Monday, March 10, 2014

What Is Best Option For Wii Repairs?

By James Pierce




Nintendo Wii competes with other newer generation gaming consoles such as the Sonly PlayStation 4 and Xbox 360. It is a very social style entertainment system that brings friends and family alike together for hours at a time, unlike other gaming consoles it promotes interaction with other around you vs. individual play or online games.

Although I enjoy its mind relaxing ability, it was disappointing when I first installed my update only to realize that the only space that was remaining was roughly 3GB of the entire internal memory of 8GB. After this had happened the subsequent problems followed. The operating system of the Wii system became very sluggish. I noticed this when I tried to open its setting and it was quite taking long time to open the settings. This kept on disturbing as to why it should take up so much of the disk hard drive space and still require lengthy loading times only to open images, text and other few sound effects.

As a result of all these problems I decide to consider the addition of a thumb drive. This worked very well at the beginning but after some time small complications began to emerge. The USB port 2.0 became very outdated and as a result data transmission became very slower and the USB port could only allow the device to draw a maximum of 500mA of current power per port. It was then that I decided I had to do something such as find a way to repair my Wii.

I decided after much thought that sending my Wii out for Wii repair was not the route I wanted to take. Soon after I made the plunge and late at night working on my own Wii all with the help of the Wii Fix Guide. I did run into a couple of questions and soon after placed an email to the free support address. It did not take long and I had a quick reply detailing the answers to my questions. I was soon up and running and I have not looked back since. I repaired my own Wii.

The first option that always seems to pop up is sending your Wii out for repair to one of the many repair houses. There a ton of mixed reviews on this. Some people paying an arm and a leg to get their Wii back and not to mention the big hassle of getting it ready to ship then having to deal with the long wait times. Some people ended up getting their Wii back with tons of scratches and marks that were not on them previously. I then found a lot of good info on a Wii Repair Guide. It had great reviews and live email support. I am good with my hands and directions so I knew this was the way I wanted to go. With live email support you can?t go wrong. I had my Wii up and running real quick after doing the upgrades.






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