소개
Get back to your gaming by replacing your Xbox 360 wireless controllers logic board.
필요한 것
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Depress the battery release button on the top of the controller.
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Remove the battery holder from the controller.
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이 단계에 사용된 도구:Tweezers$4.99
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Use a pair of tweezers to peel the barcode sticker from the battery compartment.
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Use the flat end of a spudger to remove the vibration motor cable, moving it upward from its socket on the logic board.
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Lift the vibration motor out of the front case.
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Lifting from the headphone jack and power plug, remove the logic board from the front case.
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Using your thumb and forefinger, push the left trigger toward the right side of the controller. Simultaneously push the trigger control arm in the opposite direction.
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Push the trigger arm downward.
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Insert the edge of a spudger in between the trigger and the trigger assembly near the left edge. Pry the housing away from the catch on the trigger.
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Using the previously described technique, pry the housing on the right edge away from the trigger.
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Rotate the trigger away from the logic board, past its housing.
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To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
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댓글 7개
Any guides for troubleshooting the test points on the board as to determine why the left trigger doesn't aim during gameplay? I've replaced the potentiometer with a brand new one but still nothing, everything else works perfectly …thoughts?
bad connection down the Vdc supply, gnd, or sense pin paths? Or a blown channel on the ADC that reads the potentiometer and converts the value to digital. If the ADC is integrated inside the main chip, its toast. Its also possible another component along the signal path may be faulty. Like a capacitor gone short for some reason. Basically its break out the multimeter and start poking stuff time.
Tank R -
I don't need a removal guide I need a diagram that shows me how to put the trigger on a button on top so a child with deformed fingers can use it. The triggers apparently have hall type sensors.
I havent been inside my official remote yet, but if the unofficial ones Ive scrapped and/or repaired are any indication the triggers are potentiometers, not hall effect sensors. If you're fine with simple binary control (ie, on off, and not the analog sweep of values) then just wire the center pad and what ever side the wiper moves towards (whichever side drops in resistance when going to full deflection) to a button. If that doesnt work, try center and the other pin.
Tank R -