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Alterações no passo nº 5

Edição por Carsten Frauenheim

Edição aprovada por Carsten Frauenheim

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[* black] At first glance it doesn't look like we got much out of removing this friendly Seattle ~~Frisbee~~ flying disc, which is disappointing—it took some tedious internal unclipping.
[* icon_note] At second glance, there are some more screws here. Interesting... maybe we'll pay these another visit later on.
-[* black] The optical drive comes out next. And like that one guy you weren't expecting to show up to your class reunion, we notice this one is the same model found in the [guide|65572|Xbox One S|stepid=135530|new_window=true]!
- [* icon_note] Preliminary testing suggests what we expected: the optical drive is paired to the motherboard, which means no easy replacements if it goes kaput. That said—we pulled the drive apart and found this suspicious-looking board inside. Perhaps with some board swapping, all is not lost? Stand by for more tests.
+[* black] The optical drive comes out next. And like that one guy you weren't expecting to show up to your class reunion, we notice this one is the same model found in the [guide|65572|Xbox One S|stepid=135530|new_window=true] and Xbox One X!
+ [* icon_note] Our testing suggests what we expected: the optical drive is paired to the motherboard, which means no easy replacements if it goes kaput.
+ [* icon_note] That said—in the same fashion as the One S and One X, swapping the optical drive board to a new drive allows for full functionality. Microsoft doesn't pay for your soldering course, though.
[* black] In any case, one of these chips might be responsible for the intimate bond:
[* red] Microsoft MS0DDDSP03 2011-ATSL ATN2TU22
[* orange] Texas Instruments 2050G4 7T AXTN