@@Tronicsfix yeah but you're not a robot so I feel with the scales you deal with it is totally acceptable and I'm not even going to pretend I could do anyting close to that
When I watch your videos all I want to do is go buy a soldering iron and supplies, open random old electronics, and just start cleaning and soldering stuff 😅
Same! I recently bought a small iFixIt kit to have a go at repairing a Switch joycon whereas in the past (before watching TronicsFix) I would have sent it to recycling and bought a new one. My neighbour wants theirs repairing for their kids now :)
I’ve been wanting one of these particular Vitas for a while now. I half expected you to go right for the board swap, but it would have been a much shorter video. I enjoy watching the troubleshooting process.
@@Tronicsfix I have one with the same problem - liquid damage in the same area. Haven't been able to figure it out yet either. Tried reflowing the chip, nothing - and replacements don't seem to be available. Would be interested to know if anyone has any information on that circuit. And I think you made the right call using the original battery in the end - there isn't really any point in using a third party battery over an original one, unless you really want the higher capacity, but then there are issues with that (the Vita only checks voltage level at boot; it normally calculates remaining battery by tracking mAh used, so as it's assuming a 2200mAh battery you could put in a 4000mAh but it would think it's dead when it still has 1800mAh remaining - unless you turned it off for 2 mins and then back on again. If someone can make a plugin to check voltage regularly then an upgraded battery would work well with CFW but otherwise it's not a very user friendly mod.).
It never ceases to amaze that people with zero knowledge about soldering still seem to think because they’ve watched it on TH-cam it’s easy. All they end up doing is destroying perfectly good items.
I mean... I had zero knowledge on soldering. Watched a TH-cam video. Figured I could do it and did it. 🤷 Made some mistakes on some consoles. Fixed them when I got better and now I do repairs for people. I never did *this* though. That's a different level of stupidity. But plenty of people w zero knowledge watch a TH-cam video and learn how to do it. Everyone starts somewhere
Because of your videos and your free soldering course I have fixed 2 headsets and a home theater subwoofer. Next project is replacing the clock capacitor on my Original Xbox.
Enjoyed the video. That board was absolutely disgusting. One of the things I wanted to understand is why the supposed battery mod was attempted and trying to accomplish.
this looks like someone had absolutely no idea what they were doing. I don't know if I could do this mod or not, but I at least have some idea of what I'm doing. If I fail, it wouldn't be this level of fail. lol
When it comes to poking at electronics i have found the best material pick to use is a Nylon pic. Silky/smooth yet hard plastic thats unlikely to be able to damage anything important while also able to dig at anything needing sticky/annoying stuff. I usually like the 2 sided ones with a poker on one tip and a scraper on the other, the sharp points on both ends stops you being able to press on the end to overdo the pressure and potentially cause damage.
ah man this is sick! love dq. the little figure you saw at the beginning of the vid is a liquid metal slime, an enemy that traditionally gives huge amounts of XP in dragon quest games even compared to other metal enemies/bosses. they're one of the best enemies to XP farm with usually in these games
Your videos gave me the confidence to finally try my hand at soldering again after failures long ago. It's been a start, and honestly you have no idea how much these videos help, thank you so much!
I still have two original PSP's but I always wanted a VITA. Great machines and probably way ahead of their time. Today, they would be a hit if marketed properly.
If I'm not mistaken, the white wire is a temperature based resistor or you could say a battery temperature sensor which normally prevents the battery from overheating/overcharging or maybe even overdischarging. But most cheap battery companies in china used to bypass it with normal resistors, so the sensor wouldn't work properly
I always wanted this Vita. I have one I modded. It lets you play every Vita and PSP game ever made. I recommend doing this. It is extremely worth it. Make sure you use the latest model Vita because the old one can be a bit weird with the sd card that is compatible with the mod(unless you find a way around this) where as the newer model can use just any size card from any company.
I always feel that the takeaway from your videos is that every one can do it, just need to use a little bit of your head and have a little bit of understanding. And to not be afraid to mess things up because we all started some place.
It's a nice boost to the battery life, and eventually people will have to replace the battery when it starts dying so might as well upgrade. BUT NOT LIKE THIS LOL this board actually got raped, I don't even know how you mess it up this bad and I'm a noob at soldering.
Can I have one of those 9 you fixed 😂 I used to have a psp back in the day and I loved it, used to watch TV shows and movies on it, play games... I had to sell it, hard times etc.... Just wanted to say thank you for all those videos you make, I used to repair cell phones back when the Motorola v60/Nokia 5160&5165 were the top sellers and people broke the antennae often.. I appreciate all you do man.
Oh the frustration of watching the video. In my experience, the controller board on the battery often has the pad for the white wire empty (although you do need to inspect that pcb for LiPo controller chip too). If it was fitted then you didn't even need the thermistor mod or to cut wires. tbh I can feel your pain. From a personal point of view, I'd have loved to have seen you remove the scratch on the screen. It's a plastic shell, and I've never found a good solution to remove a bad one on my PS Vita.
love your videos. because of them i just recently fixed three broken ebay switches. the fourth one i got has a missing lcd connector with torn traces ... wish me luck lol
You had me worried when you were soldering that component to the white wire. Your iron was super close to the battery and in fact you scorched it a little lol. Careful!
I once got a cheap "as is" vita years ago that had just about every zif tab inside broken off! I was able to get it working again by adding thin tape to the back of the ribbons to friction fit them in, which was way easier than sourcing new connectors and hot air swapping them all. BTW, the thermistor needs to be physically touching the lipo or it'll do nothing. It's purpose is to monitor the cell temp and cut off charging in case it starts rising too quickly. Having it not touch the cell would mean it'll work normally, but if the cell ever does get damaged and starts going thermal the themistor cant sense it till it's too late and the cell ignites or spews electrolyte.
Honestly with it being a limited edition system I think I would have paid a hopefully professional to install the new battery. This definitely seems like it was Cleary above the owners skill set.
My rule is that I don't mess around with modding anything that I don't have the skill, experience or tools to do justice, and for me that's pretty much every handheld other than the og GameBoy Advance. I'm kind of mad at the seller for trying to mod this beautiful system and failing so badly. Don't try unless you're confident and practice first!
I have actually done 3 of those battery mods to the 3 vitas I have, and I do recommend it, if it's a legit battery, vita batteries die for no known reason so once It happened to my first vita I did it to my other 2 vitas as well.
I think the person trying to do the aftermarket battery mod was trying to do the Lipo battery mod conversion with universal connector. Hence why you need the battery connectors and thermistor to attach to piece of battery component from the original battery. From there you solder the power and ground to the connectors and a thermistor to the third white wire. Its a delicate mod to take on if you don’t have the proper tools, patience and knowledge you end up with a disaster like this. Y You almost got the wiring done correctly, you only needed to add a piece of the original battery board to the Lipo battery.
Love the vita! I recently tried to replace some analog sticks in some controllers and I guess my soldering iron just cant get hot enough to melt the old solder on a dualshock 4 :( Really enjoy your vids
I don't see the point in modding the battery, Cameron Sino makes quality aftermarket batteries for the Vita now. They are drop in replacements and don't require soldering.
So... whoever tried doing this mod job likely shorted those contact pads and welded different layers of the PCB together, judging by the skid mark? Probably tried soldering the wires coming directly from the battery, and the battery had a charge. Another good reason not to try using the aftermarket battery. xD So many ways to avoid this... could've used wires that weren't connected to a battery, then putting them together afterwards. I'd definitely try using that connector somehow instead, just to avoid soldering things directly to the PCB. That's just super iffy particularly if you don't have the right tools. Boards with tiny components like those the most I'll risk is hot air gun... don't have enough confidence to solder things directly to it even if I had a fine tip soldering iron, which I don't. I suppose the kit didn't come with a connector to use there, but if you are replacing it anyways just chop it off the original... Yeesh... well, sometimes there's only one way to learn things, which is by doing expensive mistakes. xD I also do them all the time. Also, it was pretty generous to pay that much for it Steve... :P I mean, it is a limited edition and all that, but man, still expensive. Btw, the creature that came with it is a Metal Babble. xD I have one made of metal in my figure collection. xD
Glad you were able to save that vita. Recently you've been showing off more modifications to older systems and even gameboy game pcbs, any chance you can try out a better/quieter cooling mod for the ps4? I know you did a few in the past, but would be happy to see what you can come up with now a few years later after fixing more types of stuff. Modding a pc tower cooler to it? Thanks for the video.
I installed a 3300mAh battery in my ps vita, the battery was from a samsung smartphone. It runs longer for a couple of hours. I have the 1000 oled model, the 3G one, i removed the internal connector for the hspa modem, otherwise my battery wouldn't fit, i removed the sony port and installed a micro-usb connector in place where the accessories port was (which isn't used anyway on ps vita) and i modded the L and R buttons for nice clicky ones, i didn't like the feel of those buttons, i mean, every other button is a nice clicky one, except for those 2. My vita runs great, a lot of people want to have my vita, but i keep it! I've put in a lot of work and time to mod it just the way i want it.
This is why I love Japanese electronics (particularly consoles), so many versions( and by versions, I mean colors). What's with Na/c consoles and the color black?
I love how every time you put on components it looks like they're decently crooked and then you realize that they're absolutely tiny
Lol, to be fair a lot of times they are a bit crooked.
@@Tronicsfix As long as they work. (:
@@Tronicsfix yeah but you're not a robot so I feel with the scales you deal with it is totally acceptable and I'm not even going to pretend I could do anyting close to that
yeah. You dont realize how precise he actual is until you try it your self.
my god that close up on the board...
Makes me feel better to know that the guy who fixes stuff for a living forgets to put the shrink tubing on first too
Lol, all the time!
When I watch your videos all I want to do is go buy a soldering iron and supplies, open random old electronics, and just start cleaning and soldering stuff 😅
You can do it!
Do it.
YESSIR
Same! I recently bought a small iFixIt kit to have a go at repairing a Switch joycon whereas in the past (before watching TronicsFix) I would have sent it to recycling and bought a new one. My neighbour wants theirs repairing for their kids now :)
..just do a better job than previous owner of this vita did kek
I’ve been wanting one of these particular Vitas for a while now.
I half expected you to go right for the board swap, but it would have been a much shorter video. I enjoy watching the troubleshooting process.
It's a pretty cool one! I did want to at least try and fix that original board.
@@Tronicsfix I have one with the same problem - liquid damage in the same area. Haven't been able to figure it out yet either. Tried reflowing the chip, nothing - and replacements don't seem to be available. Would be interested to know if anyone has any information on that circuit.
And I think you made the right call using the original battery in the end - there isn't really any point in using a third party battery over an original one, unless you really want the higher capacity, but then there are issues with that (the Vita only checks voltage level at boot; it normally calculates remaining battery by tracking mAh used, so as it's assuming a 2200mAh battery you could put in a 4000mAh but it would think it's dead when it still has 1800mAh remaining - unless you turned it off for 2 mins and then back on again. If someone can make a plugin to check voltage regularly then an upgraded battery would work well with CFW but otherwise it's not a very user friendly mod.).
Jesus christ, how is it even possible to damage the board that badly 😂
STOP blaspheming!
It never ceases to amaze that people with zero knowledge about soldering still seem to think because they’ve watched it on TH-cam it’s easy. All they end up doing is destroying perfectly good items.
That will be me someday
Soldering itself isn't that hard, what makes it hard is doing it at such a small scale like this.
I was able to solder after watching it on youtube no problem.
You ever learn anything? 😆 we all do it big guy
I mean... I had zero knowledge on soldering. Watched a TH-cam video. Figured I could do it and did it. 🤷
Made some mistakes on some consoles. Fixed them when I got better and now I do repairs for people. I never did *this* though. That's a different level of stupidity. But plenty of people w zero knowledge watch a TH-cam video and learn how to do it. Everyone starts somewhere
"... actually, I don't think it moved" @ 5:11
Totally moved, bro 😂 Damn that board was a mess.
Because of your videos and your free soldering course I have fixed 2 headsets and a home theater subwoofer. Next project is replacing the clock capacitor on my Original Xbox.
Love hearing this!
Enjoyed the video.
That board was absolutely disgusting. One of the things I wanted to understand is why the supposed battery mod was attempted and trying to accomplish.
I was wondering the same... the slim Vita didn't have the battery issues that the big ones did, I thought.
this looks like someone had absolutely no idea what they were doing. I don't know if I could do this mod or not, but I at least have some idea of what I'm doing. If I fail, it wouldn't be this level of fail. lol
Lol
When it comes to poking at electronics i have found the best material pick to use is a Nylon pic.
Silky/smooth yet hard plastic thats unlikely to be able to damage anything important while also able to dig at anything needing sticky/annoying stuff.
I usually like the 2 sided ones with a poker on one tip and a scraper on the other, the sharp points on both ends stops you being able to press on the end to overdo the pressure and potentially cause damage.
I just want to say thank you, your videos inspired me to start my own repair business and your videos are teaching me a lot
Love to hear it!
It's great that Vita is getting the retroactive love it deserved back then. Nice video, Steve 👍
Your videos have partially inspired me to open my own repair shop
Opening things up and making them tick again. Amazing, i love doing it
Great to hear!
ah man this is sick! love dq. the little figure you saw at the beginning of the vid is a liquid metal slime, an enemy that traditionally gives huge amounts of XP in dragon quest games even compared to other metal enemies/bosses. they're one of the best enemies to XP farm with usually in these games
Always such high-quality work. I'd never be afraid to let him work on my stuff.
Your videos gave me the confidence to finally try my hand at soldering again after failures long ago. It's been a start, and honestly you have no idea how much these videos help, thank you so much!
I still have two original PSP's but I always wanted a VITA. Great machines and probably way ahead of their time. Today, they would be a hit if marketed properly.
Wow this seller probably used a knife or something really sharp what a mess... but great that you were able to save the shell, it looks great
Nice to see you bring vita (Latin for life) back to this Vita.
Thanks for watching!
I learned from other people to never buy broken things that were opened/failed repairs. This is why.
If I'm not mistaken, the white wire is a temperature based resistor or you could say a battery temperature sensor which normally prevents the battery from overheating/overcharging or maybe even overdischarging. But most cheap battery companies in china used to bypass it with normal resistors, so the sensor wouldn't work properly
I love your videos, always awesome to see you fix things. Inspires the DIYer in me.
Glad to hear it!
I think the scratching isn't on the screen itself because it looks like there's a glass screen protector on it. Great video by the way.
I always wanted this Vita. I have one I modded. It lets you play every Vita and PSP game ever made. I recommend doing this. It is extremely worth it. Make sure you use the latest model Vita because the old one can be a bit weird with the sd card that is compatible with the mod(unless you find a way around this) where as the newer model can use just any size card from any company.
Awesome video as always,wow the seller absolutely butchered the components and pcb,well done on the repair.💯👌🏻✌🏻
I always feel that the takeaway from your videos is that every one can do it, just need to use a little bit of your head and have a little bit of understanding. And to not be afraid to mess things up because we all started some place.
I didn't even know people did this battery mod. I'd be so scared to mess up such a beautiful device!
It's a nice boost to the battery life, and eventually people will have to replace the battery when it starts dying so might as well upgrade. BUT NOT LIKE THIS LOL this board actually got raped, I don't even know how you mess it up this bad and I'm a noob at soldering.
Gorgeous console! Was a great candidate for a board swap whether you could fix or not! :)
I love the vita videos. Would be awesome to see you do a USC Type-C mod for the 2000 though. I really want to do that for my own.
A lot things i Have learned from this guy. Bravo bro ✌️✌️🖤
Glad to hear that
Can I have one of those 9 you fixed 😂 I used to have a psp back in the day and I loved it, used to watch TV shows and movies on it, play games... I had to sell it, hard times etc.... Just wanted to say thank you for all those videos you make, I used to repair cell phones back when the Motorola v60/Nokia 5160&5165 were the top sellers and people broke the antennae often.. I appreciate all you do man.
Oh the frustration of watching the video. In my experience, the controller board on the battery often has the pad for the white wire empty (although you do need to inspect that pcb for LiPo controller chip too). If it was fitted then you didn't even need the thermistor mod or to cut wires.
tbh I can feel your pain. From a personal point of view, I'd have loved to have seen you remove the scratch on the screen. It's a plastic shell, and I've never found a good solution to remove a bad one on my PS Vita.
Scrubbing the board with a dental pick.. I can't even watch anymore.
The windshield uv resin repair kit works pretty well to disguise deeper scratches in gorilla glass
Well done sir. 👏👏 Like what Miss Fizzle said " Make mistakes , make mistakes, make mistakes. It's the best way to learn something."
love your videos. because of them i just recently fixed three broken ebay switches. the fourth one i got has a missing lcd connector with torn traces ... wish me luck lol
Good luck!
As an aircraft avionics tech. Considering what you started with, this was a pretty well executed job imo. Can't win them all. ^^
I had serious anxiety watching those battery cables that you'd just stripped slowly drifting towards each other!
Nothing makes me happier than vita content.
So glad you enjoy these! I don't make many Vita videos but this one was just too cool to not fix!
I love watching your video when I am at school and at home
A screen replacement video for that one would be cool. (or whatever is needed to remove those scratches)
That little silver ghost you unpacked at the start is supposed to sit in the headphone jack. Just for looks. :)
I literally just ordered a 1000 jp psvita and then I see this on my feed😂. Good content
I would love to see more PS Vita Content 😁
You had me worried when you were soldering that component to the white wire. Your iron was super close to the battery and in fact you scorched it a little lol. Careful!
I love how easy it is to take apart the Vita compared to any other console. No over designed crap to prevent consumer self repair!
I once got a cheap "as is" vita years ago that had just about every zif tab inside broken off! I was able to get it working again by adding thin tape to the back of the ribbons to friction fit them in, which was way easier than sourcing new connectors and hot air swapping them all. BTW, the thermistor needs to be physically touching the lipo or it'll do nothing. It's purpose is to monitor the cell temp and cut off charging in case it starts rising too quickly. Having it not touch the cell would mean it'll work normally, but if the cell ever does get damaged and starts going thermal the themistor cant sense it till it's too late and the cell ignites or spews electrolyte.
nice BGM Hoshifuru Yoruni · ra'z · 9maBear · Noa Tamaki
love it
The Vita was such a killer handheld; it's so sad that Sony killed it.
Looks great on the outside, disaster inside.
Yes, this one was pretty crazy inside!
Wow, that's a mess. It's really gonna need the perfect amount of thermal paste.
Honestly with it being a limited edition system I think I would have paid a hopefully professional to install the new battery. This definitely seems like it was Cleary above the owners skill set.
Nice fix. That vita was always on my wishlist but never wanted to pay inflated prices on it
My rule is that I don't mess around with modding anything that I don't have the skill, experience or tools to do justice, and for me that's pretty much every handheld other than the og GameBoy Advance. I'm kind of mad at the seller for trying to mod this beautiful system and failing so badly. Don't try unless you're confident and practice first!
I loved when you pro said "to see if it explodes!" xDddd
I have actually done 3 of those battery mods to the 3 vitas I have, and I do recommend it, if it's a legit battery, vita batteries die for no known reason so once It happened to my first vita I did it to my other 2 vitas as well.
Wait, you don't know about the slimes from Dragon Quest? They're almost as iconic as Goombas in Mario!
I think the person trying to do the aftermarket battery mod was trying to do the Lipo battery mod conversion with universal connector. Hence why you need the battery connectors and thermistor to attach to piece of battery component from the original battery. From there you solder the power and ground to the connectors and a thermistor to the third white wire. Its a delicate mod to take on if you don’t have the proper tools, patience and knowledge you end up with a disaster like this. Y
You almost got the wiring done correctly, you only needed to add a piece of the original battery board to the Lipo battery.
Another video to lighten my day!
Glad to hear it!
Love the vita! I recently tried to replace some analog sticks in some controllers and I guess my soldering iron just cant get hot enough to melt the old solder on a dualshock 4 :( Really enjoy your vids
There are different types of flux on of which Water Soluble Flux does corrode board components over time if left unclean
What a coincidence, I’ve never had a vita but I bought one on eBay a few days ago and it comes in today lol
Great video lad keep up with the work
Thanks, will do!
@@Tronicsfix your welcome
Imo you took amthe best road with the vita Steve, your right about the quality of some after market batts they loose charge ability quick sometimes.
A technicians least favorite words, I tried to do it myself.
Lol!
steve just did a triple heart bypass surgery and the patient lives... steve is a gigachad vita doctor
Pegwood would be a good option instead of the metal dental pick. Watchmakers use that to help scrape off dirt and grime on watch cases
Haha I do the same when cutting wires, just before I cut my brain says "just a little longer" multiple times before my hands start working again haha
Items like this scare me if I were to receive them. 175 is pretty expensive if I am unable to restore it.
Nice work! The Vita is a cool system.
Love your videos 👍🏻 please be gentle with the music 🙉
I don't see the point in modding the battery, Cameron Sino makes quality aftermarket batteries for the Vita now. They are drop in replacements and don't require soldering.
So... whoever tried doing this mod job likely shorted those contact pads and welded different layers of the PCB together, judging by the skid mark? Probably tried soldering the wires coming directly from the battery, and the battery had a charge. Another good reason not to try using the aftermarket battery. xD
So many ways to avoid this... could've used wires that weren't connected to a battery, then putting them together afterwards. I'd definitely try using that connector somehow instead, just to avoid soldering things directly to the PCB. That's just super iffy particularly if you don't have the right tools. Boards with tiny components like those the most I'll risk is hot air gun... don't have enough confidence to solder things directly to it even if I had a fine tip soldering iron, which I don't.
I suppose the kit didn't come with a connector to use there, but if you are replacing it anyways just chop it off the original...
Yeesh... well, sometimes there's only one way to learn things, which is by doing expensive mistakes. xD I also do them all the time.
Also, it was pretty generous to pay that much for it Steve... :P I mean, it is a limited edition and all that, but man, still expensive.
Btw, the creature that came with it is a Metal Babble. xD I have one made of metal in my figure collection. xD
Awesome fix tronicsfix Awesome Video tronicsfix
A happy ending for the psvita good job.
Love the content Steve keep up the good work
Thanks! Glad you enjoy it!
I used to have a first model PsVita, the one with OLED screen and it was amazing, too bad they started to put a standard led screen…
Amazing work like always! Always look forward to my Friday evening watching your videos thank you from London 🇬🇧 🎉
The PS Vita. I see you are a man of culture.
Nice fix 😁 I love your videos 😊
I hope this guy never lays another hand on electronic micro work again. Or until her learns a little bit lol. That poor board!
Awesome video. I now want a PSVita 😊
Glad you were able to save that vita.
Recently you've been showing off more modifications to older systems and even gameboy game pcbs, any chance you can try out a better/quieter cooling mod for the ps4? I know you did a few in the past, but would be happy to see what you can come up with now a few years later after fixing more types of stuff. Modding a pc tower cooler to it?
Thanks for the video.
I got a super rare Pentium 1 laptop here where I accidentally knocked 2 transistors off. Could be fun to see that fixed sometime.
175$ for a pos in disguise but you saved the day
I'm surprised that didn't let out magic smoke or even catch fire.
Another great video about a great job well done!
This board looked horrible.. but good you saved that pretty special edition.
I thought my first attempt at soldering was bad...
I installed a 3300mAh battery in my ps vita, the battery was from a samsung smartphone. It runs longer for a couple of hours. I have the 1000 oled model, the 3G one, i removed the internal connector for the hspa modem, otherwise my battery wouldn't fit, i removed the sony port and installed a micro-usb connector in place where the accessories port was (which isn't used anyway on ps vita) and i modded the L and R buttons for nice clicky ones, i didn't like the feel of those buttons, i mean, every other button is a nice clicky one, except for those 2. My vita runs great, a lot of people want to have my vita, but i keep it! I've put in a lot of work and time to mod it just the way i want it.
You forgot the heat shrink on the thermistor ;)
Great vid man.
This bord looked so disgusting, iam very happy to see it clean.
That board needed a magic spell to fix but I don't think magic exists. :(
Was the seller trying to solder with a blow torch? Honestly one has to be extremely untalented to damage a board that badly.
Man I wish people would take the time to practice soldering instead of doing what this seller did, they mangled those areas.
great job still puzzled why this guy didnt just use the orignal connector either
This is why I love Japanese electronics (particularly consoles), so many versions( and by versions, I mean colors). What's with Na/c consoles and the color black?