CECH-25xx
Release | |
---|---|
Initial Release | July 29, 2010 |
Datecodes | 0C, 0D, 1A, 1B |
Regions | 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 06, 07, 08, 11, 12 |
Colour | |
Specifications | |
Motherboard | JSD-001 or JTP-001 |
Flash | NOR |
Harddrive | 160GB (25xxA) / 320 GB (25xxB) |
HDMI CEC | Yes |
OtherOS | |
PS2 Compatibility | No |
SA-CD | |
WiFi | |
Cell / RSX | 45nm, 40nm |
Watt / Max / Cum | 80w, 250w |
USB Ports | 2 |
MultiCardReader | No |
Third PS3 slim model. The Blu-ray drive's components were revised (including laser), as well as having the daughterboard controller integrated into the main motherboard. The networking components (LAN and WiFi/Bluetooth modules) were also updated.
Starting with some of the later manufactured date code 1A models, factory firmware that came with metldr2 superseded the exploitable metldr which previously allowed the installation of CFW (Custom Firmware).
The "Yellow Light of Death" sequence was changed yet again with this revision, where the power LED simply turns off after the initial green, and the three sequential beeps are no longer heard.
Some 25xx slims came with the IHS glued directly to the die of CELL/BE, using an epoxy resin glue. This glue is very tough and can easily lead to the die cracking while attempting a delid. Therefore delidding the CELL/BE is not advised on this model.[1]
Harddisk | 160GB (25xxA) / 320GB (25xxB) |
---|---|
Flash | 16Mb NOR |
Release date | 07/2010 |
USB Ports | 2 |
PS2 Emulation | No |
SACD Playback | No |
Original OtherOS Support | No |
Card Readers | No |
Wifi | Yes |
Available Colors | Charcoal Black, Classic White, Titanium Blue (25xxA), Splash Blue (25xxB), Scarlet Red (25xxB) |
Regions | 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 06, 07, 11, 12 |
Cell / RSX Architecture | 45nm, 40nm |
Watts/Max | 80w / 250w |
HDMI Version | 1.3a |
HDMI CEC | Yes |
Console/board without PlayStation 2 compatibility via hardware. Although this model does not support PlayStation 2 games via hardware, this board/console can run PS2 games using "PS2 Classics", in which the emulation is completely accomplished via software, which can affect the performance and graphics quality of the games, if compared to PlayStation 2 compatible models with hardware support. Jailbroken models can run games using Homebrew softwares that trigger the corresponding emulators in the console firmware. The emulation of PlayStation 2 in this model does not support, by default, the execution of games via CD/DVD disc. See: PS2 Compatibility |
References
|