Recently manufactured Xbox 360 bricked after 20 minutes
It was a bad day for Andru Edwards from PlayFeed. After getting a replacement for his bricked Xbox 360 console, his new one got the Red Rings of Doom after 20 minutes of play. He claims that the new console was manufactured on August 15 of this year, which suggests that the new line of consoles may still be having problems dealing with the red ring problem.
Edwards’ first Xbox 360 got the red rings and he received a brand new replacement about three weeks later. After playing the Fatal Inertia demo for 10 minutes, Edwards moved on to Stranglehold where the new 360 froze in the opening sequence. When he manually reset the console, the red rings appeared.
Edwards expressed his dissatisfaction with Microsoft‘s service. He even cited an interview with Peter Moore who addressed the issue during E3. The question Moore was presented with was: ” […] Are you guaranteeing or insuring that the systems that are rolling off the assembly lines now and the systems that will be returned to consumers will be fixed properly this time?” Moore answered, saying:
Yeah. I mean, nothing is perfect, guys. […] I can’t guarantee everyone in the world that we go fix one thing and then something else [won’t] happen. No I’d be stupid to make that guarantee. But I feel very, very good about the quality of hardware now. You guys know this, every day in the factories where we are building these and where we are learning more about it. […] You’re constantly tweaking, moving parts around, youÂ’re renegotiating with suppliers because your goal is to continuously raise the quality of the box, and bring the price down.
Edwards also posted some pictures to back up his claim that the new console he received was indeed manufactured on August. Click on the image to enlarge.
It was a bad day for Andru Edwards from PlayFeed. After getting a replacement for his bricked Xbox 360 console, his new one got the Red Rings of Doom after 20 minutes of play. He claims that the new console was manufactured on August 15 of this year, which suggests that the new line of consoles may still be having problems dealing with the red ring problem.
Edwards’ first Xbox 360 got the red rings and he received a brand new replacement about three weeks later. After playing the Fatal Inertia demo for 10 minutes, Edwards moved on to Stranglehold where the new 360 froze in the opening sequence. When he manually reset the console, the red rings appeared.
Edwards expressed his dissatisfaction with Microsoft‘s service. He even cited an interview with Peter Moore who addressed the issue during E3. The question Moore was presented with was: ” […] Are you guaranteeing or insuring that the systems that are rolling off the assembly lines now and the systems that will be returned to consumers will be fixed properly this time?” Moore answered, saying:
Yeah. I mean, nothing is perfect, guys. […] I can’t guarantee everyone in the world that we go fix one thing and then something else [won’t] happen. No I’d be stupid to make that guarantee. But I feel very, very good about the quality of hardware now. You guys know this, every day in the factories where we are building these and where we are learning more about it. […] You’re constantly tweaking, moving parts around, youÂ’re renegotiating with suppliers because your goal is to continuously raise the quality of the box, and bring the price down.
Edwards also posted some pictures to back up his claim that the new console he received was indeed manufactured on August. Click on the image to enlarge.