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- If the [[Xbox 360]] is unresponsive to the power button, the board is died-died. * Try a known good RF board and power supply3 KB (483 words) - 01:34, 2 February 2024
- ...), thermal sensor circuits, fan driver op-amps, and some of the [[Power On Reset]] logic. The clock generators on the ANA are not used due to excessive PLL jitter. The [[Backup Clock Genera1 KB (132 words) - 12:19, 10 July 2023
- ...s, thermal sensor circuits, fan driver op-amps, and some of the [[Power On Reset]] logic.1,010 bytes (126 words) - 12:20, 10 July 2023
- ...)#V_CPUCORE|V_CPUCORE]]. Titan used on [[Waternoose]] receives 1.8V from [[Power Rails (Original)#V_1P8|V_1P8]]. ..., and the various revisions of Waternoose, due to difference in [[Power On Reset]].2 KB (374 words) - 03:02, 16 December 2023
- Shiva is also known as DD0.9, a reference to the DD1/DD2/DD3 names used on [[Waternoose]]. ...not capable of performing [[Power On Reset]] and [[Initial Program Load]] on its own. Systems using this chip have a service processor (for example, IBM2 KB (260 words) - 23:13, 9 April 2024
- ...n error occurs on the [[Xbox 360]], some segments of the [[Ring of Light]] on the [[RF Board]] will be solid or flashing red. Examining the LED pattern i ...ral nature of the failure can be determined by observing the red light lit on the front of the console. In order to get the exact error, see [[#Secondary31 KB (4,738 words) - 01:20, 6 December 2023