Not big on leaving comments but you saved me a couple hundred bucks and I appreciate it! And heating up the solder and setting the port down vs soldering individually is so much easier
Got there too. In my situation the dismantle and re assemble was all i needed. I had a second chassis that had trouble. Switched out hard drives a couple time till it logged. All worked out.
One of the best tutorials I have seen. His methods worked great and by watching the video I was able to easily replace the HDMI port. I already had the tools I needed and the port was 8 bucks for a 2 pack on amazon. Oh, I got thermal paste at Best Buy for 9 bucks. Thanks so much for making this tutorial, and I really appreciate you taking the time to walk us through reassembly.
Thanks for using the microscope, it was great seeing everything so clearly. The only thing that could have made this video better would be to show what it looks like when noobs mess it up. I’ve done processes like this and my thing doesn’t look all tidy and professional like you more experienced guys. And how do I know I need to loosen it, clean up and try again? Always a nail-biter for me.
Awesome video! Followed along step by step, and it works perfectly. I saw some videos with other methods, but this one makes the most sense. I had to solder up my pins after I attached the port, I didn't add enough.
I got to the actual port repair only to find out I needed a heat gun and solder. I thought I’d reassemble the Xbox while I get those when the little plastic knob that connects the power button to the front panel sheared off. Now I have an Xbox that won’t power on or connect my TV.
Cool video. Back in high school I would frankenstein PS3 parts to make working systems then sell the rest of stuff for parts. Never got into messing with any soldering. Couple of those units sold to friends still running from time to time today. I did successfully solder in some replacement capacitors on a TV before to get an extra few years out of it.
On a new console revision it might happen a few times but it becomes mindless to put everything back. Ps5 was the worst with how many screws it has holding the top shield to the main board.
Thanks for the calm and easy to follow along tutorial. Job done - I even bought a cheap SMD Rework Station (finally!) - and it all worked out. Let's see what my kids break next... 😂
What is the cordless screw driver you used? I wouldn't mind buying one. Its not too powerful? To strip anything out? If so i definitely want one of those
If you are on max heat and Max Air Flow and it's not melting the solder then your hot air gun does an output enough heat. I would suggest an atten st-862d or a quick 861dw.
@@CNA-Games honestly I gave up broke the replacement hdmi port and threw the motherboard across the room In just going to buy a broken xbox one s (faulty power) one and replace the power supply with the working one I have it’s all pointless I hate soldering I’ll never do this again.
@@CNA-Games So the Quick 861dw is a heat gun integrated in the soldering system, I assumed you were just using a heat gun. You think that would work? I’d assume the “heat gun” your using get hotter then 1200 Fahrenheit?
going to try this!! repair place said itd be 250$ to replace and im not willing to pay that! ive never soldered before, but my library has a whole set up! this looks easy and if i break it... well it was already broken!
Well, the universe strikes again. If something bad can happen to me it does. I was trying to fix an hdmi port for my nephew and everything was going well, until I tried to remove the old port. It was taking longer for the solder on the port to come loose (than it was in this video), and when it finally did, I gently pulled the bad port away… along with 3 of the wires that were soldered into the board. I have solder, a soldering iron, magnifying glass, etc., but that type of repair is way beyond my expertise. Smfh.
What kind of iron and hot air rework station are you using? Leaded or lead free solder should have no problem melting with a good iron and a good hot air rework station.
So no application of thermal paste qhen reattaching heat sink? Will that keep the temperatures optimal without issue? Asking as I've torn a One S apart to repair the hdmi port.
Great video! Worked great, but for some reason the blue tooth connect button no longer works. Feels loose as if it not touching what it needs to be touching. Any suggestions on a fix? I’ve taken apart twice to ensure everything was lined up and put it back together and everything looks good.
Not big on leaving comments but you saved me a couple hundred bucks and I appreciate it! And heating up the solder and setting the port down vs soldering individually is so much easier
youre telling me i dismantled an entire xbox just to find out i need a heat gun and flux for the solder... im about to crash out
This just happened to me 🥲
Thanks for the warning💀💀
Bullshit
Got there too. In my situation the dismantle and re assemble was all i needed. I had a second chassis that had trouble. Switched out hard drives a couple time till it logged. All worked out.
So you didn't watch the video first? Must be joking, because how else did you assume the port was attached.........glue?
Very interesting putting the port down while the solder is hot. I usually use wick to remove the solder. Your method seems much easier 😮
We hot swap all ports this way. Definitely a good time safe and as long as the solder flows up the anchor legs you get a good strong connection.
First time soldering but your video was the best! Xbox is working great now. Thank you so much!
One of the best tutorials I have seen. His methods worked great and by watching the video I was able to easily replace the HDMI port. I already had the tools I needed and the port was 8 bucks for a 2 pack on amazon. Oh, I got thermal paste at Best Buy for 9 bucks. Thanks so much for making this tutorial, and I really appreciate you taking the time to walk us through reassembly.
What heat gun you using
ima order the stuff now and do it myself
@@mattstarner1659 can i use a hair dryer instead of a heat gun
Thanks for using the microscope, it was great seeing everything so clearly. The only thing that could have made this video better would be to show what it looks like when noobs mess it up. I’ve done processes like this and my thing doesn’t look all tidy and professional like you more experienced guys. And how do I know I need to loosen it, clean up and try again? Always a nail-biter for me.
Awesome video! Followed along step by step, and it works perfectly. I saw some videos with other methods, but this one makes the most sense. I had to solder up my pins after I attached the port, I didn't add enough.
Great video, but this was my first time doing anything with soldering and and now my Xbox broke lol. Rip
I got to the actual port repair only to find out I needed a heat gun and solder. I thought I’d reassemble the Xbox while I get those when the little plastic knob that connects the power button to the front panel sheared off. Now I have an Xbox that won’t power on or connect my TV.
Cool video. Back in high school I would frankenstein PS3 parts to make working systems then sell the rest of stuff for parts. Never got into messing with any soldering. Couple of those units sold to friends still running from time to time today. I did successfully solder in some replacement capacitors on a TV before to get an extra few years out of it.
How often do you end with bonus screws and just toss em in the bin without telling anyone? 😆
On a new console revision it might happen a few times but it becomes mindless to put everything back. Ps5 was the worst with how many screws it has holding the top shield to the main board.
Thanks for the calm and easy to follow along tutorial. Job done - I even bought a cheap SMD Rework Station (finally!) - and it all worked out. Let's see what my kids break next... 😂
please can you link or list all the stuff/equipments and the white looking fluid used in this video, thank you
Solder Flux brother. And the clear stuff is alcohol
Great instructional video. If i ever get brave ill fix my old chassis this way.
You made putting down that solder easy. I just found out my wifes port is messed up and i am goimg to try to change it.
are you doing a nudge test on every individual pin everytime? or you know its a good fit from looking now?
I can tell by looking for the most part. Only really nudge test when a pin doesn't look like the rest.
hey what would be the best way to detatch the hdmi port without that stuff that you used
updates?
What is the cordless screw driver you used? I wouldn't mind buying one. Its not too powerful? To strip anything out? If so i definitely want one of those
Yes, same question why did you take the cpu off? Excellent video.
you make it look so easy I’ve been hot air gunning this thing for an hour it’s BS!
If you are on max heat and Max Air Flow and it's not melting the solder then your hot air gun does an output enough heat. I would suggest an atten st-862d or a quick 861dw.
@@CNA-Games honestly I gave up broke the replacement hdmi port and threw the motherboard across the room In just going to buy a broken xbox one s (faulty power) one and replace the power supply with the working one I have it’s all pointless I hate soldering I’ll never do this again.
@@CNA-Games So the Quick 861dw is a heat gun integrated in the soldering system, I assumed you were just using a heat gun. You think that would work? I’d assume the “heat gun” your using get hotter then 1200 Fahrenheit?
going to try this!! repair place said itd be 250$ to replace and im not willing to pay that! ive never soldered before, but my library has a whole set up! this looks easy and if i break it... well it was already broken!
Which Flux do i need to buy ?
Well, the universe strikes again. If something bad can happen to me it does. I was trying to fix an hdmi port for my nephew and everything was going well, until I tried to remove the old port. It was taking longer for the solder on the port to come loose (than it was in this video), and when it finally did, I gently pulled the bad port away… along with 3 of the wires that were soldered into the board. I have solder, a soldering iron, magnifying glass, etc., but that type of repair is way beyond my expertise. Smfh.
I was wondering how it became broken and how you could tell. I have an xbox that also has the same issue but the hdmi port looks fine.
What type of solder did you use? Mine is taking forever to melt.
What kind of iron and hot air rework station are you using? Leaded or lead free solder should have no problem melting with a good iron and a good hot air rework station.
what is your flux of choice ?
So no application of thermal paste qhen reattaching heat sink? Will that keep the temperatures optimal without issue? Asking as I've torn a One S apart to repair the hdmi port.
If the heatsink was taken off in this vid then a reapplication of thermal paste 100% happened. Might have left that out in editing.
Why did you take the cpu etc off. Cant you do this with everything attatched?
Chad king! great method!
Nice. What temperature did you set the heat gun at?
For all Xbox one/series systems you can crank dat to max heat and airflow. Very thick PCBs soak up a lot of that heat.
@@CNA-GamesI seemed to have maybe burnt the board. Maybe I used the wrong flux
Everything was going fine until I started tinning the pads, then a couple of pads came right off! I've had to throw the board away 😭
dont throw it away! the board can be repaired!
So what flux did you use, I see the syringe
He used solder flux.
Great video! Worked great, but for some reason the blue tooth connect button no longer works. Feels loose as if it not touching what it needs to be touching. Any suggestions on a fix? I’ve taken apart twice to ensure everything was lined up and put it back together and everything looks good.
I would see if the switch still exists on the board that the button is pressing.
How much to change an HDMI port
The guys by me charge 75 bux
this won’t work
Feel like I can do that with super glue
Real
Welpwo❤do❤oseeosk dowo