Microsoft Extends Xbox 360 Warranty To E74 Errors
Last month we discussed reports that Xbox 360 consoles were experiencing an increased number of "E74" errors. Now, Microsoft has announced that they're extending the three-year warranty originally designated for "general hardware failures" (read: Red Ring of Death) to include E74 repairs as well. From the support page post: "... we are aware that a very small percentage of our customers have reported receiving an error that displays 'E74' on their screen. After investigating the issue, we have determined that the E74 error message can indicate the general hardware failure that is associated with three flashing red lights error on the console. ... Microsoft will refund to customers the amount paid for an out of warranty repair due to a general hardware failure associated with the E74 error message."
It's one thing to understand your console may be bricked at some point during its lifetime, but when you know it will, and it could very much be when you open the box...
Warranty or not, I don't get it. The whole 360 mess is a shame of epic proportions.
"The repair procedure will deprive you of your overpriced gaming console for more than two weeks which, though you legally paid for and own, you are not allowed to unscrew and open in order to clean out the excessive amount of obfuscated legal BS that came with the interior of your purchase. Have a nice day...."
Motorcycles, Robots, Space Gossip and More!
5+ years old, and they still haven't ironed out the bugs, erm I mean features.
- There is no point, it's like a sphere -
It cost 2 Billion to cover the RROD, how much to cover E74??
As a SHAREHOLDER I am very angry. What are we, a piggy bank?
is it possible to make fake receipts for the repairs and get money from microsoft??
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/941377
Only cause listed: "This problem occurs when the Xbox 360 console experiences a general hardware failure."
So the original warranty covers general hardware failures and Microsofts kb article acknowledges E74 as a general hardware failure.
So aren't they simply covering this under warranty because they have to?
At least for us Brits, it's time we stopped relying on these warranties and go back to the good ol' Sale of Goods act, where goods must last "a reasonable length of time" and the liability is with the retailer. My brother keeps bringing his consoles back to GAME, and they just give him a new one except the hard drive (annoyingly meaning he has to be signed in to live to use content downloaded on a previous Xbox, but IIRC MS don't always give you your exact console back). Quick and easy. If enough people do this, it will eventually become infeasible for many retailers to actually stock the Xbox, and THEN Microsoft may actually do something.
Okay that's wishful thinking and isn't going to happen, but considering it's usually a lot easier and quicker to take it back to the retailer than send it to MS, you should do it anyway.
Is the fact that it is so damn noisy. The fan is bad enough but the fact I will be watching a video from my computer and the drive is spinning. WTF is that for?
Sucks that I have to wait for the box to come in over the long weekend. Funny, mine was a month within its year warranty anyway, so I was lucky either way, but I think it's funny that it clunked out so close to the warranty expiration date.
I thought I read somewhere MS stopped sending coffins in the US? FWIW, I own all three, the Wii died once and took about 6 weeks to get replaced. It was kind of a suprise because we never really use the thing. The 360 died twice, once was a 2 week replacement and the other was due to a power supply failure. The people at the call center weren't much help in troubleshooting that. The PS3 has never been repaired, but it's really just a blue-ray player for us. The 360 gets by far the most use. Best online community and best games hands down.
It seems like they have an error code and had no idea what it meant until enough people started complaining about it.
I've officially missed the warranty boat. I picked up my 360 on 1/1/2006 and have not had a problem with it. It is the only console I own and it acts as my main DVD player as well. It is consistenly used and has not faltered. I'm not sure what the difference is, because everyone I know is either on their 3rd or 4th replacement.
They think it has something to do with the woodgrain faceplate.
I would be interested to know how many people HAVE NOT had a problem with this console? They're usually the least likely to speak up.
Does this mean I get my $100 back from when my 360 broke two weeks after the warranty expired and I had to get it replaced?
I have nothing compelling to say
The sticker on the side clearly said to only use E85.
I traded all my mod points for these magic beans.
Microsoft has discounted the entry-level Doesn't-Do-Much Xbox 360 to $200 from Friday, $50 cheaper than the Nintendo Wii. (This will translate to a GBP250 price point in the UK.)
"We are thrilled to be the first next-generation console on the market with a big 'Microsoft' logo on it to reach $199, a price that invites everyone to enjoy Xbox 360," said Aaron Greenberg, marketing marketer for Xbox. He says this will cause a "smash and grab" mentality amongst consumers. "And not 'grab and smash' as they throw it out the window when it gets a red ring of death or E74 error again."
The models that actually play anything worth playing will, of course, stay at $300 and $400. "But history shows that more than 75 percent of all console sales happen after the price falls below the $200 mark. Which would be the PS2, PSP and DSi ... uh, forget I said that."
Greenberg assures consumers that the new cheap Xbox 360s will not be refurbished red ring of death casualties. "Not all of them. Honest. However, twenty Xbox lifts every morning will be much better exercise than Wii Fit."
Microsoft Japan is already actually paying people to take the machines, with little success. "We hope more people will be able to enjoy Xbox 360," said marketing marketer Takashi Sensui, "and we can stop enjoying quite so many of them. We also have this fine pile of HD-DVD drives ... Wait! Come back!"
Greenberg further assured consumers that "the Xbox 360 will kick the PS3's ass every way from Friday, you wait and see." Nintendo were unable to comment in time for this story as they were still too busy trying to make Wiis fast enough to keep them in the shops.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
Microsoft really made a mess with the XBox 360 for a number of reasons: - Poor hardware designers - Poor mechanical designers - Poor choice of hardware / component placement - Lack of experience in designing ASICs - and a lot of others. If you have a hardware or PCB design background you would understand. Here are the reasons: 1. Having said that, if you crack open an XBox the first thing you notice is these huge bulk caps of 4700uF each (about 10+ of them) across their power planes. Is there so much noise in that unit you need that many huge caps? Apparently so! 2. If you remove the heatsinks, you find both ASICs have an exposed die. There is almost little or no thermal paste between the die and heatink. What they are missing is a heat spreader/lid which should be glued to the processor/gpu but no, that would have cost them an extra dollar or so. Since both ASICs have thermal diodes inside them once a critical temperature is reached, the unit stops working with a thermal alarm --> possible E74 3. Poor choice of heatsink mechanicals. They hired a bunch of monkeys to spec out their mechanicals. The X-clamp was the worst choice ever since is caused boards to warp, ASICS to lose connectivity due to cracking BGA solder balls when the temperature went up. 4. Poor feedback from their contract manufacturure who built and assembled the PCB and hardware. The people working on the assembly lines at the CM in Mexico don't provide feedback enough to the designers. If they noticed a lot of units were failing with thermal alarms or poor soldering (poor yields for that matter) they should have told the hardware engineers. Eventually, someone on the hardware team clued in and the heatsinks were changed and the x-clamps vanished and were bolted down instead. 5. Use of lead free solder. Why they chose to use a lead-free solder process is beyond me. The thickness of the PCB is already thin and they have to use extremely high heat to solder the ASICs down to the circuit board. Coupled with the terrible heatsink design/implementation you get a thermal differential on the circuit board causing it to flex. When the XBox is on and it heats up thats what you get, the circuit board warps and some of the solder balls crack because the lead free solder is brittle especially at high temperatures. 6. Microsoft learned first hand they stank at ASIC design. The tried to design the processor and gpu inhouse and learned very quickly they were terrible at it. After a horrible first run, they decided to hand that over to a design shop who knew what they were doing. However, they still need to learn how to package ASICs properly. The most common issue is with heat, and you all have read the RROD fix using the towel. Which is a poor mans attempt to solder an ASIC that has 1200 solder balls. In short, you restrict the XBoxs airflow while it is on, allow it to heatup in an attempt to get the solder to go into re-flow while the temperature of the circuit board climbs beyond 150 degrees while everything is running. Mind you the components inside aren't even rated to operate reliably at those temperatures. So even if that fix works for you, you have just cut the life time of your unit in half or less because you caused damage to all the components inside by allowing them to operate well beyond their rated maximums. So if your unit operates when its been off for a long time and dies shortly after being turned on, congrats you have soldering problems on the key ASICs. Take it back to the store and tell them its a manufacturing defect because it is! Microsoft sends it back to the CM and they strip it down and run it through the machine that solders the ASICs down using hot air or a confined infra-red source nozzle.
Well, that one is easy, cause that's what is happening.
when mine died 3 months ago, they claimed that they still send the boxes, but they prefer not, and that it is faster for everyone to just get your own box (which is true).
umm over here in the uk right now (prices from game.co.uk and rounded to the nearest pound) the xbox 360 ranges from £130-£210 depending on model, the PS3 is £300 and the wii is £179
The base model xbox 360 has been cheaper than the wii over here for some time afaict.
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
Got mine back last week from repair, which was less than two weeks total. Came with a one-month Xbox Live card. No charges at all. Much quieter, too.
My system was out of warranty, had three red lights, and had been opened on an attempted repair by me.
Having been very dissillusioned, Microsoft has now somewhat redeemed itself.
Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
Did Microsoft rape your dog?
Also, you need more humour in your whining. As it stands, that was the least funny thing I have read all day.
"Trying to make wiis fast enough to keep them in shops"
I can go to any one of the big box stores here and find one no problem... Your post is a year and a half too late
Stupidity only gets you so far, then you've gotta try
VGChartz numbers:
Wii:48.95M
360:29.68M
PS3:21.60M
Wikipedia numbers:
Wii:Worldwide: 50 million (as of March 25, 2009)
360:Worldwide: 27.93 million (as of January 14, 2009)
PS3:21.3 million (as of December 31, 2008)
The 360, for having a year lead, is by no way thrashing the PS3. In fact it's arguable that the PS3 could very well catch up by the end of the year if MS doesn't have any decent exclusives and Sony does. MS should point out that the "unpopular" PSP is out selling the 360.
Sony is clearly selling more units than MS which is why they're catching up. It helps that the PS3 is popular all over the world where as no one outside of the US or UK really care about the 360. Especially in poor countries where they can't afford a system that breaks after a month's use.
Once you add the DS' 100,000,000 units and the PSP's 46 million units then you realise MS is still the nobody in gaming and it's because they don't have enough good titles to completely blow away the PS3 and their hardware is shit.
I see there are a lot of complaints and discussion of the shoddy hardware, but I must point out that the newer units are far more reliable. Personally, I own two 360's and neither have had any problems what so ever. I'm not saying that the problem doesn't exist nor that my experience is the same for everyone, but I suspect it is not as rampant as people make it out to be. I own all three consoles, Xbox 360, wii and PS3. None has given me any hardware issue so far.