Xbox 360 overheating? Or something worse?

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Gh05tsh4d0w2k

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#1 Gh05tsh4d0w2k
Member since 2012 • 25 Posts
It's about that time of the year again here in the central United States - the summer sun shines and things are heating up. Kids are out of school and running about or taking a swim. People board up inside their houses and turn on the air conditioning or break out the seven million fans they stashed away for winter. And gaming still runs strong all year round, but not for this poor sod. I've had a few, serious issues with Microsoft in the past - My first console I received as a kid for Christmas, only a month after the launch date. It worked for a few good years, and ultimately RRoD'ed on me. A sad time indeed. It was replaced not long after, but I was still a kid then. I was prone to leaving my 360 on for hours at a time while I was away at school. Eventually it just wouldn't even turn on again. Figuring I was just having bad luck, I had it replaced again. This one lasted for another few years before the disc drive went faulty and wouldn't even read a single disc. And now? It hasn't been more than a year since I've purchased my Xbox 360 Arcade as a quick, cheap replacement to the older 360. I essentially just swapped the hard drives for the memory and went from there. It's happening. Again. It's hot, no doubt. But our house is locked up, with fans and air conditioning units running just about all times of the hour with a regular temperature around 70 degrees. My room is small and a bit cluttered but there's a unit in the window with a fan blowing on my 360 at all times. On touch of the vents, it's mildly warm. The power supply is rather hot, however, and I've yet to try setting it up near the fan as well. Anyway, on with the meat of the topic. I just recently came into possession of several new games - Prototype 2, Dead Space 2, The Witcher 2, Bioshock II, Divinity II: Ego Draconis, etc. And none. Of them. Will work. They will boot up and go for maybe 5-10 minutes on the start-up screen, or during gameplay, and then it freezes. The music still plays for a few seconds, then cuts out. I have to do a reset of the entire system, it's crashed so hard. The only exception would be The Witcher 2, which does a soft freeze from time to time. The issue? Most, if not all, of my older games can play for hours without an issue. Not a single one. Hell, Dragon's Dogma, (which I got maybe 2-3 weeks before any of the above mentioned games) works perfectly fine. I've tried deleting useless memory usage (older game data, etc.) and even did a system cache clearing. Nothing seems to work. And every time this happens, the vents are fairly warm. Which led me to believe it's an overheating issue. But now I think it's the disc drive, or something else. If it was an overheating issue, wouldn't all of my games be prone to this senseless freezing? Come, forum members. Lend me your advice. I don't want to spend any more money on a new Xbox 360. I need a permanent solution. Getting rid of the games is not an option - I got them because I was tired of all my old games. Sending my console into Microsoft is not an option either. The warranty is still usable, but even then, I don't want to wait a month or longer to play. I need something to do aside from sleeping or idling about the internet when I come home from being on my feet for 8 straight hours at Walmart. It can also read all of my DVDs, which leads me to believe it's something beyond the disc drive. My 360 has become a glorified DVD player. And I prefer Blu-Ray instead.
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driftingsilvia

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#2 driftingsilvia
Member since 2005 • 4089 Posts

Do you own a slim or the white model?

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darkdude2k12

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#3 darkdude2k12
Member since 2011 • 874 Posts

It's about that time of the year again here in the central United States - the summer sun shines and things are heating up. Kids are out of school and running about or taking a swim. People board up inside their houses and turn on the air conditioning or break out the seven million fans they stashed away for winter. And gaming still runs strong all year round, but not for this poor sod. I've had a few, serious issues with Microsoft in the past - My first console I received as a kid for Christmas, only a month after the launch date. It worked for a few good years, and ultimately RRoD'ed on me. A sad time indeed. It was replaced not long after, but I was still a kid then. I was prone to leaving my 360 on for hours at a time while I was away at school. Eventually it just wouldn't even turn on again. Figuring I was just having bad luck, I had it replaced again. This one lasted for another few years before the disc drive went faulty and wouldn't even read a single disc. And now? It hasn't been more than a year since I've purchased my Xbox 360 Arcade as a quick, cheap replacement to the older 360. I essentially just swapped the hard drives for the memory and went from there. It's happening. Again. It's hot, no doubt. But our house is locked up, with fans and air conditioning units running just about all times of the hour with a regular temperature around 70 degrees. My room is small and a bit cluttered but there's a unit in the window with a fan blowing on my 360 at all times. On touch of the vents, it's mildly warm. The power supply is rather hot, however, and I've yet to try setting it up near the fan as well. Anyway, on with the meat of the topic. I just recently came into possession of several new games - Prototype 2, Dead Space 2, The Witcher 2, Bioshock II, Divinity II: Ego Draconis, etc. And none. Of them. Will work. They will boot up and go for maybe 5-10 minutes on the start-up screen, or during gameplay, and then it freezes. The music still plays for a few seconds, then cuts out. I have to do a reset of the entire system, it's crashed so hard. The only exception would be The Witcher 2, which does a soft freeze from time to time. The issue? Most, if not all, of my older games can play for hours without an issue. Not a single one. Hell, Dragon's Dogma, (which I got maybe 2-3 weeks before any of the above mentioned games) works perfectly fine. I've tried deleting useless memory usage (older game data, etc.) and even did a system cache clearing. Nothing seems to work. And every time this happens, the vents are fairly warm. Which led me to believe it's an overheating issue. But now I think it's the disc drive, or something else. If it was an overheating issue, wouldn't all of my games be prone to this senseless freezing? Come, forum members. Lend me your advice. I don't want to spend any more money on a new Xbox 360. I need a permanent solution. Getting rid of the games is not an option - I got them because I was tired of all my old games. Sending my console into Microsoft is not an option either. The warranty is still usable, but even then, I don't want to wait a month or longer to play. I need something to do aside from sleeping or idling about the internet when I come home from being on my feet for 8 straight hours at Walmart. It can also read all of my DVDs, which leads me to believe it's something beyond the disc drive. My 360 has become a glorified DVD player. And I prefer Blu-Ray instead.Gh05tsh4d0w2k

Sounds like a dirty laser.

Be careful with fans blowing on your 360 as it's prone to blow dust inside; even if your room's spotless. This happened to my 360 twice. I opened it up, cleaned the laser head and presto!

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zaku101

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#4 zaku101
Member since 2005 • 4641 Posts

Try installing your games to the HDD then booting them.

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darkdude2k12

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#5 darkdude2k12
Member since 2011 • 874 Posts

Try installing your games to the HDD then booting them.

zaku101

He has an Arcade, so there's very little space for an install.

Assuming he even has a hard drive, I'd still clean the laser.

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Gh05tsh4d0w2k

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#6 Gh05tsh4d0w2k
Member since 2012 • 25 Posts
Cleaning the laser sounds like my most viable option, and the most cost effective out of any other choice. Thanks for the suggestions; My room isn't spotless, a bit dirty perhaps, but it IS just a little dusty. To google!
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ILikeThatGame

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#7 ILikeThatGame
Member since 2012 • 25 Posts
[QUOTE="Gh05tsh4d0w2k"] Sending my console into Microsoft is not an option either. The warranty is still usable, but even then, I don't want to wait a month or longer to play. I need something to do aside from sleeping or idling about the internet when I come home from being on my feet for 8 straight hours at Walmart.

If you find you cannot fix the issue, you should really send it in to microsoft. The system is most likely done for. You do not have to wait for them to send your system back, you can opt for them to send you a replacement FIRST, and then mail in your old one. Once they receive the old one, then the one they sent you is officially yours. You would keep your original hard drive, and controllers, etc. The core system would be swapped. The company doesn't repair your system anyway, they usually swap it with another model that is ready to go. No down time. (Even though you can't play games now so I don't understand your original logic.) I suggest you give Microsoft a call...thats what your warranty is for.