Chosen Solution

I got this problem which occurred when I was playing gta4. The system froze and when I tried restarting the system the red light turned green then in a split second it flashed yellow and then the ps3 system just shuts down.. Is there anyway to fix this?

Hey, if you are still having this problem, iFixit now offers free guides to fix the YLOD, and also sells complete YLOD repair kits. Good luck and let us know how it works out.

I got the YLOD last night while playing MW2 and was frantically looking for help online. I read that this occurs when the heatsink and the GPU/CPU separates when the thermal adhesive melts from over heating. I found this link that might help. I’m going to give this a try and let you know how it goes. Hope this helps… http://playstationlifestyle.net/forums/s

What I am to suggest is a risky way, and most likely not recommended! I researched several things online to find out how I could fix this issue. From what I read, the most common solution was to “reflow” the motherboard. Since I am in Africa, with no warranty and any other options, I decided to go with the most extreme suggestion. To cook my motherboard. Once again, do this as a desperate measure and assume that it will not work. Striping your PS3 all the way down to the motherboard, you need to make sure you remove everything that is not completely built into the motherboard, to include the battery and extra thermal paste. After that, place it on a tinfoil pan into a preheated oven at 425 Degrees Fahrenheit for 10 minutes. After the 10 minutes, remove it and let it cool for 30 minutes. Reassemble the entire console and ensure you place new thermal paste on it. Then cross your fingers and try it out. I was successful, as well as many others. But there have also been some with horror stories from others that melted some items. Before doing this jump on youtube and check out some videos like this. It is VERY risky, but it worked for me.

or use a heat gun. they sell them quite cheap… cooking a MB… never heard of that, but might be worth risking. especially, when no warranty, or no other option…

Reflowing the mobo in the oven would not be advised in my opinion due to the fact that the parts on the bottom can drop of since it is a double sided board. I would use the heat gun reflow method. There are many videos on Youtube. Much easier, be sure not to overheat or bump the board while it is hot. Otherwise, you are pretty much doing the same thing that is done during manufacturing. From what I have researched it seems to be issues with the BGA (Ball Grid Array) under some of the chips as well as poor heatsink compound. Some people have had good luck with the reflow and new heatsink compound (artic silver is best).

the only permanent fix is to reball the rsx bga chip. you might have to take it to a professional with a bga rework machine.

i have discovered the ylod cause… believe it or not its the ps3 case!! you heard right the plastic outer shell/ case. took mine off and it never overheated again.problem solved

My PS3 died too after nearly four years so no warranty comeback. I followed This Video on how to fix it. I didn’t have a heat gun though so I searched a bit more on the internet and found this video from the BBC consumer affairs program Watchdog. So I googled to see if anyone else had tried using an oven to do the repair. The general consensus seemed to be around 400F for 10 mins. I didn’t have a tray so I wrapped the motherboard in tin foil and stuck it in the oven (pre-heated to about 400F for 10 mins.) I then let it cool down for 20 minutes and followed the video again for re-assembly. Worked like a charm for me PS3 is working perfectly again.

you need silver lite paste to protect the chips and it has to be spead evenly, covering the whole chip or you will get air pockets in the paste, the hair dryer trick does work but i’ve done 5 consoles now for friends using a cardboard box seal at one end, use a decent hair dryer at full power moving side to side for about 15 to 20 mines, let it cool completely, add your silver lite paste and put the machine back together. problem solved. first time took me about 3 hours to do but now only takes just over an hour or so. very disappointed in sony for using rubbish materials in such a popular bit of equipment with the highest price tag of all the game consoles

‘‘‘Unfortunately everything I read hear about fixing the YLOD on a PS3 is 100% wrong !! first , YLOD has nothing to do with the CPU so heating the CPU is a big mistake that everyone is doing, YLOD is a bad connection between the GPU chip and the motherboard regardless which model a fat or a slim, second using any kind of Flux makes things worse , when using flux first it has to be the proper kind of flux for BGA packages, more important it has to be a very thin layer and distributed equally, clearly that can not be done by using a liquid flux or by just flooding under the chip with flux, when you do that you will be just making a layer of unmixed flux with solder that actually makes an extra isolation layer between the solder and the chip or the solder and the board and most probably both, the reality is that there are two kinds of repairs non of them can be done at home, they have to be professionally done in order to achieve a real repair not just a try and error or hit or miss. the first one is a procedure called reflow which means totally melt the solder that attaches the chip to the board, supposedly this will allow the bad connections to be soldered and the console will come back to life, The reality is this procedure is rarely works and if it works will be very temporary and will only last for few hours , days or weeks at its best so why is that? simply the GPU chip or the graphics chip is the one that gets hot the most ( heat ) the motherboard material is cupper and with air coming into the console for cooling ( oxygen ) that will make perfect conditions for oxidation , cupper when oxidized will form cupper oxide which is a non conductive material and that what causes an isolation and bad connection between the chip and the motherboard, that layer of cupper oxide will prevent good soldering when a real reflow is applied and that is why it doesn’t last for too long that if it works at all so in order to get a good soldering and a real long lasting repair the cupper oxide isolation layer has to be cleaned up and removed from the soldering pads and in order to do that the chip has to be removed from the motherboard , the old solder has to be removed from both the chip and the board, the soldering pads on both have to be cleaned from the cupper oxide and make sure they will accept soldering again before applying a new layer of solder to the chip and reattach it to the motherboard again a procedure that is called reballing and that is the real and long lasting repair for the YLOD and all other problems caused by bad connections between the video chip and the motherboard like no video , pixilation, freezing , no hard drive activity, no synchronization between the controller and the USB ports and many other symptoms. Reballing specially for the PS3 GPU chip is not an easy task, it requires very advanced machines , very accurate thermal profiles and a lot of hands on and training and high skills, very few places are able to do that on a high success rate that grantee that you will send your console to really get repaired and not to be permanently damaged, Reballing is like a heart surgery to the console so you have to choose carefully a very reputable place to do it for you, the same procedure is used to fix all kind of electronics that use BGA packages like laptops, graphics cards and even desktop computers and all in one and it is also the same procedure used to fix RROD in xbox 360 ,Don’t try anything else if your console is valuable to you or you have important data you care not to loose.

The ONLY way to resolve this and NEVER have this situation again is to get it REBALLED. Sony and other electronics manufactures have switched to using ’lead-free’ solder. This type of solder is environmentally safe, but does not hold up to high heat like the PS3 generates very long. Only lead solder can since it can withstand high heat, it melts when temps reach beyond 400*, which no PS3 will ever meet unless put into a furnace.

jejejoey - almost correct! they switched to lead-free - thats right (to anybody who cares ->google “RoHS” for more information about that topic). the melting temperature is exactly the other way. leaded solder melts earlier then lead-free solder. the lead-free solder is “harder” - and that’s why it breaks. you can read more about it on wikipedia -> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restriction

My solution for the YLOD was to bake the motherboard at 120° C wrapped in Tin-Foil for 30 Min. and let it cool down for several hours. Also I used a better thermal paste. On the CPU the thermal paste looked cracked and dry. I think this was the main problem. After reassembling everything worked fine… wonder how long ;)

You can send it to the official Sony shop to get it repaired for around $200, although they give no guarantee that it won’t happen again. If you can’t afford to get it fixed for $200 there are also some guides that make the yellow light error fixed. I was told from my friend about this guide, he said it fixed his ps3, it’s called ps3lightsfix and it gives a 100% guarantee of fixing the yellow light error. Here is a link: Spam removed

Ps3 yellow light quick fix. No opening Keep turning it on. Let it kick off and just keep pressing power it will stay on eventually. Or open it up. Clean the dust out. Reapply thermal paste to the heatsink. Then bend the CPU tension plates on the bottem to make it tighter before reassembling. Heat up the two large chips on the board with a heat gun or hair dryer as hot as you can get it without melting anything then reassemble it. It should work fine after that.

Get a box then unconnect your PS3 and put it in the box with the vents facing you. Grab a hairdryer and start heating up your playstation. Don’t do it too close, and after 5mins of heating let it rest for a few mins then do it again. After you heat it up you are going to try to get the PS3 to cool down as fast as possible so probably putting it in the refrigerator for a while will work. When it’s cool try starting it back up.