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Thinking about RGHing my slim | HELP
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Thinking about RGHing my slim | HELPPosted:
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I have a Star Wars edition Xbox 360 Slim. I'm wanting to Dual Nand RGH it. Can somebody tell me all the things I will need to do this? Such as Nand-X etc...
Any help is appreciated
Thanks
#2. Posted:
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Glitch chip (ex. CR4 XL)
NAND r/w (ex. JR Programmer)
Soldering skills
Soldering iron
Flux
Solder
DUAL NAND CHIP( DemoN)
Computer
NAND r/w (ex. JR Programmer)
Soldering skills
Soldering iron
Flux
Solder
DUAL NAND CHIP( DemoN)
Computer
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#3. Posted:
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What the above said but if it's a 4gb console you will need a 4gn r/w kit otherwise your fine. Also use a fine pointed soldering iron, rosin core solder, soldering flux(not plumbing flux)
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Everything above is correct, however, a CR4 is unnecessary, as Slims boot pretty fast with a CR3 Lite.
As for everything else:
Iron: anything between 20-40 watts is good.
Solder: 60/40 Rosin Core Leaded
Lots of Flux
Honestly, it is way cheaper to send your console off, as opposed to buying all the parts and doing it yourself.
As for everything else:
Iron: anything between 20-40 watts is good.
Solder: 60/40 Rosin Core Leaded
Lots of Flux
Honestly, it is way cheaper to send your console off, as opposed to buying all the parts and doing it yourself.
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It all depends on the console. I'm pretty sure it's a Corona board, so it could be a v1-v4. If it's an odd number, it will have no on board memory and can be a dual nand. If it's an even number then it will have a 4GB on board memory chip, and it will be much more expensive and complicated to glitch, and I recommend just sending it in to a professional installer.
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Everything the first guy said is pretty much right, except it doesn't need CR4. Slims have the fastest boot times.
Everything you really already need is already here, good luck!
Everything you really already need is already here, good luck!
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xChillest wrote It all depends on the console. I'm pretty sure it's a Corona board, so it could be a v1-v4. If it's an odd number, it will have no on board memory and can be a dual nand. If it's an even number then it will have a 4GB on board memory chip, and it will be much more expensive and complicated to glitch, and I recommend just sending it in to a professional installer.How exactly is it more difficult to glitch? I'm not keen on hardware, but I'd love to learn. Could you explain it to a hardware dummy?
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Cheeba wrotexChillest wrote It all depends on the console. I'm pretty sure it's a Corona board, so it could be a v1-v4. If it's an odd number, it will have no on board memory and can be a dual nand. If it's an even number then it will have a 4GB on board memory chip, and it will be much more expensive and complicated to glitch, and I recommend just sending it in to a professional installer.How exactly is it more difficult to glitch? I'm not keen on hardware, but I'd love to learn. Could you explain it to a hardware dummy?
The places to solder on the 4GB consoles is a lot of points and extremely close together, while the 16MB nand consoles have solder points further away from each other and easier to get to.
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Those are the points to solder on the 4GB consoles and you would need the 4GB R/W kit and an sd card reader for your computer. In my opinion just too much to mess with.
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