- Oct 19, 2000
- 17,860
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Well, after a pretty exciting day, I sold my old TV and picked up a new 42" LCD 1080p set. So excited was I, I threw in my M:I3 HD-DVD in the 360, and marveled in the sharpness and color of the picture. I still have it hooked up via component, so the dashboard showed at 1080p fine, but the movie would switch to 1080i.
So, I switched back out of the movie, and fired up Gears of War. The first thing I noticed was the backlight bleeding I was getting in upper right (which is very noticeable, I'll have to see about getting that fixed), but I decided I'd hop into a game to see what it would look like. While Gears was loading, I'll be damned if I didn't get the jarbled mess of a screen. I immediately knew what was coming. I rebooted the system, got the same thing at the splash screen. Next reboot resulted in the 3 red rings.
Needless to say, 1080p apparently killed my 360. IMO, the system hadn't even had time to warm up yet after being off for a few hours, so I'm not sure how heat would've affected it so quickly. Oh well, this was my second 360. My first lasted 8 months from purchase, one which I swapped out for a new unit at Walmart, the one I have now. It was brand new, and lasted for 10 months.
I need to decide now if I want to go through the Microsoft warranty merry-go-round, or if I should look into doing the x-clamp mod, something I've heard of, but know nothing about.
EDIT: I'm going to keep a log of the turn-around for repairing my console.
So, I switched back out of the movie, and fired up Gears of War. The first thing I noticed was the backlight bleeding I was getting in upper right (which is very noticeable, I'll have to see about getting that fixed), but I decided I'd hop into a game to see what it would look like. While Gears was loading, I'll be damned if I didn't get the jarbled mess of a screen. I immediately knew what was coming. I rebooted the system, got the same thing at the splash screen. Next reboot resulted in the 3 red rings.
Needless to say, 1080p apparently killed my 360. IMO, the system hadn't even had time to warm up yet after being off for a few hours, so I'm not sure how heat would've affected it so quickly. Oh well, this was my second 360. My first lasted 8 months from purchase, one which I swapped out for a new unit at Walmart, the one I have now. It was brand new, and lasted for 10 months.
I need to decide now if I want to go through the Microsoft warranty merry-go-round, or if I should look into doing the x-clamp mod, something I've heard of, but know nothing about.
EDIT: I'm going to keep a log of the turn-around for repairing my console.
- Console died on Friday, August 17th, 2007. I called in to start the in-warranty repair the night of the 17th.
- Received shipping box via UPS on Monday, August 27th, 2007.
- Shipped console out via 3-day prepaid UPS label on Tuesday, August 28th, 2007. Box is headed to a Texas repair facility, from Kentucky.
- Package was received at repair facility in McAllen, TX the morning of August 31st, 2007.
- When phoning support to check on the status, they said that the 360 was entered into their system on September 1st, 2007. The call was made the morning of September 7th, 2007, at which time the guy said it was still being diagnosed, and a "new unit" (his quote) would be most likely be shipped in 3-5 business days.
- System was boxed and billing information sent to UPS on September 14th, 2007. Packed was actually shipped on September 17th, 2007.
- Received refurbished system on September 20th, 2007. So far, so good!