Saltar al contenido principal

Lanzado en noviembre de 2016, el PS4 Pro cuenta con hardware actualizado para juegos de 4K y streaming de vídeo.

Preguntas 388 Ver todo

Redid thermal paste and cleaned PS4 Pro, now it shuts down mid-boot

I’ve looked around A LOT for this specific problem but I can’t see an answer just yet.

Like many people, my PS4 Pro was insanely loud so I opened it up, cleaned it up, applied fresh thermal paste etc.

I’ve put it back together and now when I turn on the light flashes blue. The PS4 Pro starts to boot up but then the fans get faster and faster and then it shuts down with 3 beeps.

I’ve reopened and double-checked everything and I’ve got idea what it could be apart from the clamp which sits over the APU. I’ve tightened the screws as much as they’ll turn but the x-shaped plate is still a wobbly and definitely doesn’t feel as if it’s applying pressure down on the heat plate / APU.

Contesta esta pregunta Yo también tengo este problema

Es esta una buena pregunta?

Puntuación 0
Agregar un comentario

1 Respuesta

Respuesta Más Útil

Hey sounds like you aren’t achieving contact, or maybe have uneven contact between the apu and the heat sink. Did you replace the thermal pads too? If so what thickness were the pads? If you did replace them, they need to be 1mm thick. I’ve read people claim they’ve used thinner than that but I don’t know. There was one guy that used 2mm, of course no contact, wouldn’t boot. I haven’t done a pro yet. But when I did my near to launch white base model I discovered the apu only had paste on half the chip. After repaste it was much quieter and has been for years now. But a wobbly clamp sure sounds like something is uneven. Best of luck.

Edit:

I just finished looking at the tear down. Thermal pads shouldn’t matter because they’re all on the clamp side and have nothing to do with clearance between apu and heatsink. Unlike the launch ps4’s which had ram chips on both sides of the board.

However it says there’s a metal+plastic plate between the mobo and the x-clamp. Maybe try inspecting it for damage, or turning that 180 degrees (I know it shouldn’t matter, but who knows).

Something is crooked or off just enough. But the only things it seems that it could be

are: the heat sink, or the mobo wasn’t seated properly, or the metal+plastic plate between the mobo and x-clamp, or last but not least the x-clamp itself.

That’s about all I can figure without seeing it with my own eyes. Hope you get it sorted.

Fue útil esta respuesta?

Puntuación 2
Agregar un comentario

Añadir tu respuesta

Jonathan Sutton estará eternamente agradecido.
Ver Estadísticas:

Ultimas 24 horas: 0

Ultimos 7 días: 2

Ultimos 30 días: 10

Todo El Tiempo: 1,184