holes the top and used a cpu fan and a case fan to try to cool it. The damage was already done although it did make it last longer

  18. There is a HUGE market in my area and online for repairing the 360. I get about 10 – 15 inquiries a week about doing the repair. Nobody wants to throw it away to buy a new one that will do the same thing in a few years. Most people would rather have it professionally fixed with leaded solder balls for $100 plus parts. It wont ever break again after that. In just a total of 3 weeks and it’s all paid off. Simple.

  19. I replied to the reasonable comments on the forum.

    All of the others who insist on buying >$2000 equipment to fix a small $200 console. Really?

    All I had was a knife, fan and a SATA cable.

  20. I’m interested in the xbox 360 but all the RROD talk just puts me off. Any word on Microsoft getting their act together about releasing a model that doesn’t have these problems?

  21. Hey that shit looks pretty good, looks like a nice cheap way to fix the problem, Not sure id use a reflow thing because they can be reallly costly and considering rbz was only fixing and xbox i can understand why he did this, great idea – Good Job

  22. This isn’t a bad idea. But there are better ways of repairing an cooling your 360. I repair all manner of electronics including the 360 and PS3. Both have over heating issues. And you really only need a handful of tools to do it right costing nowhere near the 2 grand mentioned earlier. I have a fully functional clean room and the whole build only cost about $600.

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