Qué necesitas
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This appears to be a run-of-the-mill Samsung Blu-Ray player, capable of handling 1080p output with downgrading for DVD's, plus a few smart features.
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Nothing on the bottom or the front that hints at how to crack this #!@$% thing open! (DIY cussing. Let the games begin)
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It appears to have HDMI, Ethernet, and Coaxial "Digital Audio Out." And it's also powered by coffee, apparently.
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Safety first, kiddos!
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The positions of the screws: One in the center (Above the coffee), one above the HDMI port, and that's it. Please tell me if there's a third, I can't remember.
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Pry open the two outer edges of the DVD player. Look to the photos for reference.
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I removed the top plastic casing to make it easier to access. You can leave it on. (If you want to)
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Would ya look at that compactness? It's "amazing"! (I've seen better laptops than this)
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Y'all are welcome to scan that QR code. It's probably a repair link or something.
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Removing the AC wire. (Could've sworn that this thing shuddered when it lost power)
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Interesting... They didn't use the center pin. Safety reason? (Or just plain weird?)
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Removing the wireless data wire. (Why are there only 5 wires? Does it have a USB converter hidden inside?)
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Well... that wasn't expected. A heatsink, inside a DVD player? Huh.
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Funnily enough, they provide a preinstalled heatsink for this machine, but not for a Raspberry Pi.
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Pry out this little tab, to remove the wireless card. There's no wired antenna (It's on the board), so you can literally yank it out.
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There are a few silver screws holding down the plastic shield. Remove them, then you can unclip the shield. (Should be pretty obvious)
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Metal casing, begone! Everything's literally out of the factory packaging, and it looks weird. Like, why are the boards 2 different colors(?)
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Bixby: "Sir, we've detected missing cable anomalies in the primary data disc reader. Please confirm connection."
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Anyone get my reference? (FRIDAY in Civil War)
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That's a lot of cabling? How does one know where to find what?
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That laser assembly looks suspicious. Guess I'll be opening it!
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It'd be awesome if I loaded up a DVD while this thing was running. Imagine the turbulence from the disc...
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That grey circle thing is the "manual eject" slot. In case your DVD is stuck and you can't remove it. Although if you remove the top, it's easy to push the tray out. Was this once a PC drive?
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I decided to pry off the heatsink for 2 reasons: 1) I want to see what kind of CPU it is. 2) Maybe reuse it for my RPi.
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Apparently this ain't an Exynos CPU. I'm disappointed. At least it's MediaTek...
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CPU: MediaTek MT8553 ARM (32bit, 800MHz Single Core)There's also DDR3 RAM, made by Samsung. (Capacity N/A)
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Flash memory (Capacity N/A, probably around 2GB)
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Unknown TI chip.
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That is one TINY power supply. Like, seriously, I think it may be smaller than a laptop charger!
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Yup, it's smaller than my Lenovo's charger box. Wow...
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There's a pinout for this little IC. Huh.
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This weird white goop broke off. I assume it's an epoxy of some kind, but why?
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Interesting... that looks like an RPi header! I wonder if there's...
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Yup. There's a pinout. I'll be damned.
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Here's part of the I/O on the front. The USB port is on the other side. (USB 2.0 type A)
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Why didn't they design it like this? I'm a bit stumped.
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All the buttons are front press style, but yet the buttons on the PCB are top press? How does this work?
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Each button is actually a small lever, so when you press it one way, it pivots slightly to push the actual button.
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And with that, the entire Blu-Ray player is dead, never to play a movie again. You don't have to tear it down all the way like I did.
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The tools shown are an example of what I used, you don't have to be as specific.
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Every single screw I removed. It's gonna be tough trying to put this back together without duct-tape...
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4 comentarios
im about to take mine apart due to the fact that samsung updated the thing and killed it……no taking it to the repair shop so im going to try to make it into a PC blu ray player…….it should work at least in my head it should work….lol wish me luck
Uh no. It uses proprietary connectors, so it won’t be do-able.
How do I hook this up to my tv?
copied from: https://us.community.samsung.com/t5/Home...
and personally verified. Try this BEFORE total disassembly LOL
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Re: Blu-ray player power cycling whenever plugged in
06-28-2020 08:40 AM
@userHqWNet9sdV wrote:
Yes! Couldn't agree more. I am a life-long member of Consumers Union and i too will be reporting this poor quality to them. My model is BD J5700/ZA. Problem started 2 weeks ago, none of the suggested fixes work.
Call 1-800-Samsung, get past the automated attendant, get to a real person, explain your have a Blu Ray player stuck in a boot loop. They will ask you to perform a reset (turn on, press eject for 15 seconds). After that they'll get information from you, email you a UPS label, you ship it back to them. No charge shipping, no charge repair.