Anyway, the ROG ally uses PTM7950 which is a phase change thermal interface material. In *some* devices it can be used as a safer substitute to liquid metal with same/similar performance. It was dry because thats the nature of it - stays dry under 50C and liquifies after it hits 50C. It is extremely good at heat transfer and replacing it with traditional thermal paste can for sure make the performance worse. Longevity wise PTM7950 does not dry out, as it stays dry to begin with. That's why there should theoretically be no need for replacing the TIM on devices with that material (it can shift to the sides when liquified so thats worth consideration). Not sure why my original comment dissapeared, is it censoring or just youtube, I'll repost it anyway so others won't hurt their Ally thermal performance
@@captaincrunch1707 Someone replaced thermal paste on an older legion (9th gen intel) and while gaming it reached over 90 degrees, the paste was replaced a few days before he reached out to me for help. I replaced the tim with ptm7950 and it reaches ~70-75C while gaming. Awesome suff
TH-cam moderation needs to be better communicated. Its so frustrating when you have to keep rewriting your comment because you keep using some obscure trigger word (or worse, when you think you've commented but it just silently vanishes)
I bought mine last week when I got to the U.S. I straight away installed a 1TB WD SN740 1TB SSD. Then I finished Resident Evil 4 Remake on it already, and now I’m playing Baldur’s Gate 3. I’m really loving it and the graphics quality. Thanks for taking it apart, it was fascinating to watch.
I was thnking of buying it,but i heard it really gets hot,so i dunno really,and i honestly dont want steam deck with current specs,so maybe i just wait and something better comes out.
@@EyefyourGf it does get kinda hot but its only a issue if youve got hands of a giant and your fingers touch the center of the console other than that it really isnt a problem and you can always make your own fan curve
@@EyefyourGf I have both the Asus ROG Ally and Valve Steam Deck. I feel like my Steam Deck gets hotter. The fan of the Steam Deck is also very loud in comparison.
I have Asus ROG Ally and the plastic grip is actually well designed. Was able to play game for 2 hours and because of big plastic grips, You can't feel the heat for the device. Also if you put the device on flat surface, the grip also make air gap to the case so that ROG ally can breath better. Freaking amazing.
@@EyefyourGf trust me bro put on a custom fan curve and you don’t gotta worry about overheating even with the latest triple a titles if you don’t mind the fans a lil louder (still relatively quiet)
Call me cynical but I don;t think they did those things to make it easier for us to repair, they did that to make it easier for them to. I am curious how that'll hold up over time. I had an Asus laptop where the GPU fan would start making loud obnoxious noises after about a year of use. Both the original and replacements. And I had to get replacements off of ebay because the first time it started doing it it was literally 1 day out of warranty and Asus could not just send me the replacement part even though they obviously have them to do the repair themselves. Super pissed at Asus about the hole thing tbh.
@@ryanb509repairing let's say the joystick: a normal completely soldered joystick is easy to repair/change if you have the correct tools, which allegedly asus does, but soldering them into a flex cable and attaching a conector into a daughterboard is definitely more expensive than just soldering it directly, so that didn't help them directly in any way
@@ryanb509 It's not that simple. The ASUS support reps probably can't just call up the facility that does the repairs and have them ship out a replacement part. They might not even have an internal system capable of doing so. They're not just going to call up the repair centre, ask for a random employee and say "get an envelope, find this part number, send it to this address and then bill god knows who".
@@dariohermosillo The average consumer does not have ready access to a soldering pen/kit or even the know-how. Buying a replacement joystick soldered onto a flex cable is more expensive (if and when they decide to sell parts) , but it enables the average consumer to replace it themselves instead of bringing it to a third party repair or even Asus. It's a right step in the direction of repair friendliness for the average consumer, which most are.
@@nrdn_ that's what I said. I responded to someone saying it was for ease of repair for Asus, but to asus directly it makes no difference because they do have the correct tools, it is thought for the end consumer.
That captive screw in the case you mentioned, actually serves an important purpose. The device will not turn on at all unless that screw is in all the way. There's a sensor in there that, when the screw is not in, kills all power to the device, even if the charger is plugged in.
It's not really the screws, but there is a light sensor on the upper right if you face the motherboard, some black tape on it can let you use it unscrewed. I use this setup to put a NVME Oculink adapter and an RTX 3060 in a separate case and connects it to my Rog Ally and boot from USB without the backplate, thanks to that piece of tape ! :)
Thank you for this 🙏🏻 I have a minor little chunk of the white casing that came off near the middle upper area by the screen. I also have aome grinding noises with my left thumb stick (accuracy still unaffected as of yet tho) and my display itself seems to have an issue with gray translucent type textures where it diskplays a pattern-effect that shouldn't be there, even though that isnt a huge deal as of yet and otherwise unnoticeable. With GN latest video on Asus RMA I no longer want to take the chance with warranty for the sd card slot and screen / thumb stick. I am just going to fix everything myself except for the SD card reader, so this video will be of great help to me. I have heard some say that the SD card issue is related to weak solder points on the reader itself so i may try to get it re-soldered since worstncase scenario it didnt work anyway (nothing to lose). I wish you a speedy recovery and a thank you for the years of content that have been invaluable to me and many others. 🙏🏻❤
I expected the Ally to be impressive and it definitely is, but I was shockingly surprised at how good those speakers sound and they get fairly loud without sounding tiny or distorted. Very impressed
Seems a good build and looks repairable, one thing with the reassembly the black sheet piece you put on last you put it back upside down the flaps were at the top not the bottom
Can you please investigate the memory card slot heat fail issue , and maybe you will come back with the solution on how to prevent it ? Would it be so cool
2:27 The battery part number that you would need is C41N2208, which is the model number of the battery. I know this because a lot of Asus batteries I've seen also follow a similar style of part number. Also, the nominal battery rating is 15.48V, or 3.87V per cell. The maximum charging voltage is 17.8V (4.45V per cell).
My theory is that they did it to compete with the Steam Deck. Since the SD is very repairable/moddible ASUS would have to do something similar to not look greedy.
Hats off to Asus for good repairability. Nearly as good as Steam Deck, just the availability of spare parts for the Ally may be an issue in the future.
ASUS sells parts on their website. Also,, the thermal paste they use is actually very high quality. They use Liquid Metal in their laptops but obviously can’t use that in a handheld. Even stuff like nth1 is worse than whatever asus used.
Having broken a joycon while trying to replace a drifting analog, this seems MUCH simpler to do, and the whole console honestly looks much easier to open with respect to others. It feels good that they made it simpler, it's likely for their own sake, but still it's a win win situation
I saw some tesla chargers on ebay that could use some fixing and thought of you haha. Might make an interesting video. And seems to be within video game console pricing. This was another great video! I realized it would be cool if these companies hired someone like you to gauge repairability on prototypes before going to mass production.
If someone doesn't know, modern laptops do not use thermal paste. Manufacturers put a special thermal pad that performs better and does not need to be serviced.
5:18 the Ally already has replaceable sticks. I believe they use the same sticks as GPD3. If you want a Hall Effect version, OneXPlayer's selling it, but there would be interference in the left analog stick but can be resolved by adjusting the deadzone or attaching a magnet. I think there's a video about that.
Needed this at 1am. Looks like a good product. Thanks for the teardown and review; I want to buy one of these. It's almost as if the console's designers have repaired a few in their day. Thermal paste aside. Lol 🤘🏼
I have an ASUS gaming mouse that I bought because it has 4 screws and it opens up for easy repair. Just a shame their control software sucked, I couldn't get it working to switch off the LEDs so I just pulled the LEDs off the PCB.
The purpose of thermal paste is to improve metal-to-metal contact due to the microscopic air gaps created by the imperfections of the materials. Putting more thermal paste can become worse as it increases the thermal resistance. In the video you can see that it is applied perfectly.
Dell laptop tech here. this thing has alot of laptop design choices. wanted to tell you a few secrets. You mentioned the arrows denoting the screws on the board, most laptops are like that. Also the numbered screws on the heatsink, the numbers are the order you put the screws back in so your paste evenly spreads. The rubber things in the speakers are sound dampeners and most laptops have those too. very good design on this thing overall, the non-soldered sticks were quite a surprise.
Wow this is a great video. I was wondering how repairable the device would be long term and assuming there are parts available this looks amazing. Please do more videos like this for new and relavent tech like this!! (I still love all the retro stuff too, it's all great)
I just love how you try to remove that connector pulling on the wires and immediately out of instinct give yourself a good warning 'don't pull on the wires kids" lol
ive opened mine up and am insanely impressed with repairability its little things like all screws being obvious where they go (no 2mm longer screws so no longscrewing it ) non glued battery easy access to high wear componets like thumbsticks and a website where you can buy almost every componet About the only way they could improve it is slotted memory but unfortunately thats just not something thats viable on a device of this formfactor
My luck sucks so these videos are very helpful. Had a Nintendo switch for a year and a half and it just randomly died on me. The system literally looks brand new because I had a case and took great care of it.
@@Robbie-mw5uu Got it fixed before Christmas and gave it to my son. The people who fixed it said the GPU was fried. He said it was the best system he ever had to fix but he wouldn't fix it without taking a board from another system. Cost $80 bucks
Hey Tronicsfix, i hope you read the top comments regarding the Thermal Paste situation. Because it could cause overheating not using the thermal paste Asus uses
Crazy to see a teardown on a new product. Sucks that those main left and right buttons are hot welded. It would have been amazing if they had dropped some threaded metal sleeves in there, like the other main screws. Yet another thing that will make repairing or customization more difficult.
I saw someone from Ally reddit mod their Ally using the Zephyrus G15 battery (90wh) and soldered a 32GB RAM module, just insane how far mod goes with this Ally
On the thumb stick boards it looks like you dont have to unplug the connector for the little vibrating motors. Looks like you only have to take the ribbon cable and screws out and the board pops up
Great video; much appreciate your insight. For future reference, you may want to check on how durable the buttons and D-pad are for this class of devices. Especially with early gens products, there is always some default anxiety about durability and repair-ability. (Which has absolutely, positively, nothing to do with my experience of having to replace S*ny's Dual Shock 4 face buttons' plastic membrane again and again and again and ...) Also, specific to Asus Ally: a lot of TH-camrs aren't impressed by its D-Pad. If you can put together video on how to source and replace with a better D-Pad, I think you may get a lot of views from Ally owners and those interested in getting one.
One last thing: the Ally has a problem with overheating SD cards. While Asus has pushed out a firmware mitigation that spin up the fans more, if you can figure out a hardware hack to keep the SD card and reader significantly cooler, it may bring a peace of mind to many.
Do you think you could make a video showing the hardware you use for your content (soldering iron, screwdrivers, camera, mic, etc.), at some point ? I'd be particularly interested by the reference of your digital microscope.
Can you fix my PS3? It only works by pressing the on and off button a second time after the first try. I know it sounds weird but I’m really hoping you can help me.
I love that you have to disassemble it to see the "do not disassemble" sign.
Lol, that's true
I suppose they probably just mean further disassembly, like removing the heatsink or battery or what not but still silly regardless
I think it meant dont disassemble the battery itself 😂
Kind of gives me "private sign, do not read" vibes.
My door is wide open but please dont creep in
For those of us who do not have the opportunity to have these teams and be able to open them to know their components is a great class. Best regards
Is this a video game
which team are you on?
I guess he confused "teams" with "equipment"
@danielcordero901 Yeah, I thought this was an auto correction from items.
Anyway, the ROG ally uses PTM7950 which is a phase change thermal interface material. In *some* devices it can be used as a safer substitute to liquid metal with same/similar performance.
It was dry because thats the nature of it - stays dry under 50C and liquifies after it hits 50C. It is extremely good at heat transfer and replacing it with traditional thermal paste can for sure make the performance worse.
Longevity wise PTM7950 does not dry out, as it stays dry to begin with. That's why there should theoretically be no need for replacing the TIM on devices with that material (it can shift to the sides when liquified so thats worth consideration).
Not sure why my original comment dissapeared, is it censoring or just youtube, I'll repost it anyway so others won't hurt their Ally thermal performance
That stuff is awesome. Would love to put it in my Deck someday
@@captaincrunch1707 Someone replaced thermal paste on an older legion (9th gen intel) and while gaming it reached over 90 degrees, the paste was replaced a few days before he reached out to me for help. I replaced the tim with ptm7950 and it reaches ~70-75C while gaming. Awesome suff
Good to know. I have the ROG Ally but I wouldn't take it apart.
TH-cam moderation needs to be better communicated. Its so frustrating when you have to keep rewriting your comment because you keep using some obscure trigger word (or worse, when you think you've commented but it just silently vanishes)
Yeah in this case, that amount of paste was actually the perfect amount of it :) PTM is great product!
I bought mine last week when I got to the U.S. I straight away installed a 1TB WD SN740 1TB SSD. Then I finished Resident Evil 4 Remake on it already, and now I’m playing Baldur’s Gate 3. I’m really loving it and the graphics quality. Thanks for taking it apart, it was fascinating to watch.
I was thnking of buying it,but i heard it really gets hot,so i dunno really,and i honestly dont want steam deck with current specs,so maybe i just wait and something better comes out.
@@EyefyourGf it does get kinda hot but its only a issue if youve got hands of a giant and your fingers touch the center of the console other than that it really isnt a problem and you can always make your own fan curve
@@EyefyourGf I have both the Asus ROG Ally and Valve Steam Deck. I feel like my Steam Deck gets hotter. The fan of the Steam Deck is also very loud in comparison.
I have Asus ROG Ally and the plastic grip is actually well designed.
Was able to play game for 2 hours and because of big plastic grips, You can't feel the heat for the device.
Also if you put the device on flat surface, the grip also make air gap to the case so that ROG ally can breath better. Freaking amazing.
@@EyefyourGf trust me bro put on a custom fan curve and you don’t gotta worry about overheating even with the latest triple a titles if you don’t mind the fans a lil louder (still relatively quiet)
At least some one knows repair friendliness.
Well done, Asus.
Call me cynical but I don;t think they did those things to make it easier for us to repair, they did that to make it easier for them to. I am curious how that'll hold up over time. I had an Asus laptop where the GPU fan would start making loud obnoxious noises after about a year of use. Both the original and replacements. And I had to get replacements off of ebay because the first time it started doing it it was literally 1 day out of warranty and Asus could not just send me the replacement part even though they obviously have them to do the repair themselves. Super pissed at Asus about the hole thing tbh.
@@ryanb509repairing let's say the joystick: a normal completely soldered joystick is easy to repair/change if you have the correct tools, which allegedly asus does, but soldering them into a flex cable and attaching a conector into a daughterboard is definitely more expensive than just soldering it directly, so that didn't help them directly in any way
@@ryanb509 It's not that simple. The ASUS support reps probably can't just call up the facility that does the repairs and have them ship out a replacement part. They might not even have an internal system capable of doing so. They're not just going to call up the repair centre, ask for a random employee and say "get an envelope, find this part number, send it to this address and then bill god knows who".
@@dariohermosillo The average consumer does not have ready access to a soldering pen/kit or even the know-how. Buying a replacement joystick soldered onto a flex cable is more expensive (if and when they decide to sell parts) , but it enables the average consumer to replace it themselves instead of bringing it to a third party repair or even Asus. It's a right step in the direction of repair friendliness for the average consumer, which most are.
@@nrdn_ that's what I said. I responded to someone saying it was for ease of repair for Asus, but to asus directly it makes no difference because they do have the correct tools, it is thought for the end consumer.
That captive screw in the case you mentioned, actually serves an important purpose. The device will not turn on at all unless that screw is in all the way. There's a sensor in there that, when the screw is not in, kills all power to the device, even if the charger is plugged in.
that sounds annoying to deal with if you're trying to diagnose a problem
Oh damn
It's not really the screws, but there is a light sensor on the upper right if you face the motherboard, some black tape on it can let you use it unscrewed.
I use this setup to put a NVME Oculink adapter and an RTX 3060 in a separate case and connects it to my Rog Ally and boot from USB without the backplate, thanks to that piece of tape ! :)
Steve was definitely like, “I want a ROG Ally… I can write it off if I make a video, plus it’ll pay part of itself back. Sweet.”
Thank you for this 🙏🏻 I have a minor little chunk of the white casing that came off near the middle upper area by the screen. I also have aome grinding noises with my left thumb stick (accuracy still unaffected as of yet tho) and my display itself seems to have an issue with gray translucent type textures where it diskplays a pattern-effect that shouldn't be there, even though that isnt a huge deal as of yet and otherwise unnoticeable. With GN latest video on Asus RMA I no longer want to take the chance with warranty for the sd card slot and screen / thumb stick. I am just going to fix everything myself except for the SD card reader, so this video will be of great help to me. I have heard some say that the SD card issue is related to weak solder points on the reader itself so i may try to get it re-soldered since worstncase scenario it didnt work anyway (nothing to lose). I wish you a speedy recovery and a thank you for the years of content that have been invaluable to me and many others. 🙏🏻❤
Thank you for the super thanks!
I expected the Ally to be impressive and it definitely is, but I was shockingly surprised at how good those speakers sound and they get fairly loud without sounding tiny or distorted. Very impressed
I love watching the skill in removing those warranty stickers
Seems a good build and looks repairable, one thing with the reassembly the black sheet piece you put on last you put it back upside down the flaps were at the top not the bottom
I love the repairability structure of the Ally, one of the bests out there. More companies should encourage self repair...
They actively discourage it though. Its why I support steam deck because they actively encourage it.
if you plaster your product in warranty void labels they dont encourage self repair its just easier to fix ones that get sent back as rma
They dont encourage people. They just put warranty void stickers everywhere
What do you mean? They discourage it. Even if you can, you're prone to damaging it unless you're an expert.
@@kenomenorias3200 Waching a youtube video is good enough to replace the SSD & joysticks which are the parts you'll most likely want to swap.
That thumbstick design just blew my mind. That is extremely convenient and very cool that they did that. Good work, Steve!
When you shot a close up of the steam deck it Deffo looked like the cheaper system. That ROG handheld is something else😮
That’s because the Steam Deck literally is the cheaper system lol
the base version of the ROG Ally is $200 more expensive than the base steam deck.
because it is
At least there are metal inserts for the screws. That shows INTENT to support repairs.
Yep, love that
Regarding the thermal compound, can't any more perfect than that factory amount. It's spot on.
Only problem is that he removed the better performing and expensive PTM7950, in place of lower performance thermal paste
Can you please investigate the memory card slot heat fail issue , and maybe you will come back with the solution on how to prevent it ? Would it be so cool
*The "stuck" screw pushes the two parts for easy opening. But you started on the other side and didn't see it. haha*
2:27 The battery part number that you would need is C41N2208, which is the model number of the battery. I know this because a lot of Asus batteries I've seen also follow a similar style of part number.
Also, the nominal battery rating is 15.48V, or 3.87V per cell. The maximum charging voltage is 17.8V (4.45V per cell).
4.45V per cell? Wow I wonder how many cycles it will give always going that high to max charge...
LiHv? Graphene LiPo? Like RC packs? Is it safe enough?
This makes me more intrigued by the Asus ally. I'm glad they made it easily repairable. Some of their laptops have been a nightmare to work on.
My theory is that they did it to compete with the Steam Deck. Since the SD is very repairable/moddible ASUS would have to do something similar to not look greedy.
Hats off to Asus for good repairability. Nearly as good as Steam Deck, just the availability of spare parts for the Ally may be an issue in the future.
Yeah thats the biggie. Good on them for repairability though but without volumes for sale theres going to be no real stock of spare parts Ill bet
ASUS sells parts on their website. Also,, the thermal paste they use is actually very high quality. They use Liquid Metal in their laptops but obviously can’t use that in a handheld. Even stuff like nth1 is worse than whatever asus used.
Yeah I saw the screen on there. They sell it in the whole front assembly
I feel there are some cons but also a bunch of pros when it comes to this console. The explanations are really good.
Having broken a joycon while trying to replace a drifting analog, this seems MUCH simpler to do, and the whole console honestly looks much easier to open with respect to others. It feels good that they made it simpler, it's likely for their own sake, but still it's a win win situation
My first mod was a 2tb ssd and this thing has been amazing so far.
It's been a while since I have seen this Channel you helped me fix my release day ps4 slim thanks for having quality how to videos.
I saw some tesla chargers on ebay that could use some fixing and thought of you haha. Might make an interesting video. And seems to be within video game console pricing.
This was another great video! I realized it would be cool if these companies hired someone like you to gauge repairability on prototypes before going to mass production.
If someone doesn't know, modern laptops do not use thermal paste. Manufacturers put a special thermal pad that performs better and does not need to be serviced.
5:18 the Ally already has replaceable sticks. I believe they use the same sticks as GPD3. If you want a Hall Effect version, OneXPlayer's selling it, but there would be interference in the left analog stick but can be resolved by adjusting the deadzone or attaching a magnet. I think there's a video about that.
Needed this at 1am.
Looks like a good product. Thanks for the teardown and review; I want to buy one of these.
It's almost as if the console's designers have repaired a few in their day.
Thermal paste aside. Lol 🤘🏼
Hello, that's definitely the information I need before every important purchased, thanks.
I have an ASUS gaming mouse that I bought because it has 4 screws and it opens up for easy repair. Just a shame their control software sucked, I couldn't get it working to switch off the LEDs so I just pulled the LEDs off the PCB.
Switch off the LEDs? Like the ones around the joysticks? You can turn them off.
Kudos and handsup for this guy to show the internals from tearing down a bramd new device😊
The purpose of thermal paste is to improve metal-to-metal contact due to the microscopic air gaps created by the imperfections of the materials. Putting more thermal paste can become worse as it increases the thermal resistance. In the video you can see that it is applied perfectly.
Dell laptop tech here. this thing has alot of laptop design choices. wanted to tell you a few secrets. You mentioned the arrows denoting the screws on the board, most laptops are like that. Also the numbered screws on the heatsink, the numbers are the order you put the screws back in so your paste evenly spreads. The rubber things in the speakers are sound dampeners and most laptops have those too. very good design on this thing overall, the non-soldered sticks were quite a surprise.
I really appreciate what you do.
If only all tech was this simple, very good of them in making it easy..likely reflected in the price but still. Very very nice.
5:44 I like the way he almost said ""BW one hunna" hahah like it's a rap name
Seems that it is build to last - or can be repaired. Not bad.
Wow this is a great video. I was wondering how repairable the device would be long term and assuming there are parts available this looks amazing. Please do more videos like this for new and relavent tech like this!! (I still love all the retro stuff too, it's all great)
Witnessing the void of a warranty and also the Advent of something amazing.
I just love how you try to remove that connector pulling on the wires and immediately out of instinct give yourself a good warning 'don't pull on the wires kids" lol
Great Video Steve
Thanks 👍
I think it has thermal paste that liquifies after a certain temperature. Did he out tire same stuff on it?
no he put in an inferior thermal paste
ive opened mine up and am insanely impressed with repairability its little things like all screws being obvious where they go (no 2mm longer screws so no longscrewing it ) non glued battery easy access to high wear componets like thumbsticks and a website where you can buy almost every componet About the only way they could improve it is slotted memory but unfortunately thats just not something thats viable on a device of this formfactor
There are already spare parts available for ordering. Good job Asus
It looks like they use Honeywell PTM7950 rather than thermal paste for the APU.
Great teardown! Thanks for the info!
Asus Engineering team: S tier
Asus Warranty and technical support team :F Tier
Bro you're my go to yt channel. Please make Videos more frequently.
taking new device disassembled is Bravery🫣 my best channel❤
Yus! I was waiting for this 👍😁
Awesome video Bhaijaan 😊🫡🔥🥶✌🏼
My luck sucks so these videos are very helpful. Had a Nintendo switch for a year and a half and it just randomly died on me. The system literally looks brand new because I had a case and took great care of it.
I'd start with swapping the battery. Especially if you have a first gen switch.
Nintendo Switches don't just "die". You need to enter recovery mode.
@@Robbie-mw5uu Got it fixed before Christmas and gave it to my son. The people who fixed it said the GPU was fried. He said it was the best system he ever had to fix but he wouldn't fix it without taking a board from another system. Cost $80 bucks
Nice, finally analog sticks that can be replaced without soldering. Hope it became standard one day.
I love how this device is very repair friendly, you can probably buy all the components and "build your own".
Damn that battery looks super easy to replace I am impressed
That sounds like a good video where you take it apart and see if you can send it in for warranty repair and see if they can tell.
Hey Tronicsfix, i hope you read the top comments regarding the Thermal Paste situation. Because it could cause overheating not using the thermal paste Asus uses
Crazy to see a teardown on a new product. Sucks that those main left and right buttons are hot welded. It would have been amazing if they had dropped some threaded metal sleeves in there, like the other main screws. Yet another thing that will make repairing or customization more difficult.
Thumbstick replacement would be sick this is nice and streight forward
My favorite GOD OF FIXER LOL
the bumbper button is awsome
I have a Steam Deck, but these machines are still very early technology. Wait a few years and we'll see ones much stronger and better.
And now over heat it uses special thermal paste. Remember to plug it in before you turn it on, make shure the charging light comes on.
Looking good here. I wish all device has a removable battery like the one in Ally.
Love the new format, please do it for all new products
supposedly you can use the hall effect sticks from the one x player as replacements for the ally same hold down and cable
Alot of very impressive design there! Great teardown Steve!
I saw someone from Ally reddit mod their Ally using the Zephyrus G15 battery (90wh) and soldered a 32GB RAM module, just insane how far mod goes with this Ally
I respect people who go that far id be terrified to do all that just for a somewhat small performance increasr
On the thumb stick boards it looks like you dont have to unplug the connector for the little vibrating motors. Looks like you only have to take the ribbon cable and screws out and the board pops up
Great video; much appreciate your insight.
For future reference, you may want to check on how durable the buttons and D-pad are for this class of devices.
Especially with early gens products, there is always some default anxiety about durability and repair-ability. (Which has absolutely, positively, nothing to do with my experience of having to replace S*ny's Dual Shock 4 face buttons' plastic membrane again and again and again and ...)
Also, specific to Asus Ally: a lot of TH-camrs aren't impressed by its D-Pad. If you can put together video on how to source and replace with a better D-Pad, I think you may get a lot of views from Ally owners and those interested in getting one.
One last thing: the Ally has a problem with overheating SD cards.
While Asus has pushed out a firmware mitigation that spin up the fans more, if you can figure out a hardware hack to keep the SD card and reader significantly cooler, it may bring a peace of mind to many.
@@SansBalance i'm guessing a workaround would be to add thermal insulation tape around the micro sd port
The Lenovo GO already has this beat.😇
The captive screw is to help you open the halves up without a pry tool.
So nice to see something that’s doesn’t induce nightmares to repair it. 😂
Let's see if you can fix the SD card issue :)
Do you think you could make a video showing the hardware you use for your content (soldering iron, screwdrivers, camera, mic, etc.), at some point ? I'd be particularly interested by the reference of your digital microscope.
Most of his tools are listed in the description.
Excellent video 📸
Thanks! So glad you enjoyed it
Pretty cool seing some red pcb, it isnt very common
Will you please make a video of Rog Ally SD card reader issue.
May you please make a video of RoG Ally SD card reader issue, what cause the issue.
Hey is it possible to remove and replace the vibrator on the daughter board where the joysticks are located thank you for the video
First Im hearing of this system.
14:43 is gonna be my metal band name. "Isolation for Vibration"
I wish vavle used better screws as some of mine stripped at first attempt of swapping the ssd. Very frustrating.
Love your content bro
Can you put hall sensor analog sticks in ?
probably can if somebody makes one to size. it looks pretty thin.
What about the sd card slot?
beautiful conception
Can you fix my PS3? It only works by pressing the on and off button a second time after the first try. I know it sounds weird but I’m really hoping you can help me.
about the thermal paste that Asus didnt do it correctly, totally agree.
Can you do a video on increasing VRAM of the laptop by using the RAM Chips from donor laptops?
Can you reposition the micro sd card slot to a different location so that it would not overheat the card reader & destroy the micro sd?
was that a linus reference at the beginning?
Where? Not on purpose but I'd love to know what you're referring to
@@Tronicsfix Linus is notorious for dropping new things he touches.
Would placing some capton tape over the Micro SD card component help protect the card from excessive heat?
no you need to place a heat sink on the ic like a copper sheet to guide heat away from the sd area.
Johnny 5: "No disassemble"
Great taredown video steve i quite like the build quality of the asus rog ally just wondering on if you can install steam os on them
I believe you need to duel boot them but it is possible
"You broke the warranty sticker we dont have to honor it"
Every US Customer: "See funny thing about that... FTC says otherwise"
Since the vibrator motor plugs into the board its on, was unplugging it a necessary step ?
got stuck problem with RB button now, thanks for your video. But i asking if anyway to fix the stuck RB LB button without dissassemble thay much?