baabox 3 Posted December 19, 2018 I noticed that x360ace has released new chips since V3, with the most recent being V5. Does anyone have experience with these new chips? The new chips seem to use a new clock signal from the 360 motherboard. Is this actually useful or just a cost saving feature? It would be interesting to know the clock signal frequency and if it is in any way in phase with the CPU clock? Install pictures for the new chips: http://x360ace.com/product/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
felida 1653 Posted December 20, 2018 6 hours ago, baabox said: I noticed that x360ace has released new chips since V3, with the most recent being V5. Does anyone have experience with these new chips? The new chips seem to use a new clock signal from the 360 motherboard. Is this actually useful or just a cost saving feature? It would be interesting to know the clock signal frequency and if it is in any way in phase with the CPU clock? Install pictures for the new chips: http://x360ace.com/product/ to be honest.. there is better methods.. the new chip requires different soldering points that your usual setups from before.. try rgh 1.2 or s-RGH as the cheapest options for the console Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
baabox 3 Posted December 20, 2018 I know S-RGH - it's usually done with the ace V3 chip. It's usually just a bit of a hassle to find the optimal timings. I'm just interested if the chinese have figured out something or not with this new chip. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
felida 1653 Posted December 21, 2018 7 hours ago, baabox said: I know S-RGH - it's usually done with the ace V3 chip. It's usually just a bit of a hassle to find the optimal timings. I'm just interested if the chinese have figured out something or not with this new chip. well you can tell that with the c1 and c2 points.. THOSE are new.. lol Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Swizzy 2083 Posted December 21, 2018 Most likely it's just cheaper to do it that way, there's less components for that chip as it has no crystal as is required for other chips on corona Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rover820 0 Posted March 17, 2019 just installed ace v5 on a trinity P1 install and it boots between 1-3 every time loving it Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BlueSn00w 21 Posted March 25, 2019 the ace v5 is usually shit on trinitys. Its OK on coronas. I recommend the matrix v3 with oscillator so you can do falcon - corona with it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rover820 0 Posted April 2, 2019 to be honest i have never had a problem with the ace chips and i have done 3 trinity on the ace 5 using the P1 method and have had great boot times so i suppose its all down to prefrence really Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
goldmoon 0 Posted May 9, 2019 Hi, About the ace V5 on Trinity. NEWER USE P1 install for Trinity! Has killed two trinity MB. first power on glitch correctly but no Xell. after restart no glitch anymore. Write back the original nand I got ROD. but with P2 install Trinity boot until 5sec, always. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ar4ijss 0 Posted October 20, 2019 On 5/10/2019 at 12:07 AM, goldmoon said: Hi, About the ace V5 on Trinity. NEWER USE P1 install for Trinity! Has killed two trinity MB. first power on glitch correctly but no Xell. after restart no glitch anymore. Write back the original nand I got ROD. but with P2 install Trinity boot until 5sec, always. Had the same issue but I messed c1 and c2 points(resistors from HANA). After some time, I was bored and tak'ed same board, bridged resistors and board started to work! Sorry for bad english, I'm from Mars. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Decrypt786 3 Posted January 12, 2020 How did you do the bridge? You brided across c1 to c2 or from c1 resistor 1 to c1 resistor 2 and the same for c2? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites