Introduction
After eight years, Microsoft has finally released a proper successor to the Xbox 360—the Xbox One. Will this be the One Xbox to rule them all? Follow us as we journey into the tower of Microsoft's new console—coming to you straight from Mordor New Zealand!
We regularly put pics of "the daily grind" on Instagram, announce teardowns on Twitter, and keep up with friends on Facebook!
What you need
Video Overview
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This is the One. The One we've all been waiting for this whole time. The Xbox One.
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Think we're pulling your leg with all this New Zealand funnybusiness? Check out the folks in the background of this Xbox New Zealand release photo—that would be our very own Samantha Lionheart (in red) and Optimus Goldberg (in orange).
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Tech Specs:
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8-core x86 processor
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HDMI pass-through
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8 GB of RAM
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500 GB storage capacity
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Blu-ray/DVD drive
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Before any teardown, we take a few test photographs.
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We don't like to brag, but this is quite possibly the best picture of a roll of toilet paper we've ever seen. Or it just might be super-early in the morning.
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This message is to all the toilet paper manufacturing companies out there: this is how it's done.
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Full resolution in case you want to make it your wallpaper.
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The Day One Edition includes a commemorative controller, with appropriate inscription smack dab in the middle: "Day One 2013."
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The design of the Xbox One controller builds on that of the Xbox 360 controller, with a few updates.
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The development cost for the Xbox One controller exceeded $100 million, according to a Microsoft representative. Some of the prototypes featured built-in displays and cameras, a cartridge for emitting smells, and even a built-in projector.
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Also tumbling out of the, er, box: the Kinect 2.0 unit and a
miniature Xbox Oneenormous power brick.
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Making our way to the bottom, we check the tags to find…power ratings in Spanish?
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The Xbox One is identified as model 1540 and was designed by the Microsoft Corporation in Redmond, WA.
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Our Xbox One was manufactured on October 14, 2013 in China.
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And, in friendly words across the back, Microsoft says "Hello From Seattle."
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Don't panic; we're prepared.
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Despite the lack of screws, we find a way in with a plastic opening tool—prying the grille up.
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Speak, friend, and enter. Giving the right password and freeing some clips, we gain access to the innards of the Xbox One.
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We flip open the top case, granting us a peek at the
mines of Moriadark chambers within. -
While our first peek doesn't reveal much, we are ready to venture through shadow and circuit…
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Our Pro Tech Screwdriver Set is almost as anxious to get into this console as we are.
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The Pro Tech set was much easier to get through customs than our backup opening tools.
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While we're not sure how they stand up against orcs, our screwdrivers are awesome for removing the small screws holding the Wi-Fi board in place.
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A quick wave of our spudger, and the Wi-Fi board is out and ready for inspection.
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Marvell Avastar 88W8897 2x2 MIMO Wi-Fi Combination Radio Chip Supports 802.11ac, NFC, Bluetooth and Wireless Display
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Marvell Avastar 88W8782U WLAN SOC w/USB 2.0 Interface Support
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There are eight 64 mm T9 Torx screws securing the upper metal shield to the chassis.
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Game consoles are one place where we haven't seen the smaller, lighter, thinner trend taken to extremes—and we're okay with that. We like a device with a little meat on its bones, if it means finding standard fasteners like these screws—a win for repairability.
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This is our first real glimpse inside the Xbox One.
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Well, that was easy. The entire Xbox One assembly simply lifts off from the lower case.
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We appreciate a mystery, wrapped in an enigma, hidden inside a hobbit hole as much as the next person, but for repair purposes, it's nice when things are a little more straightforward.
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How much do we care about the Hobbit Hole breakfast at Denny's? Oh, you know…
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In another win for repairability, the Blu-ray/DVD drive is connected to the motherboard via a SATA data connector.
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While we are tempted to re-watch the entire LOTR trilogy on Blu-ray, our own quest to destroy the One Xbox in the fires of the teardown table is more dire.
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We take a look at the underside of the optical drive, finding a few ICs and a large ribbon cable:
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Microsoft MS0DDDSPB1 1326-BTSL ATNGS501
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Texas Instruments 37T AVY7
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Unfortunately, the Xbox One doesn't officially feature a replaceable hard drive—but then, we're not much for playing by the rules. Out it comes.
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Bad news: replacing the hard drive requires voiding the warranty. Good news: it's a standard 2.5 inch SATA II drive. Sad news, the Xbox One doesn't support unformatted hard drives.
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Inside our Xbox One, we find a Samsung Spinpoint M8 ST500LM012 500 GB 5400 RPM with 8MB Cache SATA II 3.0Gb/s hard drive.
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Teardown update: We tossed the One's hard drive into one of the tech writers' secondary hard drive bays. We found five NTFS partitions:
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Temp Content: 44 GB capacity, 27.1GB available (in an Xbox that we never turned on).
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User Content: 391.9 GB capacity, none used.
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System Support: 42.9 GB capacity, 34.1 GB available.
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System Update: 12.8 GB capacity, 11.8 GB available.
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System Update 2: 7.52 GB capacity, 7.47 GB available.
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Sadly, we were not able to go the other way -- we didn't have a spare hard drive (in New Zealand) to put into the Xbox One. So that will have to wait for another day!
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What do our elf eyes see? An army of integrated circuits. The heavy hitters include:
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X887732-001 DG3001FEG84HR (includes AMD "Jaguar" 8-core CPU + AMD Radeon Graphics GPU)
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16x SK Hynix H5TQ4G63AFR 4 Gb (512 MB) DDR3 SDRAM (total of 16 x 512 MB = 8 GB)
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X861949-005 T6WD5XBG-0003
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SK Hynix H26M42003GMR 8 GB eMMC NAND Flash
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ON Semiconductor NCP4204 GAC1328G Integrated Power Control IC
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Realtek RTL 8151GNM Ethernet Controller
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Texas Instruments TPS2590 3-V to 20-V High Current Load Switch
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The backside of the motherboard is a glorious, green field, void of any integrated circuits.
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As always, a big thanks to the folks at Chipworks for helping us determine names of the doodads we found inside the Xbox One!
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If you haven't, already, check out their in-depth analysis of the PS4!
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- Only a few tools are required to take the whole console apart. The opening procedure is similar to, but much easier than, any Xbox 360.
- Once inside, a clean, no-nonsense modular design allows the drives, fan, heat sink, wireless board, and front daughterboard to be easily replaced.
- Clips instead of screws make opening the case more difficult than necessary, but the absence of adhesive and proprietary screws helps soften the transgression.
- The hard drive is relatively difficult to access; you'll have to void the warranty if you'd like to upgrade/replace it.
Final Thoughts
Repairability Score
(10 is easiest to repair)
93 Comments
Can you replace the HDD with another to see what happens?
Yeah, no brainer
I'm curious if the replacement drive needs special formatting, or if the system has a built-in recovery 'partition' that will format the drive and install the OS automatically on a stock hard-drive?
Id imagine it wouldn't have a recovery system since the user is not meant to replace the hdd wether upgrading or replacing through fault. every previous Ms console has had proprietary locked hard drives in some form
I downloaded the full OS and day one patch from Microsoft website yesterday. if you replace the harddrive. u will need those files