Microsoft Insider Details Xbox 360 Red Ring Problems 415
kylemonger writes "A blogger at the Seattle PI has interviewed a Microsoft insider about the Xbox 360 project. The insider purports to have the background story on the 'red ring of death' (RROD) failures and why they are so common. 'RROD is caused by anything that fails in the "digital backbone" on the mother board. Also known as a core digital error. CPU, GPU, memory, etc. Bad parts, incompatible parts (timing problems) bad manufacturing process (like solder joints), misapplied heat sinks or thermal interface material, missing parts, broken parts, parts of the wrong value, missed test coverage. Any one or more, on any chip, or many other discrete components, would cause this. And many of the failures were obviously infant mortality, where they work when they leave the factory and fail early in use. The main design flaw was the excessive heat on the GPU warping the mother board around it. This would stress the solder joints on the GPU and any bad joints would then fail in early life. There are also other significantly high failure rates in other areas, like the DVD.'"
Sometimes I hope Microsoft AI conquers the world (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sometimes I hope Microsoft AI conquers the worl (Score:3, Funny)
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"it's Pinky, Pinky and the brain brain brain brain brain brain brain brain brain brain brain brain"
To catch a ring. (Score:5, Funny)
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Which is why it is funny... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Which is why it is funny... (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, towels, isn't there anything they can't do!
Ok, true, you have to remember where your towel is...
Re:Which is why it is funny... XBOX mensuration!! (Score:3, Funny)
This problem should be known as "XBOX menstruation" with the fix being "tampaxing":
Person1: "Damn my XBOX is now showing the red ring and is refusing to work properly".
Person2: "Have you tried tampaxing?"
Person1: "Eh?"
Person2: "Your XBOX is suffering from XBOX menstration. Tampaxing deals with the flow issues"
Person1: "Thanks, your right tampaxing has fixed the issu
Calling Shenanigans... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Calling Shenanigans... (Score:5, Insightful)
Were employees lined up outside this director's door to extol the virtues of motion-sensitive controllers? If not, a sufficiently-motivated manhunt could probably narrow down who this person is fairly quickly.
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That doesn't mean he's safe from fear of being discovered.
No, it doesn't.
There's no such thing as 'anonymous' on the internet.
Blinks. ....What?!
Should it become a priority to find who made a post, it could be done.
No. Wrong.
And, considering Microsoft's vast army of lawyers... Welp, I know I wouldn't take that risk.
Because you're a self-serving douche.
That doesn't mean somebody else wouldn't, but it is still a valid question to ask.
No, it isn't a valid question to ask, because you're not basing it on any information about this specific situation. It happens all the time. So unless you think it's valid (which might, in a perfect world, imply some sort of usefulness) to challenge the entire incorporeal idea of investigative journalism, this is not a valid question to ask.
- Yes, actually it does.
- You've heard of logs, right?
- Not wrong. Ask anybody defending themselves against the RIAA.
- Get yourself a family and a life you don't want to risk for something silly like that, then you can be my self-serving-douche-apprentice.
- Considering the blantant fanboyism and bullshit orbiting all three major players, yes it is a good question to ask. You're an idiot if you think everything that is posted should instantly be taken at face value when there's so much controversy surroun
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- You've heard of anonymous networks, TOR, public access points and such? There are heaps of ways to be anon online.
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It could be that they are planning on quitting anyway, people do leave jobs. Its not exactly a secret that the 360 is shoddily built though, is it.
2nd time's not the charm (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:2nd time's not the charm (Score:4, Informative)
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They're just average now, at least the ones I've used.
I don't think Microsoft does much hardware in-house anyway - it's all just badge engineering.
TFA actually says the 360 team was under resourced because they just didn't have the people to do the work, though this quote was the most telling;
MS was so focused on beating Sony this cycle that the 360 was rushed to market when all indications were that it had serious flaws.
Microsoft rushing a product to market before it's ready. Who'd have thunk it...
Re:2nd time's not the charm (Score:5, Informative)
You are quite right - Logitech have made some nice hardware for Microsoft. The Xbox is not made by Logitech.
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It's just that their games division is not up to tempo.
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That's FUD and you know it! If anything Microsoft's hardware is _better_ than their software. I won't use any other mouse but a Microsoft mouse on any of my Linux servers or workstations!
(I won't forget the smiley this time
Preventative measures? (Score:2)
Re:Preventative measures? (Score:4, Funny)
The sun coming up, basically.
Re:Preventative measures? (Score:5, Funny)
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Then again, I'm having good luck with Vista so I guess I'm inversely jinxed.
Re:Preventative measures? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Preventative measures? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:My SNES has pennies in it... (Score:2, Informative)
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The Xbox 360 Is Fundamentally Defective (Score:5, Informative)
Xbox 360s were dying in kiosks months to weeks before hitting the shelves in huge numbers.
Xbox 360s were dying at review sites in huge numbers around the time the system hit the shelves.
Xbox 360s have been dying for two years now and there is no sign that Microsoft will ever fix the fundemental design problems of the console.
Each new model is heralded as the one that 'fixed the RRoD problem'. And the failures continue. Each new model comes out and the very day they do owners start posting their RRoD problems.
It is common now for people to have gone through five to six Xbox 360s over the past two years. And people who have had to have their console replaced ten or more times is not rare.
Absolutely pathetic.
Microsoft has forever linked their name and the Xbox label with hardware failure and shoddy design. There never has been anything in the console market in the same league as the Xbox 360 hardware failure fiasco and almost certainly never will be again. No other company in the world has the necessary nexus of unlimited resources and incompetence that Microsoft posses to ever top this sad bit of console history.
Re:The Xbox 360 Is Fundamentally Defective (Score:5, Insightful)
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And yet, despite knowing this, they're still outselling the PS3 nearly two-to-one. That says more about Sony than it does about Microsoft.
You are right but only a few months ago the ratio of Xbox360 to PS3 was almost 3 to 1 world wide, now it is less then 2 to 1. The Xbox360 has well over a year start on the PS3 in the USA and Japan but in Europe and Australia the PS3 has been out just 10 months. Go to here [vgchartz.com] for current sales and then to compare launches [vgchartz.com] and you can see that the PS3 is starting to overtake the Xbox360 although in the USA the Xbox360 leads almost 3 to 1 which is significant while the lead in Europe and Japan is very margin
Xbox infant mortality? (Score:4, Interesting)
manufactured products for 24 to 48 hours. It drastically cuts down on infant mortality problems because only the survivors are shipped.
Re:Xbox infant mortality? (Score:4, Funny)
exactly what I guessed. (Score:2, Informative)
I grew up as a broadcast brat with dozens of 7-foot racks of nice, hot, red tubes around all the time. the physics never changes. as the temp goes up 10 degrees, the life expectancy of the parts goes down 50 percent. batteries, capacitors, resistors, insulation... semiconductor power output, read your spec sheets. heat kills everything. the use
Re:exactly what I guessed. (Score:5, Insightful)
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How about to -10 Celsius?
Thus, is my frozen computer [flickr.com] going to last forever?
(I think that a 10 degree variation from the optimal internal temperature is what should be avoided, but I am not a hardware engineer)
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Most new consumer hardware can sustain temperature to a point close to 100 degrees Celsius before critical failure happens.
Oh and smart consumer putting a hand on the product? are you fucki
Re:exactly what I guessed. (Score:5, Informative)
Interesting comment, but you really can't sensibly extrapolate one part of a graphics card to "most new consumer hardware". Conductors increase resistance with temperature. Semiconductors sometimes increase resistance at an almost exponential rate and usually have a point where they become full insulators. Electronics that operate at 100C+ is specificly and expensively designed to do so. A big lump of copper and a fan is usually easier. Of course sometimes cases are hot because that is where the heat is getting away - I have a little fanless machine that looks like a BBQ plate and the entire case warms up significantly, which is better than one hot spot of a higher temperature.
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It's called 360 because... (Score:5, Funny)
from microsoft, to you, back to microsoft, to you again
http://bash.org/?806949 [bash.org]
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Re:It's called 360 because... (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing new! (Score:5, Insightful)
What background story? Cheap parts, not enough testing blah blah...Where are the specifics?...and the causes mentioned for RROD were already known ages back.
I rarely got such heat failures... (Score:2)
When will people learn (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:When will people learn (Score:5, Insightful)
Honestly. You're ranting about how bad Microsoft is and how stupid anyone is to buy a Microsoft product, but you go on to give an entire litany of all the products you repeatedly purchase and how they repeatedly suck. Apparently, you haven't learned your lesson, and by your own standard, are a fool.
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Been running Windows since 3.1.... Three XP machines currently in this computer room.
Not one reformat.
What I don't understand... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What I don't understand... (Score:5, Informative)
You can use the same principles to build quiet computers- large heatsinks with big, slow fans cool more quietly and more effectively.
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That is how bad the heat issue is with the 360. If they put anything slower or less CFM, their little 360 would cook at 360 degress, and then some.
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GPU and the DVD drive. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Still i would have thought a smart idea would be for the Airflow guide to channel air flow over both heat sinks.
The pictures would suggest otherwise.
OB Venture Brothers tie-in? (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft inventing their own terminology as usual (Score:5, Insightful)
We'd better start calling the RROD the "ruddy halo of definitive binary turkey washout".
Microsoft -- reinventing the wheel... into some kind of odd mix between a rhombus and a Moebius strip.
Heat Sink Design Flaw (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's a thread with more details, and instructions.
http://forums.xbox-scene.com/index.php?showtopic=595746 [xbox-scene.com]
Ringu? (Score:5, Funny)
There's a movie in there somewhere...
We don't all have this issue (Score:2)
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BGA-problems (Score:2, Interesting)
If you think thermal expansion is hard think about the stress introduced in a SMA due to users pressing buttons.
RoHS (Score:3, Insightful)
Manufacturers are still learning how to deal with lead-free solder, and until they do, you can expect your shiny electronic gadgets to turn into bookends and doorstops with grim regularity.
RRoD is the new BSoD (Score:2)
421,000 hits for RRoD
1,670,000 hits for BSoD
Impressive considering the Xbox to Windows ratio.
No more BSODs... (Score:3, Interesting)
my... (Score:3, Funny)
As a new owner of a 65nm Xbox 360 (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, I said problem, it's simply un-acceptably noisy, sure if you're playing Sporty Mc Loud cheer 09 or Explosion masher 12 that's fine but for an RPG or or any adventure style game, ugh!.
I got my PS3 and 360 within a week of each other (good deal here in Australia at the time) and the 360 is almost not being used at all due to the noise, it's just frustratingly loud AND it can't easily be fixed.
The PS3 is quiet for 2 fantastic reasons,
1: the developers can COUNT ON there being a hard disk inside it, so they use it, infact all games install 300 to 1000mb to the hard disk, increasing load times on the repetetive data and dropping laser wear / noise
(not so the 360, thanks 'core' and 'arcade' models... sigh)
2: the data per square inch on the blu ray disks is substantially more, meaning it can spin lower and still deliver data relatively quickly.
I was playing Crackdown the other night and my g/f* called me, so I paused the game, then muted the home theatre system, I'm trying to talk to her but all i can hear is the whirr of a 16x dvd rom spinning at full speed,... big big sighs
I own the premium ffsake Microsoft, FORCE the developers to code in, if there IS a HDD found, to utilize it properly - because right now all i'm hearing is dvd's spin, how that's going to go on the disc spin motor over the years who knows?
While I'm on this topic:
Everyone has likely heard that GTA4 will be better on the 360 due to better game engine code, the PS3 is running it slow (or was?)
Problem is, one thing GTA is RENOWNED for is the constant disc access, chirp chirp chirp on PS2 and Xbox 1, HDD flash on PC - through GTA 3/ VC and SA
Do I really want the disc thrashing about on the 360 version when I could get it for my PS3 and (likely) have the developers utilise the HDD a lot better?
Decisions decisions.
I'm scared (Score:3, Interesting)
Who needs context? (Score:5, Funny)
Not always a hardware problem... (Score:4, Interesting)
I plugged the 360 into my UPS with AVR, and the problem's completely gone. I always thought the AVR stuff they try to push on people buying home theatre equipment was a scam (considering the things can cost $500+ and don't even provide uninterruptible power), but apparently some consumer electronic devices really are anal about line voltage.
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Which is still shody engineering, as most cheap (and obviously lower power) transformer that you will receive with any electonic equipement will take anything in input
- from 100V or less to 250V or more
- 45 to 65 Hz if not wider
and convert it into their output quite reliabl
Re:Q: My HDD died MS wants $100 to replace... (Score:5, Funny)
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Sorry Charlie, they make you send back JUST the Xbox itself - no cables, power supplies, or hard drives. So the only possible benefit would be the free month of Xbox Live that comes with the repair and the outside chance you received updated hardware for your troubles of forcing a RRoD.
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Re:The Blessing And Curse Of The Xbox/HD-DVD Crowd (Score:5, Insightful)
Are you high? Don't buy first-rev hardware, and don't buy add-ons for "next-gen" video formats that are (a.) only marginally better than current-gen offerings and (b.) are in the middle of a format war. Problems solved. The 360, a gaming console, sold itself to the crowds because it has good fucking games.
And while I do know people that are MS-exclusive fans, I honestly have never met anyone who has said-- of virtually any product-- "I will buy a product from any random manufacturer as long as it's not X, Inc." Anyone who's that concerned about who the "Evil Manufacturer" is isn't going to just blindly choose any secondary option, especially not from Microsoft. They're not exactly a "warm fuzzies" megacorp.
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I will buy a product from any random manufacturer as long as it's:
Re:In hindsight (current Xbox owners) (Score:5, Funny)
Your question boils down to was my life before "400 dollars better" than it is now. Yeah. Easily. Thank god for superbowls and superbowl parties.
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It only gets 3-4 hours of use during the week, and maybe 5-6 more on the weekend, so that might have something to do with it.
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Had I known all of these issues, would I still have bought mine? Absolutely. I love most of the gaming systems that have been put out since the 2600 (and own many of them from many different competing brands as well) and excluding my time spent playing WoW with a bunch of friends for an entire summer, I would say my best gaming experiences have come from the 360. Fantastic games, amazing controller, great graphics...granted, just like eve
Re:cheap repairs (Score:5, Informative)
Take the system apart and remove the xclamps that hold on the heat sinks, clean up the old thermal paste and apply new stuff. After that you insert the screws (they thread right into the heat sink dies) and tighten everything down.
On my system I also had to cut out the little square panel that's under the processors, for some reason it was causing the board to flex and not boot.
There's a thread on how to do all of this located at http://forums.xbox-scene.com/index.php?showtopic=471958 [xbox-scene.com]
You may save a little money going this way but most of the broken systems I found on Ebay are still about $200, if you want to take a gamble and enjoy working on electronics it's a good option though.
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The RROD makes me wonder if it would be cheaper to pick up a broken Xbox360 from ebay and fix it myself. I have read that a lot of repairs breaking out the soldering iron, and reapplying heating compound. I'd also like to know if anyone has purchased an xbox 360, and before using it, rebuilt/replaced the cooling infra structure. One common solution I have read about is using an antec usb laptop cooler underneath the unit as a precautionary measure. I'm not sure I want to spend $300 when I can fix xomeone elses with a dremel tool, some silver compound, and a soldering iron.
Part of the RROD problem is that the motherboard actually physically warps and destroys itself. So unless you have cheap access to good 360 boards or have some auto magical silicon repair kit/re-lithographer I'd stick to just buying a 360 new.
Re:I once hear from HP about ATI chips causing hea (Score:4, Interesting)
PS. it's in a under ventilated wood/glass cabinet along with my digital cable box. Ironically the cable box gets hotter. I probably should remove the back to allow better air flow.
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You mean "Fast, cheap, reliable, Microsoft*, pick any two"
* Microsoft counts as two
Re:Put it in a hot box (Score:5, Insightful)
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