Glad you enjoyed it bud. Protecting your warranty sticker is more about preservation. To collectors a sealed unit is more valuable than one that has been opened and repaired. To the average person it probably doesn’t make a difference. Obviously PS2 isn’t collectible but that’s the idea.
@@BorderlineOCD Cant you just heat the tape up and slip it off without the void appearing all over the it? Pretty sure I've seen it done before on a video.
@@AnarickTheDevil That doesnt work on these because most of these stickers get damaged soon as you temper with them, especially peal it off. They are similar to hologram stickers, once you mess with them they are damaged forever.
Good job on finding out about those switches. Also very creative with making some new clock batterys, currently preparing for a planned power outage by fixing up some old 12v car batteries so I can use them to power my wifi router as well as my tv and ps4
Thanks bud. How long can you power that setup with a few car batteries? I applaud your determination to game through a blackout. That is true devotion.
@@BorderlineOCD currently have 1 good 60 ah 12v battery and 1 80ah high current 12v battery that I'm trying to fix. Got at least 2 hours playtime from that good 60ah battery on my 360 without my tv connected. I just tried out my tv plugged into the converter and it sounds like my tv power supply doesn't like it since it's making buzzing noises but it does seem to work. I also could connect my soldering station up instead of my consoles and clean up my work bench and finish some projects that I didn't have time for so I guess I should just do that instead
I also need to order some batteries for my ps4 controllers as well. It's funny that I have to order some batteries for those because all of the ps3 controllers that still have working batteries outpreform my 1 working ps4 controller
A few PS2 revisions had a design flaw where a spike in voltage would short the laser coils, and in turn would fry the LA6508 chip. On slim models this could happen by opening the drive lid while the disk was reading. This could also happen when using scratched discs as the console would try to increase the power of the laser to try to read the disc, resulting in the coils overheating. IIRC Sony tried to address this by adding a pack of diodes in parallel before the coils. Another option was to perform a "romeo mod" which would power the LA6508 chip with 5V instead of 12V. So what I'm saying is use clean disks and try not to play too much with the lid switch once a disc is being read. 😉
Did exactly the same as your video adjusting potentiometers, & hey presto it works again just when I was about to order a new laser. By far one of the best vidz with clear instructions to follow so thanx.😊
Great job on fixing the two PS2 slims. It's good that you had an accurate resistance reading to go off of, since someone clearly tampered with the "dirty" slim. I've fixed a few fat PS2s that had disc reading issues. Aside from the mechanical issues of dust and dried up lubricant, they also have the potentiometer for adjusting CD and DVD. Fortunately I've never had to mess with that. On the fat PS2s, they have gears that can adjust the height of the rails where the laser slides along. The gears can reach a maximum height, and then drop back down to the lowest point once you passed the highest point. I would make marks where the gears originally were, just in case, and then I would count how many clicks of the gears would have from the laser at its lowest point until its highest point, before it drops back down. I would tune in the laser until I could read discs reliably. To test the lasers, I would make sure my PS2 could read smooth and scratched discs, but since the PS2 can read many types of discs, I would test a PS1 game, a music CD, a DVD movie, a DVD based PS2 game, and finally a CD based PS2 game (blue discs games like Half-Life, Soldier of Fortune, et cetera). With a full suite of discs to test, I would be confident where the laser was tuned. You can also tell if the laser is reading well when it boots a disc before you ever see the dashboard of the PS2. Keep up the great work. I'm looking to get a PS1 Digital Kit when they are back in stock, so I can mod my newest PS1 with HDMI.
Thanks dude, this was a fun pair to work on, although I may have underestimated the effort of working on two units at the same time! I admittedly haven't seen any fat PS2 repairs in recent memory. I'm sure I'll eventually come across a repair lot with one. After working on the PS2 Slim I feel the same way about it as the PSone. It feels a little cheap and flimsy and doesn't have the same nostalgic kick somehow... I'm prepping to work on the trio of original PlayStations I picked up recently, and happy to say the repair manual is more in depth than the PS2. I do think an oscilloscope would make things easier when working on the laser, and I'm considering getting an inexpensive one just for that purpose but not sure if it's going to do the trick or not. I've seen some rather interesting looking ones on Amazon for $40 lol... On the PS2 laser adjustment you mentioned (took me a couple of reads to visualize it but I get it now), how do you know what the right height is? So after you mark the original position and reset it, do you go through the gear teeth one by one and test? Good luck getting your hands on the PS1Digital Kit. Saw Voultar's install video and it looks like a fun and challenging soldering exercise!
@@BorderlineOCD I click through the teeth of the gears one at a time as you said. The PS2 CD-based games are some of the hardest discs to read on the PS2. I would have the top off the console and adjust the laser height one increment at a time until I could get reliable reads. I would then test the speed it boots into the game. I would finally test all the disc types I mentioned previously, to make sure the laser height was good across the board. The laser module on the fat PS2 also has a black cover that can be removed to expose the source of the laser. I also clean that, because it is possible for dust to get down there, where a regular surface clean on the top of the laser would not get. I absolutely love the fat versions of the PlayStation consoles. They have the most modding capability. I have two SCPH-50001 PS2s with Free MC Boot that loads all the games from a 1 TB internal SSD. Out of the 300 games I have, only one doesn't work. I personally tested all of them. Somehow the e-mail notification when the PS1 Digital Kit went in stock did not send to me, which is odd. Hopefully I'll get the next stock notification. I ordered my XStation ODE today. I'm going to secure a SCPH-5501, since I need a PU-18 motherboard.
Wow thanks, I haven't been able to get my ps2 to read a disc in 5yr, dusted it off today and thought I'd give it a go, just put home distilled ethanol in those spots you said and it's working like a charm.
Thank you for this video. I was able to void my warranty and fix my ps2 slim that has been in a box forever. Was able to just spray electronics cleaner in the door switches and work them and now it plays just fine
Repairs like this are the best, just a spit shine and they good to go. I've fixed 2 or 3 slims by noticing the the lid has gotten juuuust enough heat/wear that it bends slightly. So now they don't reach the lid button, put some paper snug under there and they where good to go.
Indeed, my Slimline had an issue with the door lid sensors too..... i had an issue for several years with intermittent "the disc tray is open" messages. Thought it had finally killed my system, so i disassembled with the help of your video. As i was analysing the frontal sensor, the on/off button suddenly fell off the circuitboard ! It wasn't actually soldered on, but instead attached by some very dry glue base. After managing to take out the battery, reattach the on/off button, blow some dirt out of the frontal sensor, i finally discover(i think) that the problem is the main disc rotary is dead. Thanks for the video. (I can't believe where the battery is in the PAL territory version).
Great work with those switches! :) Very informative repair indeed. The funny thing is that there are many pot tweaking videos on TH-cam (for different consoles) but tweaking the potentiometer never solved anything for me. (Tried on 10+ systems by now)
Thanks my man, glad you enjoyed it. I think an oscilloscope would improve the odds of a successful pot tweak and I’m considering getting one soon. It’s hit and miss with resistance values but yeah the odds are stacked against you given the higher likelihood that the laser is just probably dead most of the time.
The first console that I bought with a lot of work and savings, the previous ones were bought by my mother v: I still have it in its original box, it is the model scph-90001
That would be the Xbox 360 for me. Finally scraped enough money working part time to buy one. I asked for a lot of consoles growing up. The answer was a resounding "no". It was nice shopping in the bargain bin for games though haha.
The battery inside PS2s are only for the clock, the system configuration and game saves are stored on the memory cards which are flash memory in SONY memory cards.
Really enjoying your videos. Bought a 60gb ps3 recently which had discs stuck in it which I managed to fix. It is very noisy so after watching some of your videos I want to take it apart even more and do the thermal paste. Thanks for the links in the description as I know what to order then.
Glad you're finding the content useful. I think you mean the lithium grease for the drive rather than thermal paste, unless you're re-pasting your GPU/CPU as well.
@@BorderlineOCD plan on repasting the CPU and GPU but the lithium greasd I will use on my ps2 fat as I am having problems with that laser. So if I give it a good clean and grease it might help it more.
Damn man, I got a ps2 slim two days ago from a trash bin and it has the same problem. I looked for help on yt and various forums but anyone couldn't help, and then i see this video, amazing. Tomorrow I will try this and I hope it's working because I really wanna solve it. Sorry for my bad english
Really common issue this, especially after people started tampering with the sensors to get the slims to boot backups. First thing I look at if a slim isn't reading games.
@@BorderlineOCD People started gluing them down and stuff to trick the console into thinking the lid was closed. You don't really see it on the 90000 models, I think Sony implemented a different check.
I'm not sure if you are aware but disk is reserved for use to ID magnetic media formats. Floppy Disk, Hard Disk etc. Optical medias are ID'd as discs etc. Compact Disc, Digital Video Disc etc.
There are 2 door closed switches. The back middle one was messed up on mine so I taped it down and worked. The switched still worked but it didn't get pushed down enough for some reason. There is another swirch on the power button board. I would have checked the switches before anything really
You should always test slim PS2's with discs you don't care about. It's a common problem for the adhesive that holds the laser's ribbon cable to the RF shield to fail allowing it to come in contact with the disc leaving a circular scratch.
@@BorderlineOCD It's not that the ribbon detaches it just starts to peel up where the curl is from the upward pressure than gives it enough slack to come in contact with the disc. Sony solved the problem with the SCPH-9000x slims.
Can agree with this, my PS2 slim did this to Jak and Daxter. Luckily that game didn't store anything at all where the scratches were, it only uses just over 1GB of the disk!
I’ve bought 16 PS2 on ebay and all were not reading disc. I cleaned the lenses and got 14 working fine. The other two ordered lens and now they are fine.
"bad design or low quality material". Mate that console has survived for 20 years and still works, my own that i've had for 15 still works. Its likely the fault is just a build of of dirt or the eventaul drying of and grease or lubricant in those parts. The only issue i've had is that the laser rail has dirt buildup preventing it from sliding properly which as you know is easily fixed
The only other model I have in my repair pile are a couple of SCPH-79001s. The pair in this video are SCPH-75001s. Both have ethernet built in. I'm assuming you are referring to yet another iteration?
Sometimes the best the units to buy are the ones that are little broken like this. They stop working and stop being used in a sense preserving them for us.
Yeah it’s a great find when it broke down early in its lifecycle (specially when it’s a minor fault). You never know what you’re going to get in bulk lots. Sometimes they look like their owners used them as footballs, other times they’re in great shape.
I once bought a PS2 from a thrift store. The guy said that I don't know if it works or not it's all your luck. I looked for seal and it was intact. So I was like what could go wrong. I paid him I guess it was $2. Took it home and connected it to TV. It didn't played games for some reason. I opened the lid and clicked on the micro switch that tells the console that disc is in. Nothing. So I opened it up and surprisingly all ribbon cables for the dvd drive were disconnected. It was a sealed console keep this in mind. And cables were disconnected. I connected them back up and it worked. Thought I'd share this..
Yikes. Do you have memory of peeling off the warranty sticker? Is it possible the warranty sticker was a reproduction? I think scammers will always find creative ways around these seals. I personally haven't had success removing stickers like this without the "void" print separating. Tried both heat and alcohol and it still tears. I'm able to remove an original Xbox sticker no problem (and everyone needs to remove their Xbox clock caps so not sure a "sealed" unit is a good sign from a longevity standpoint) but I do it for aesthetics more than anything else.
@@BorderlineOCD yeah it was genuine seal. I also thought that this sticker might be replaced at some point. So I had another slim which I was using at the time and compared the stickers visually. It looked very similar no difference at all. When I removed it it printed void on the console as you mentioned. And all screws opened with that satisfying "click". Also the console was in great condition too.
Wow, I had no idea there were so many things that can mess up an old console. You look on line and pay sometimes hundreds of dollars for a 12 year old or more console and even if they say," working", how well or how completely, is a whole other thing. I just bought a PS2 90001 slim and though it looks in decent shape, I won't know how it works because the seller sent a power cord for the older version with a power brick. It's stupid to put a battery in the unit and not make it a simple replaceable. Vs having to solder it in. At least now I know not to expect too much. Makes me glad I bartered the price. You can buy a PS4 used, for same as a PS2. But naturally, Sony didn't make them all, backwards compatible. So we end up with games sitting around years later and no way to play them. Crazy.
AWESOME AWESOME AWESOME!! As a former computer industry service technician I applaud you for your EXCELLENT video and diagnostic skills. Bravo! Do you have a Patreon account I can buy you a well-deserved beverage for your efforts??? I recently had my PS2 apart due to the clock battery dying (mine is the onboard CR2032) as well as the dreaded DRE issue. I muddled with the trim pots too to get the drive reading again, but I didn't have the ohms values available to me. Your video gives me the values to check for now, thank you! Do you have a link to the PS2 service manual (it's a techie thing 😉) Again, THANK YOU VERY MUCH for doing this EXCELLENT video! I l subscribed, of course, and will now check out your other videos.
I have a PS2 slim that doesn't read the discs. Tried to follow this guide only to find after putting it back together that the power will no longer stay on (light goes from green to red after a second). Fuses seem to be good, but I'm guessing I may have disturbed the power connector and need to reflow the solder over there. I didn't adjust the laser yet.
I have PS2 slim the problem with it is that the disc trying to spin but after a while it started to spin but no at a high speed where can start looking for the problem? Thanks I enjoyed your repair video 😊
Muchas gracias por enseñar como arreglar el PS2 me ayudo mucho tu video y pude solucionar el problema en el mío. Thank so much and God bless you. Amigo
@@herooftime9921 I mean pick up other used gear from say ebay with faults and have a go at fixing it myself. Plus anyway im sure the shipping from the UK to him would be far more than the products are worth lol
Naa if you think you'd enjoy it just go for it bud. You gotta start somewhere, just stick to older systems at the beginning. The circuitry is simpler, traces are larger, etc. eBay can be hit and miss, as sometimes "untested" systems have had prior failed repair attempts. See if you can source something locally, or if you wanna do eBay definitely scrutinize the listing details and the seller feedback. But its a hobby like any other. You get better with each repair. Kitchen appliances are good candidates as well. I know they're not the sexiest things to fix but I did my first soldering on things like that (broken power cables, blown fuses) and can be good practice.
I have a couple of Dreamcasts and they all arrived with dead drives. Would love to bring one back to life but I haven't found any great repair info on it and I'm not eager to do a trial and error approach. I will be on the lookout though. Although I have a GDEmu I would love to have one of the physical discs working.
Man you are a pro. You make it look easy, which it is really not. Awesome work! Btw I measured the resistance not with the two points of the bottom but with one from the top and the bottom, can this cause issues? Another question I have a ps2 slim there were the motor seems to try to spin faster 2 or 3 times and then the disc error appears, could be this a motor problem or it is likely that the laser is old (or needs adjustment)?
I recently found your channel, and I am enjoying your videos. I do wonder, do you speed up your videos a little? There is an unusual audio skipping that I keep hearing.
I would love a video about DVD resurfacing! Here IN Argentina this console has been very popular but original discs not so much ;) recently I got my hands on several rare discs and they are unreadable :(
Since he may not have seen your comment, I'm gonna help you now. There is a good video on doing a resurface made by the TH-camr "The Game Museum". I attempted it myself with my copy of Midnight Club 3: DUB Edition Remix which got scratched by my PS2 and can confirm that it indeed made the scratches a lot less. I could've gotten it completely scratch free if my friend continued polishing it, but for now, I'm happy with the result. Here is the link: th-cam.com/video/AN8ET7axaNk/w-d-xo.html Good luck and also greetings to Argentina from Germany. :)
Hey dude! I know this is an old video but i would highly recommend not using expensive games on these slim consoles you get for repair. Sometimes the laser ribbon cables start to unstick and they belly up and touch the disc underneath. Ran into this problem myself but thankfully i test with fifa haha
Thanks for the tip. A few folks shared similar experiences. Surprised I haven't run into this yet but good to keep in mind. Seems to be a prevalent issue with the Slims.
I have heard this from a few commenters but have not experienced this myself. Needless to say the Slims are a step down in quality compared to the Fats.
Nice video. On my unit, I pushed on both switches and the disc start to spin and stopped after a few revolutions, and then turn off. Would appreciate any ideas. Thanks.
Amazing video, ive learned a LOT. Thank you for that. I have a PS2 SLIM model first gen with a bootscreen freeze. The console booting to the the systemscreen and just freezing up. It refuses to start a game. Any clue what this might cause?
I burnt out my whole laser trying to adjust the cd, could you list the ome ohms for both the dvd and laser and tell me whats to high or too little for both, theres so much conflicting information on google
Good job on fixing both! :) I have one question tho. Were you able set the date and time on both right away or did you have to do something else first? My friend and I have replaced the batteries in our PS2 Slims (His is a black 75004 and mine is a silver 70004) and both consoles showed the same problem at first: We couldn't set the date and time and the spinning circles in the home menu still were the big blob like it was with the depleted batteries. I was able to get both working by changing random settings until the clock eventually started ticking again (It took about half an hour for each console.). I'm wondering if there is a trick to get the time working again right away.
Try to change the hour and if it doesn't let you, just press X and try again. Pressing x gets the clock going again. Going back with circle does not. Once the clock is going, you can set the time normally.
The little black latch that presses down the back sensor button on my ps2 slim broke off, I tried to glue it back on twice with superglue but every time I open the tray it snaps off again! I don’t know what to do😭
Might not work. The plastic gets worn down ovee time too so.might not be pushed enough. Like I said another comment i taped down back middle one and it works fine with switch on power button.
Those "tray open" switches are crap. I know people who have either super glued them shut, or removed them entirely and soldered a bridge it place. There's also a third switch on the front of the laser assembly that supposed to tell the drive when the laser is in the "foward" position. Check that if the laser is acting wonky.
i cant figure mine out all of the fuses tested good switches are good the laser will move but disk still wont spin even with a supposedly brand new laser and disk drive
Does the laser power change depending on the model? I have seen other videos on TH-cam that leave it at 750 ohm, or maybe those have chips to read copies
I would suspect the values can vary depending on revision. I saw similar videos with values in the range like you saw and I just don't know what to make of them. I have another two silver SCPH-79001 so it will be interesting to see the stock values on those (seals are intact) compared to this pair of SCPH-75001s...
I read on a forum that the fat model and slim ps2 actually needs different values. But I'm still not certain what exact numbers they both have since people seem to confuse and mix the numbers between the models :S
I have a problem with two lasers, both don't read CDs at all, but the DvD games can be read, I set the DvD screw value to 1646 +/- and it was able to read two DvD games, one in good condition, and the other in bad condition.. on the CD screw, I've already tried several values, but none of them worked... I tried the value represented in this video, but it didn't work.. Could it be that the laser is almost dead or close to dying?
Hi, nice video! I tried everything u showed in the video but my ps2 still doesnt spin at all. I've checked all the things u showed with tester and about the resistence my ps2 showed some values higher than yours, (+100 each value) but I decided to dont change cause my ps2 is schp-7004 and not 1 as yours. At this point I think it's something related to the engine, do you have any suggestion? While reassembiling my ps2 I've also lost the power led which is not showed up anymore. I hope you can help me. P.S my ps2 has a mod
Hello excellent video, a question by chance do you know how to recover the movement of the blue spheres that are shown in the main menu of the Playstation 2 slim
i think i blew a fuse on mine when i was dialing the laser. I didnt plug the ribbon back into the laser and when i when to go do a test my ps2 started buzzing and i shut it off. reconnected the ribbon cable to the laser and now the disk doesnt want to spin
update: turns out i was using the wrong kind of laser for my ps2. i had bought 2 lasers. One was green like the one in the video and the other i had was like orange/yellow. Turns out that the green underside laser was incompatible with my version of the slim causing the disk drive not to spin. I put the other one (which was more like the original one i had in my slim) and it worked fine. Turns out you do need specific lasers
Mine has the same problem some how the data reseted by me just clicking the power button and all the data reseted and tried inserting discs but wont read them and i have no idea how to fix it by this video makes me wanna sell it cause im scared ill break it
Lol "If you don't want to void your warranty" I'd be impressed if they offered a 15-year warranty. But in all seriousness, good video.
Glad you enjoyed it bud. Protecting your warranty sticker is more about preservation. To collectors a sealed unit is more valuable than one that has been opened and repaired. To the average person it probably doesn’t make a difference. Obviously PS2 isn’t collectible but that’s the idea.
@@BorderlineOCD Cant you just heat the tape up and slip it off without the void appearing all over the it? Pretty sure I've seen it done before on a video.
@@AnarickTheDevil if you want to warp the sticker
@@BorderlineOCD isn’t collectible yet…..
@@AnarickTheDevil That doesnt work on these because most of these stickers get damaged soon as you temper with them, especially peal it off. They are similar to hologram stickers, once you mess with them they are damaged forever.
You're a PS2 wizard! You not only repaired them to perfect health, you also rescued the consoles from becoming e-waste!
Good job on finding out about those switches. Also very creative with making some new clock batterys, currently preparing for a planned power outage by fixing up some old 12v car batteries so I can use them to power my wifi router as well as my tv and ps4
Thanks bud. How long can you power that setup with a few car batteries? I applaud your determination to game through a blackout. That is true devotion.
@@BorderlineOCD currently have 1 good 60 ah 12v battery and 1 80ah high current 12v battery that I'm trying to fix. Got at least 2 hours playtime from that good 60ah battery on my 360 without my tv connected. I just tried out my tv plugged into the converter and it sounds like my tv power supply doesn't like it since it's making buzzing noises but it does seem to work. I also could connect my soldering station up instead of my consoles and clean up my work bench and finish some projects that I didn't have time for so I guess I should just do that instead
I also need to order some batteries for my ps4 controllers as well. It's funny that I have to order some batteries for those because all of the ps3 controllers that still have working batteries outpreform my 1 working ps4 controller
Well done. Rarely see anyone grasp so completely the repairs they undertake like you do. Bravo.
Someone probably messed with the potentiometers thinking they were undoing screws
@Harley Mekhi ive seen this comment everywhere, with the exact same reply...
@@SetyaPriatna likely a bot
@@SetyaPriatna it’s a scam. Don’t go on the site. They always like you said make a comment and with that same reply
A few PS2 revisions had a design flaw where a spike in voltage would short the laser coils, and in turn would fry the LA6508 chip. On slim models this could happen by opening the drive lid while the disk was reading.
This could also happen when using scratched discs as the console would try to increase the power of the laser to try to read the disc, resulting in the coils overheating.
IIRC Sony tried to address this by adding a pack of diodes in parallel before the coils.
Another option was to perform a "romeo mod" which would power the LA6508 chip with 5V instead of 12V.
So what I'm saying is use clean disks and try not to play too much with the lid switch once a disc is being read. 😉
Should have just made more fat models
Did exactly the same as your video adjusting potentiometers, & hey presto it works again just when I was about to order a new laser. By far one of the best vidz with clear instructions to follow so thanx.😊
Great job on fixing the two PS2 slims. It's good that you had an accurate resistance reading to go off of, since someone clearly tampered with the "dirty" slim.
I've fixed a few fat PS2s that had disc reading issues. Aside from the mechanical issues of dust and dried up lubricant, they also have the potentiometer for adjusting CD and DVD. Fortunately I've never had to mess with that. On the fat PS2s, they have gears that can adjust the height of the rails where the laser slides along. The gears can reach a maximum height, and then drop back down to the lowest point once you passed the highest point. I would make marks where the gears originally were, just in case, and then I would count how many clicks of the gears would have from the laser at its lowest point until its highest point, before it drops back down. I would tune in the laser until I could read discs reliably.
To test the lasers, I would make sure my PS2 could read smooth and scratched discs, but since the PS2 can read many types of discs, I would test a PS1 game, a music CD, a DVD movie, a DVD based PS2 game, and finally a CD based PS2 game (blue discs games like Half-Life, Soldier of Fortune, et cetera). With a full suite of discs to test, I would be confident where the laser was tuned. You can also tell if the laser is reading well when it boots a disc before you ever see the dashboard of the PS2.
Keep up the great work. I'm looking to get a PS1 Digital Kit when they are back in stock, so I can mod my newest PS1 with HDMI.
Thanks dude, this was a fun pair to work on, although I may have underestimated the effort of working on two units at the same time!
I admittedly haven't seen any fat PS2 repairs in recent memory. I'm sure I'll eventually come across a repair lot with one. After working on the PS2 Slim I feel the same way about it as the PSone. It feels a little cheap and flimsy and doesn't have the same nostalgic kick somehow...
I'm prepping to work on the trio of original PlayStations I picked up recently, and happy to say the repair manual is more in depth than the PS2. I do think an oscilloscope would make things easier when working on the laser, and I'm considering getting an inexpensive one just for that purpose but not sure if it's going to do the trick or not. I've seen some rather interesting looking ones on Amazon for $40 lol...
On the PS2 laser adjustment you mentioned (took me a couple of reads to visualize it but I get it now), how do you know what the right height is? So after you mark the original position and reset it, do you go through the gear teeth one by one and test?
Good luck getting your hands on the PS1Digital Kit. Saw Voultar's install video and it looks like a fun and challenging soldering exercise!
@@BorderlineOCD I click through the teeth of the gears one at a time as you said. The PS2 CD-based games are some of the hardest discs to read on the PS2. I would have the top off the console and adjust the laser height one increment at a time until I could get reliable reads. I would then test the speed it boots into the game. I would finally test all the disc types I mentioned previously, to make sure the laser height was good across the board.
The laser module on the fat PS2 also has a black cover that can be removed to expose the source of the laser. I also clean that, because it is possible for dust to get down there, where a regular surface clean on the top of the laser would not get.
I absolutely love the fat versions of the PlayStation consoles. They have the most modding capability. I have two SCPH-50001 PS2s with Free MC Boot that loads all the games from a 1 TB internal SSD. Out of the 300 games I have, only one doesn't work. I personally tested all of them.
Somehow the e-mail notification when the PS1 Digital Kit went in stock did not send to me, which is odd. Hopefully I'll get the next stock notification. I ordered my XStation ODE today. I'm going to secure a SCPH-5501, since I need a PU-18 motherboard.
Wow thanks, I haven't been able to get my ps2 to read a disc in 5yr, dusted it off today and thought I'd give it a go, just put home distilled ethanol in those spots you said and it's working like a charm.
I've never thought seeing someone using a car product to restore PS2's faded black plastics. Awesome!
That’s one of cleanest battery job I’ve ever seen.
I've just discovered your channel,
your content is informative and interesting.
Thank you, glad you're enjoying it!
Wow! Fantastic!!!
Now I know how to try to repair my PS2 !!!
You are a good worker repairing the best jewels in the history of videogames !!!
Glad you enjoyed it. It's apparently a common issue with these so good chances you'll be able to bring your unit back to life.
Thank you for this video. I was able to void my warranty and fix my ps2 slim that has been in a box forever. Was able to just spray electronics cleaner in the door switches and work them and now it plays just fine
Repairs like this are the best, just a spit shine and they good to go.
I've fixed 2 or 3 slims by noticing the the lid has gotten juuuust enough heat/wear that it bends slightly.
So now they don't reach the lid button, put some paper snug under there and they where good to go.
Indeed, my Slimline had an issue with the door lid sensors too..... i had an issue for several years with intermittent "the disc tray is open" messages. Thought it had finally killed my system, so i disassembled with the help of your video.
As i was analysing the frontal sensor, the on/off button suddenly fell off the circuitboard ! It wasn't actually soldered on, but instead attached by some very dry glue base. After managing to take out the battery, reattach the on/off button, blow some dirt out of the frontal sensor, i finally discover(i think) that the problem is the main disc rotary is dead.
Thanks for the video. (I can't believe where the battery is in the PAL territory version).
Great work with those switches! :) Very informative repair indeed.
The funny thing is that there are many pot tweaking videos on TH-cam (for different consoles) but tweaking the potentiometer never solved anything for me. (Tried on 10+ systems by now)
Thanks my man, glad you enjoyed it. I think an oscilloscope would improve the odds of a successful pot tweak and I’m considering getting one soon. It’s hit and miss with resistance values but yeah the odds are stacked against you given the higher likelihood that the laser is just probably dead most of the time.
Thanks to your fine troubleshooting work, I was able to fix my PS2 Slim just by cleaning the disc lid sensors with 91% isopropyl alcohol!
The first console that I bought with a lot of work and savings, the previous ones were bought by my mother v:
I still have it in its original box, it is the model scph-90001
That would be the Xbox 360 for me. Finally scraped enough money working part time to buy one. I asked for a lot of consoles growing up. The answer was a resounding "no". It was nice shopping in the bargain bin for games though haha.
Thank you for teaching me about the fuses and lid covers! Now I don't have to go straight to the pot tweak when something doesn't read discs.
The battery inside PS2s are only for the clock, the system configuration and game saves are stored on the memory cards which are flash memory in SONY memory cards.
your videos are like when I first discovered Voultar's channel.... very talented well put together videos man! I'm really enjoying your content!
Glad you like them!
You know you love the ps2 if your ps4 has the same start up sound and the same background as the the ps2 :) I love it!
Man, your work is my ASMR
Haha thank you, I try to balance talking vs. just showing the work so glad you find it relaxing.
Really enjoying your videos. Bought a 60gb ps3 recently which had discs stuck in it which I managed to fix. It is very noisy so after watching some of your videos I want to take it apart even more and do the thermal paste. Thanks for the links in the description as I know what to order then.
Glad you're finding the content useful. I think you mean the lithium grease for the drive rather than thermal paste, unless you're re-pasting your GPU/CPU as well.
@@BorderlineOCD plan on repasting the CPU and GPU but the lithium greasd I will use on my ps2 fat as I am having problems with that laser. So if I give it a good clean and grease it might help it more.
This is so informative! I am looking foward for some audio repair on PS2 units. Have a nice day
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it! I never know what the next repair pile will bring, so you may see it here eventually :P
Damn man, I got a ps2 slim two days ago from a trash bin and it has the same problem. I looked for help on yt and various forums but anyone couldn't help, and then i see this video, amazing. Tomorrow I will try this and I hope it's working because I really wanna solve it.
Sorry for my bad english
Very nice video. I love PS2, and watching you repairing them is awesome!
Glad you like them!
What an amazing discovery!
Keep the good work, greetings from Brazil.
Also thanks TH-cam for recommend this.
Thanks for the sub! Força Brasil!
Really common issue this, especially after people started tampering with the sensors to get the slims to boot backups. First thing I look at if a slim isn't reading games.
Once you know, you know! First thing I’ll check in future if I ever come across these systems.
@@BorderlineOCD People started gluing them down and stuff to trick the console into thinking the lid was closed. You don't really see it on the 90000 models, I think Sony implemented a different check.
wow! I had my console kept for ten years because It stopped spinning the disk and just I bought and use the liquid and bang it works again, Thank you
You make a great job with your videos
I really enjoy it and learn new things
I hope u will do more videos like that with different consoles
Keep it on
Glad you like them!
I'm not sure if you are aware but disk is reserved for use to ID magnetic media formats. Floppy Disk, Hard Disk etc.
Optical medias are ID'd as discs etc. Compact Disc, Digital Video Disc etc.
Thank you! This helped a ton. My friend's PS2 and mine work again.
This is a very professional video. Good work, man.
"15 years after benn release, someone finally poped that cherry"...
I swear that's not what this video is about, mister FBI guy!
There are 2 door closed switches. The back middle one was messed up on mine so I taped it down and worked. The switched still worked but it didn't get pushed down enough for some reason. There is another swirch on the power button board. I would have checked the switches before anything really
You should always test slim PS2's with discs you don't care about. It's a common problem for the adhesive that holds the laser's ribbon cable to the RF shield to fail allowing it to come in contact with the disc leaving a circular scratch.
That's hilarious, permanent damage to your disks? The build quality of this system is definitely questionable...
@@BorderlineOCD It's not that the ribbon detaches it just starts to peel up where the curl is from the upward pressure than gives it enough slack to come in contact with the disc. Sony solved the problem with the SCPH-9000x slims.
Can agree with this, my PS2 slim did this to Jak and Daxter. Luckily that game didn't store anything at all where the scratches were, it only uses just over 1GB of the disk!
I’ve bought 16 PS2 on ebay and all were not reading disc. I cleaned the lenses and got 14 working fine. The other two ordered lens and now they are fine.
Great job 👍👍 thank you very much, greetings to Italy 🇮🇹
This is a very nice video I think my virgin PS2 might have the same issue
Thanks for this videos, now I can finally use my ps2 again
Glad I could help
"bad design or low quality material". Mate that console has survived for 20 years and still works, my own that i've had for 15 still works. Its likely the fault is just a build of of dirt or the eventaul drying of and grease or lubricant in those parts. The only issue i've had is that the laser rail has dirt buildup preventing it from sliding properly which as you know is easily fixed
such an amazing video. this actually fixed my problem thanks
Omfg, thank you so much! I was so happy to see that I can play my sonic mega collection plus again! Thank you!
actually there are two models of the ps2 slim for future use and repair model 1 ps2 slims have a dial up modem port still model 2 ps2 slims dont
The only other model I have in my repair pile are a couple of SCPH-79001s. The pair in this video are SCPH-75001s. Both have ethernet built in. I'm assuming you are referring to yet another iteration?
@@BorderlineOCD there is a SCPH-9000x that has the external power supply built in.
Sometimes the best the units to buy are the ones that are little broken like this. They stop working and stop being used in a sense preserving them for us.
Yeah it’s a great find when it broke down early in its lifecycle (specially when it’s a minor fault). You never know what you’re going to get in bulk lots. Sometimes they look like their owners used them as footballs, other times they’re in great shape.
I would've polished the middle plastic strip and to redo the paint I used military shoe polish and heat up the plastic a bit so the oils can enter it.
I once bought a PS2 from a thrift store. The guy said that I don't know if it works or not it's all your luck. I looked for seal and it was intact. So I was like what could go wrong. I paid him I guess it was $2. Took it home and connected it to TV. It didn't played games for some reason. I opened the lid and clicked on the micro switch that tells the console that disc is in. Nothing. So I opened it up and surprisingly all ribbon cables for the dvd drive were disconnected. It was a sealed console keep this in mind. And cables were disconnected. I connected them back up and it worked. Thought I'd share this..
Yikes. Do you have memory of peeling off the warranty sticker? Is it possible the warranty sticker was a reproduction? I think scammers will always find creative ways around these seals. I personally haven't had success removing stickers like this without the "void" print separating. Tried both heat and alcohol and it still tears. I'm able to remove an original Xbox sticker no problem (and everyone needs to remove their Xbox clock caps so not sure a "sealed" unit is a good sign from a longevity standpoint) but I do it for aesthetics more than anything else.
@@BorderlineOCD yeah it was genuine seal. I also thought that this sticker might be replaced at some point. So I had another slim which I was using at the time and compared the stickers visually. It looked very similar no difference at all. When I removed it it printed void on the console as you mentioned. And all screws opened with that satisfying "click". Also the console was in great condition too.
Wow, I had no idea there were so many things that can mess up an old console. You look on line and pay sometimes hundreds of dollars for a 12 year old or more console and even if they say," working", how well or how completely, is a whole other thing. I just bought a PS2 90001 slim and though it looks in decent shape, I won't know how it works because the seller sent a power cord for the older version with a power brick. It's stupid to put a battery in the unit and not make it a simple replaceable. Vs having to solder it in. At least now I know not to expect too much. Makes me glad I bartered the price. You can buy a PS4 used, for same as a PS2. But naturally, Sony didn't make them all, backwards compatible. So we end up with games sitting around years later and no way to play them. Crazy.
AWESOME AWESOME AWESOME!!
As a former computer industry service technician I applaud you for your EXCELLENT video and diagnostic skills. Bravo! Do you have a Patreon account I can buy you a well-deserved beverage for your efforts???
I recently had my PS2 apart due to the clock battery dying (mine is the onboard CR2032) as well as the dreaded DRE issue. I muddled with the trim pots too to get the drive reading again, but I didn't have the ohms values available to me. Your video gives me the values to check for now, thank you! Do you have a link to the PS2 service manual (it's a techie thing 😉)
Again, THANK YOU VERY MUCH for doing this EXCELLENT video! I l subscribed, of course, and will now check out your other videos.
Great work Awesome repair video!👍
Thank you brother, glad you enjoyed it!
I have a PS2 slim that doesn't read the discs. Tried to follow this guide only to find after putting it back together that the power will no longer stay on (light goes from green to red after a second). Fuses seem to be good, but I'm guessing I may have disturbed the power connector and need to reflow the solder over there. I didn't adjust the laser yet.
I have PS2 slim the problem with it is that the disc trying to spin but after a while it started to spin but no at a high speed where can start looking for the problem? Thanks I enjoyed your repair video 😊
Great video! Very detailed, would give 2 thumbs up if I could.
Muchas gracias por enseñar como arreglar el PS2 me ayudo mucho tu video y pude solucionar el problema en el mío. Thank so much and God bless you. Amigo
Good job fair play. I keep debating on having a go at fixing retro gear and watching videos like this on the easy fixes are not helping haha
Send it to him
@@herooftime9921 I mean pick up other used gear from say ebay with faults and have a go at fixing it myself. Plus anyway im sure the shipping from the UK to him would be far more than the products are worth lol
Naa if you think you'd enjoy it just go for it bud. You gotta start somewhere, just stick to older systems at the beginning. The circuitry is simpler, traces are larger, etc. eBay can be hit and miss, as sometimes "untested" systems have had prior failed repair attempts. See if you can source something locally, or if you wanna do eBay definitely scrutinize the listing details and the seller feedback. But its a hobby like any other. You get better with each repair. Kitchen appliances are good candidates as well. I know they're not the sexiest things to fix but I did my first soldering on things like that (broken power cables, blown fuses) and can be good practice.
I carefully peeled back the warranty sticker when I replaced the laser to avoid being detected by future owners 😂
nice job! i would really like to see a video where you calibrate the potenciometer of a dreamcast drive
I have a couple of Dreamcasts and they all arrived with dead drives. Would love to bring one back to life but I haven't found any great repair info on it and I'm not eager to do a trial and error approach. I will be on the lookout though. Although I have a GDEmu I would love to have one of the physical discs working.
Man you are a pro. You make it look easy, which it is really not. Awesome work! Btw I measured the resistance not with the two points of the bottom but with one from the top and the bottom, can this cause issues? Another question I have a ps2 slim there were the motor seems to try to spin faster 2 or 3 times and then the disc error appears, could be this a motor problem or it is likely that the laser is old (or needs adjustment)?
you my friend are a god tysm!! fixed my issue in seconds!
Glad it was helpful to you.
I recently found your channel, and I am enjoying your videos. I do wonder, do you speed up your videos a little? There is an unusual audio skipping that I keep hearing.
Good job on the lasers
Thank you my man, your comments appreciated as always!
Fantastic work
I would love a video about DVD resurfacing! Here IN Argentina this console has been very popular but original discs not so much ;) recently I got my hands on several rare discs and they are unreadable :(
Since he may not have seen your comment, I'm gonna help you now. There is a good video on doing a resurface made by the TH-camr "The Game Museum". I attempted it myself with my copy of Midnight Club 3: DUB Edition Remix which got scratched by my PS2 and can confirm that it indeed made the scratches a lot less. I could've gotten it completely scratch free if my friend continued polishing it, but for now, I'm happy with the result. Here is the link: th-cam.com/video/AN8ET7axaNk/w-d-xo.html
Good luck and also greetings to Argentina from Germany. :)
Hey dude! I know this is an old video but i would highly recommend not using expensive games on these slim consoles you get for repair. Sometimes the laser ribbon cables start to unstick and they belly up and touch the disc underneath. Ran into this problem myself but thankfully i test with fifa haha
Thanks for the tip. A few folks shared similar experiences. Surprised I haven't run into this yet but good to keep in mind. Seems to be a prevalent issue with the Slims.
Bear in mind, the lazers ribbon cable scratches the discs while spinning
I have heard this from a few commenters but have not experienced this myself. Needless to say the Slims are a step down in quality compared to the Fats.
Nice video. On my unit, I pushed on both switches and the disc start to spin and stopped after a few revolutions, and then turn off. Would appreciate any ideas. Thanks.
I found a ps2 slim like these and it works I might get FMCB to play games might do a video
Amazing video, ive learned a LOT. Thank you for that. I have a PS2 SLIM model first gen with a bootscreen freeze. The console booting to the the systemscreen and just freezing up. It refuses to start a game. Any clue what this might cause?
No idea buddy, haven't run into a unit with those symptoms yet.
Kermit got mad skills! ;-)
I burnt out my whole laser trying to adjust the cd, could you list the ome ohms for both the dvd and laser and tell me whats to high or too little for both, theres so much conflicting information on google
Good job on fixing both! :)
I have one question tho. Were you able set the date and time on both right away or did you have to do something else first? My friend and I have replaced the batteries in our PS2 Slims (His is a black 75004 and mine is a silver 70004) and both consoles showed the same problem at first: We couldn't set the date and time and the spinning circles in the home menu still were the big blob like it was with the depleted batteries. I was able to get both working by changing random settings until the clock eventually started ticking again (It took about half an hour for each console.). I'm wondering if there is a trick to get the time working again right away.
Try to change the hour and if it doesn't let you, just press X and try again.
Pressing x gets the clock going again. Going back with circle does not.
Once the clock is going, you can set the time normally.
I work at a retro store, and today the tech we have was repairing a slim ps2, same model.
Seems like a common issue.
Weird.;
The little black latch that presses down the back sensor button on my ps2 slim broke off, I tried to glue it back on twice with superglue but every time I open the tray it snaps off again! I don’t know what to do😭
My PS2 Slim is starting to have the same fault. I need to put something on the lid to fully press down the switches to get it to read the disc.
Use some contact cleaner in the both holes. It should revive the functionality of the switches.
Might not work. The plastic gets worn down ovee time too so.might not be pushed enough. Like I said another comment i taped down back middle one and it works fine with switch on power button.
Those "tray open" switches are crap. I know people who have either super glued them shut, or removed them entirely and soldered a bridge it place. There's also a third switch on the front of the laser assembly that supposed to tell the drive when the laser is in the "foward" position. Check that if the laser is acting wonky.
Nice video thanks bro ❤
Thanks Paul💯
i cant figure mine out all of the fuses tested good switches are good the laser will move but disk still wont spin even with a supposedly brand new laser and disk drive
Is the PVR-802W lens compatible on those units?
I have two slim PS2 both won't load discs I'm gonna try it i hope it works
thank you i restored my old consoleee
Does the laser power change depending on the model? I have seen other videos on TH-cam that leave it at 750 ohm, or maybe those have chips to read copies
I would suspect the values can vary depending on revision. I saw similar videos with values in the range like you saw and I just don't know what to make of them. I have another two silver SCPH-79001 so it will be interesting to see the stock values on those (seals are intact) compared to this pair of SCPH-75001s...
I read on a forum that the fat model and slim ps2 actually needs different values. But I'm still not certain what exact numbers they both have since people seem to confuse and mix the numbers between the models :S
It must be a common issue beacouse i have the same problem. I just put something heavy on it and it works.
I have a problem with two lasers, both don't read CDs at all, but the DvD games can be read, I set the DvD screw value to 1646 +/- and it was able to read two DvD games, one in good condition, and the other in bad condition.. on the CD screw, I've already tried several values, but none of them worked...
I tried the value represented in this video, but it didn't work..
Could it be that the laser is almost dead or close to dying?
love the channel i subbed love the retro restoration
Thanks for the sub!
Hi, nice video! I tried everything u showed in the video but my ps2 still doesnt spin at all. I've checked all the things u showed with tester and about the resistence my ps2 showed some values higher than yours, (+100 each value) but I decided to dont change cause my ps2 is schp-7004 and not 1 as yours.
At this point I think it's something related to the engine, do you have any suggestion?
While reassembiling my ps2 I've also lost the power led which is not showed up anymore. I hope you can help me.
P.S my ps2 has a mod
My ps2 is reading the disc but when I enter the disc after the ps2 logo there is a black screen
I got up to reach for Doritos and cucumber lemon Gatorade and I saw that I left a whet spot on my gaming chair after watching this...
I'm glad my videos make you feel warm and fuzzy to the point of such sweet release
Question! Never soldered before, all I need is the essentials to actually do the repair correct?
Hi, by chance do you have the service manuals for the said model ps2s??
Hello excellent video, a question by chance do you know how to recover the movement of the blue spheres that are shown in the main menu of the Playstation 2 slim
They don’t move when the time hasn’t been set. Set the system time.
who else heard the strange difference between the sound the Virgin PS2 makes and the sound the dirty ps2 makes, at 14:53 ?
Yeah it was sharper on the dirty one
i think i blew a fuse on mine when i was dialing the laser. I didnt plug the ribbon back into the laser and when i when to go do a test my ps2 started buzzing and i shut it off. reconnected the ribbon cable to the laser and now the disk doesnt want to spin
update: turns out i was using the wrong kind of laser for my ps2. i had bought 2 lasers. One was green like the one in the video and the other i had was like orange/yellow. Turns out that the green underside laser was incompatible with my version of the slim causing the disk drive not to spin. I put the other one (which was more like the original one i had in my slim) and it worked fine. Turns out you do need specific lasers
The SPU laser (Philips) needs to be changed with the same laser, but the PVR802W and the KHM430 are interchangeable.
Mine has the same problem some how the data reseted by me just clicking the power button and all the data reseted and tried inserting discs but wont read them and i have no idea how to fix it by this video makes me wanna sell it cause im scared ill break it
"welcome to Hardware Unboxed"
Awesome!
Ι love ps2s nice video
Thanks my man appreciate the comment.
I remember I had 2 broken and all they needed was ribbon cables :p
Same one for the power board? It does appear to be very flimsy, although unless it's been tampered with not sure why they fail.