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watrgate
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15 Posts |
Posted - 06/13/2005 : 8:01:17 PM
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I recently had occasion to open the case on my NII to troubleshoot a power problem. I found something rather disturbing:
http://www.watrgate.com/odds-n-solds.jpg
Could somebody at Neuros explain the Frankenstein resistor in the picture? I bought my NII back in early 2004 so perhaps this was Neuros' (or it's supplier) way to meet demand when the USB 2.0 units first rolled-out. But please tell me this seat-of-the-pants engineering has been cleaned up.
Chuck |
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Derek
Moderator
    
500 Posts |
Posted - 06/16/2005 : 10:13:03 PM
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Is your unit working....if it does, dont complain...you werent supposed to open it anyway. Looks like a damn good solder joint to me.
When I was a kid my mom used to tell me that curiosity killed the cat...What she forgot to tell me was that it also discovered the cat, invented the lightbulb, and forged the Neuros |
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hal
Posting is for Closers
  
37 Posts |
Posted - 06/17/2005 : 03:34:25 AM
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quote: Originally posted by watrgate
I recently had occasion to open the case on my NII to troubleshoot a power problem. I found something rather disturbing:
http://www.watrgate.com/odds-n-solds.jpg
I too have the resistor tacked into my USB2 upgrade backpack. Mine failed last week, and I opened it to attempt repairs. This is a common practice. In the case of my unit, the 22 uF capacitor (to which one end of the resistor is soldered) was getting excessively hot on charging (which capacitors are NOT supposed to do) so I replaced it. Now when the N1 'Brain' is inserted, it tried to come up, whereas when it failed, it would only flash once when plugged in.
All is still not right though, because the 'brain' apparently suffers from an inability to write to flash (repeated attempts to recover bad blocks and format seem to complete, but the /music directory cannot be created). The dreaded 0x4840 error comes up with both the battery pack and the USB2 20GB backpack.
Hal
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watrgate
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15 Posts |
Posted - 06/24/2005 : 06:12:11 AM
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Thanks for your $.02 but I was looking for a response from Neuros.
Sorry but that component and it's connections are garbage. Any mass-produced consumer electronic device should not contain this kind of hardware hack. I suspect that I was shipped one of their beta prototype units which had to be reworked after initial testing. I posted because I wanted them to reassure me that they don't do this anymore.
As for curiosity, I'm well within my rights to open my Neuros. You can learn quite a bit by looking under the hood. And besides, Neuros has been pretty cool about people wanting to mod their units (if not on an official basis). If you would rather not poke around yours that's your business. |
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watrgate
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15 Posts |
Posted - 06/24/2005 : 06:13:47 AM
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| Just wanted to say that my previous reply was to pedersdd's post. |
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