

So, this above will come in handy if the BOARD IS FRIED BEYOND ANYTHING or Broken… which happens when a 360 gets dropped or pulled off and has fallen to its death. Yes RROD still occurs with a BURNT BOARD…. Which I have come across burnt, kabloooey. And you reuse the Gun and the First Kit and keep doing so, first time you fix another 360 which happens alot to me now, you are making decent money.
#Xbox 360 wireless receiver not connecting to controller plus#
Plus a useless 360? Um no?ġ4$+TiME + MAJOR PROFIT! 36$ Profit. 75$ is better than getting all the supplies above for the comp control aspect. Ok 30+14+19+time= 63-75? I can live with that for 1 360, to be a little bit over to get Started, we all take losses to get started in the begining.Īlso if you dont plan on doing this on the side only for you. Mind you the paste is enough for like 3-4 360’s alone. Thermal Paste, Pads, screws, and clamps, which comes in a kit for 14$ to fix the 360’s 1 per xbox. Heat gun(I prefer a heat gun than a reflow gun plus it is cheaper) 14-19$ The Kit to open the 360, 29$ Maybe 19$ if u are lucky like me. Just like cdub, I have fixed 3 360’s and got paid to do so, 50$ a fix better than the 75$ other places were charging. Eventhe supplies to fix it are cheaper than all the stuff to hook it upto the computer, and even so the 1 time buying supply for the kit to take apart the 360(which is better than using standard tools and quicker) is a 1 time purchase. Any Idiot who takes a 360, and rips it apart like this w/o fixing it at all is an idiot. Posted in Xbox Hacks Tagged red ring of death, rf module, rrod, wireless controller, xbox 360 Post navigation It sounds like at first there was an issue with syncing a controller with the hacked module, but as you can see in the clip after the break that problem has been solved. A bit of level converting was necessary to interface with the device, but nothing too involved. Any USB enabled microcontroller will do, in this case an Arduino nano was chosen for the task.

Once you extract it from the carcass of the beast, you just need to find a way to read and push the data to your computer. The concept is simple enough, there’s a daughter-board in the Xbox 360 which hosts the RF module for wireless controller connectivity. Why not salvage the parts for other uses? If you’ve ever wanted to use your wireless controller with a computer here’s a way to pull out the RF module and reuse it. If you’re one of the hordes whose Xbox 360 died the fiery death associated with the RRoD you may be wondering what to do with that multi-hundred dollar door stop you’re left with.
