Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • ElectronicsOverhaul
    New Member
    • Oct 2019
    • 8
    • USA

    #1

    Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

    Another individual or tech horribly replaced the HDMI port. Customer pushed the whole inner wafer in knocking out three components. I have the diodes already in stock and have replaced hundreds of these ports. Can you label component that's identified by 16? I assume it's the same as the one directly below it. This is for CUH-1115A which probably the same as CUH-1005A.

    Last edited by ElectronicsOverhaul; 02-28-2020, 12:24 PM.
  • ElectronicsOverhaul
    New Member
    • Oct 2019
    • 8
    • USA

    #2
    Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

    Never mind, grabbed them from a BLoD board.

    Comment

    • ngth82
      Badcaps Veteran
      • Jul 2015
      • 541
      • USA

      #3
      Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

      Likely just a pull up resistor.

      Did you by any chance check the resistance of that location when you grabbed it from a BLOD system?
      -Thomas
      I'm a hardware engineer focused on networking equipment for my day job. I void warranties and fix consumer electronics for fun.

      Comment

      • ElectronicsOverhaul
        New Member
        • Oct 2019
        • 8
        • USA

        #4
        Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

        Originally posted by ngth82
        Likely just a pull up resistor.

        Did you by any chance check the resistance of that location when you grabbed it from a BLOD system?
        I did not check them, probably should have. They were easy to transfer with hot tweezers though.

        Comment

        • ngth82
          Badcaps Veteran
          • Jul 2015
          • 541
          • USA

          #5
          Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

          Cool. Just to follow up --- is the console good to go then? Did you fix it?

          Looking at the HDMI pinout and assuming the color coding is correct. This is pin 16 -- the DDC Data -- it's an I2C bus dataline. The drivers are ope-drain and need a pull up to function.
          -Thomas
          I'm a hardware engineer focused on networking equipment for my day job. I void warranties and fix consumer electronics for fun.

          Comment

          • ElectronicsOverhaul
            New Member
            • Oct 2019
            • 8
            • USA

            #6
            Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

            Yes, it already has been repaired.

            Comment

            • ElectronicsOverhaul
              New Member
              • Oct 2019
              • 8
              • USA

              #7
              Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

              Originally posted by ngth82
              Likely just a pull up resistor.

              Did you by any chance check the resistance of that location when you grabbed it from a BLOD system?
              A video game shop owner brought me a botched PS4 that someone tried to replace the HDMI port with the resistors out of placement from too much heat and a missing zener diode.

              The two light blue/gray resistors on a CUH-1115A have the following attributes:

              2k ohms
              1 x 0.5mm or 0402 (1005 metric)
              Height: 0.35mm
              Power: either 1/16W or 1/10W, higher probably better

              I've replaced several zener diodes with P/N VDZT2R5.6B on PS4s, and they've always worked. They're close to the port on the CUH-1215A model, and sometimes customers push the ports inward knocking off the diode. Saw two diodes blow along with an HDMI encoder IC once.

              Comment

              • Christian0734
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2020
                • 92
                • France

                #8
                Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

                Hello everyone
                I posted a new topic, I have almost the same concern
                Last edited by Christian0734; 11-15-2020, 03:46 PM.

                Comment

                • BeertjeBas
                  New Member
                  • Aug 2017
                  • 6
                  • Nederland

                  #9
                  Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

                  Can anyone tell me what type or value the diode represents in the yellow sqaure.. Its missing and i have no donorboard .
                  Thanks in advance

                  Gerard,

                  Comment

                  • Mechengr103
                    New Member
                    • Jan 2022
                    • 2
                    • USA

                    #10
                    Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

                    Can anyone tell me what the resistor or capacitor is label 18 in this image? I've seen it described as a resistor and others say it's a capacitor. I am repairing a board for a friend that it was missing. So I don't have a donor board to look it up or transfer it from.

                    Comment

                    • momaka
                      master hoarder
                      • May 2008
                      • 12164
                      • Bulgaria

                      #11
                      Re: Identify PS4 HDMI SMD

                      Originally posted by Mechengr103
                      Can anyone tell me what the resistor or capacitor is label 18 in this image? I've seen it described as a resistor and others say it's a capacitor. I am repairing a board for a friend that it was missing. So I don't have a donor board to look it up or transfer it from.
                      It looks like a ceramic capacitors. According to image in first post, it connects to the pink trace, which appears to be some kind of a power rail (5V?) My guess would be, that ceramic cap is there for just extra noise filtering on the power rail, and the HDMI port might work fine without it. But if you really wanted to have something there, I think 100-470 nF cap will probably do the trick. You can find 100 nF caps on the PCI-E lanes of discrete computer GPUs.

                      Comment

                      Related Topics

                      Collapse

                      • Gjackson
                        Original PS4 BLOD after replacing HDMI port.
                        by Gjackson
                        Hi, ill try to keep this short. I got my hands on a PS4 with a mangled HDMI port and assumed that it would be an easy fix. before the replacement it booted up fine (white light) however after replacing the port it booted up fine for 2 times and then after plugging in an HDMI cable and turning on the console to check whether it had video out it never booted again, even after unplugging the cable. now it gets stuck on the blue flashing light and after 25-40 seconds it pops out the disk (if one is inserted) and shuts itself off. Upon investigating i found that the capacitors near the HDMI port are...
                        10-22-2021, 02:14 PM
                      • aliougm
                        Marantz SR4003 AVR HDMI board issue, seeking for help
                        by aliougm
                        I have problem with my AVR(Marantz SR4003) HDMI board issue. I connect to my TV but screen color distorted,see attached picture.

                        Connection as below:
                        Set-top box HDMI output >AVR 3 HDMI input/one HDMI output>HDTV HDMI port
                        If I bypassed AVR then HDTV screen color be good.

                        I take out HDMI board from AVR and check services manual the schematic shown the HDMI signals path:
                        3 HDMI input port > SIL9185 chip(HDMI switch) > SIL9033 chip(HDMI receiver) > SIL9030 chip(HDMI transmitter) > HDMI output port

                        I replaced all...
                        04-30-2022, 12:21 PM
                      • japlytic
                        Certain DisplayPort-HDMI cables can disable HDMI CEC communication
                        by japlytic
                        With a setup including a TV and AV receiver where HDMI Consumer Electronics Control (CEC) and Audio Return Channel (ARC) functions were working, these two functions stopped working after changing some connections (not the one between the AV receiver and TV), so I believed it was a corrupt setting in the AV receiver or TV, but when I disconnected a passive DisplayPort-HDMI cable (which a Multimode DisplayPort connector supports HDMI with a low cost passive cable or adaptor) connected to a home theatre PC, HDMI CEC and ARC functionality was restored.
                        An examination of the HDMI CEC wiring...
                        07-10-2022, 09:48 PM
                      • spleenharvester
                        Toshiba 50UL2063DB randomly rebooting with HDMI-CEC and/or HDMI-ARC enabled
                        by spleenharvester
                        I have this TV hooked up to only an AppleTV 4K and a Creative soundbar. Originally HDMI-CEC and HDMI-ARC wouldn't work at all, I replaced all the HDMI cables with decent UGREEN cables meeting the latest standards, now it all works perfectly but once or twice a day the TV itself reboots while watching a program, the AppleTV keeps running. I haven't fully pinned down whether it is ARC or CEC causing it yet. All are running latest firmware.

                        I assume it is just HDMI-CEC being buggy as usual on a shitty Vestel machine, but can anyone think of anything I can try before disabling it?
                        03-12-2025, 03:42 PM
                      • RossMoodley1967
                        LG LCD TV HDMI PORT FAULTY
                        by RossMoodley1967
                        LG LCD TV picture comes on intermittenly using hdmi port.The sound is on permantly.The hdmi ports looks fine and soldered in securely.The 3.4v coming to the main board is not present(not sure if will affect the hdmi port or where that voltage goes.)The hdmi cable is fine because it works on another tv.The ceramic caps connected to the hdmi controller ic is reading 39 ohms.Could the hdmi controller ic be faulty(feels very warm to touch).The RCA jacks work normally .Thank you in advance for your assistance..
                        02-28-2024, 08:38 AM
                      • Loading...
                      • No more items.
                      Working...