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Add Note Step 9

  • Flip the PS3 over.

  • Wait for it, wait for it...

  • MEGA FAN revealed!

  • This 12V, 1.3A monster rivals the best fans found in desktop PC machines. Sony spared no expense.

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Add Note Step 10

  • Closeup of the massive fan and controller antennas.

  • This is a brushless DC motor, which is fairly standard for fans in devices like this. Brushless motors are quieter than more traditional fans, but require fine computer control to function. It is not a maglev fan like Apple is known to use, however.

  • The Bluetooth and WLAN antennas, intentionally three-dimensional in design, are attached to the lower case with Phillips screws.

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Add Note Step 11

  • Disconnecting two power supply cables.

  • The AC inlet cable is devoid of a third 'ground' pin, surprising for a unit that draws nearly 250W.

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Add Note Step 12

  • Removing the power supply. This is quite a bit smaller than the original PS3's power supply, and presumably has better thermal characteristics.

  • Much to the relief of users worldwide, the power supply is designed for inputs ranging from 100V to 240V AC.

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Add Note Step 13

  • Digging a little deeper into the new power supply.

  • This is a startlingly compact unit. It will be interesting to see what the thermal dissipation is like.

  • This puppy cranks out 18 amps at 12V DC! Fingers beware.

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Add Note Step 14

  • This is the largest fan we've come across in a consumer electronics device of this size.

  • Sony is really taking cooling quite seriously.

  • The ~95 mm diameter 17 blade impeller was definitely designed with quiet in mind. It is extremely stiff and presumably made of ABS plastic.

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Add Note Step 15

  • Tape holding down antenna and power cables.

  • That tape is just begging to be ripped off.

  • We indulged.

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Add Note Step 16

  • A tug at the plug, a twist of the screwdriver...

Add NoteNotes: Step 10

Flag Reply by katboi Aug 25 2009 @ 8:24 PM

That fan looks superb. Its just sexy.

Flag Reply by Snake Aug 26 2009 @ 1:34 PM

Hi Ifixt staff: I have a doubt about the new ps3 slim: Is this model presenting problems of overheating? with the fan that is inclued can the ps3 slim overheat? Greetings!

Flag Reply by james42519 Sep 10 2009 @ 12:00 AM

that fan is actually not that big. it is smaller then the one in the old ps3 which is 120 mm

Flag Reply by edotan Sep 25 2009 @ 1:53 PM

Thanks guys! You can't imagine how useful it is to have this kind of info and validation.

Flag Reply by kobkob Oct 21 2009 @ 1:50 PM

Hi all.

Does the slim need an external cooler fan or this one is good enough?

I've had the fat one and i bought an external fan as many people recommended to.

Thank you.

Flag Reply by djLot3k Nov 5 2009 @ 8:24 AM

Quote from james42519:

that fan is actually not that big. it is smaller then the one in the old ps3 which is 120 mm

I don't think the size of the fan itself is what there referring to, i believe it is the size in relation to the device that it is in.

Flag Reply by sanan magoi Jan 26 @ 9:48 AM

anyone knows if PS3 80 GB CECHL01 has an universal power supply?

Add NoteNotes: Step 11

Flag Reply by johndrinkwater Aug 26 2009 @ 8:40 AM

Read that the Slim would use under 100W during full load, why would the supply need that amperage ?

Flag Reply by dezz Aug 26 2009 @ 2:30 PM

You say the unit draws 250W, but it is far from that. Not even the power supply would allow that, its max. is 221W (18A@12V+0.9A@5.5V). The unit itself draws ~95W at max.! Just there is a large safety margin. (Not even the very first PS3 model drew more that 200W at max.)

power consumption datas

Flag Reply by Fameleaf Dec 13 2009 @ 6:23 PM

Yes it is indeed a universal Powersupply. Picked the 250GB version from Amazon USA. It works perfectly in India. All you need to do is to change the power cable.

In India, you can ask for a good taperecorder cable in any electronics shop. This cable will do the job.

Flag Reply by Fameleaf Dec 13 2009 @ 6:30 PM

Quote from Fameleaf:

Yes it is indeed a universal Powersupply. Picked the 250GB version from Amazon USA. It works perfectly in India. All you need to do is to change the power cable.

In India, you can ask for a good taperecorder cable in any electronics shop. This cable will do the job.

MODEL # I use is CECH-2001B.

Additional ref:

http://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=3326 shows the PSU model number (EADP-220BB)

The above PSU is certified as 100-240 V ac by Underwriters Lab (UL).

http://database.ul.com/cgi-bin/XYV/template/LISEXT/1FRAME/showpage....-+Component&objid=1073787731&cfgid=107374...

http://www.google.co.in/search?rlz=1C1CH...-8&q=EADP-220BB

Hope this helps :)

Add NoteNotes: Step 12

Flag Reply by fergie Aug 28 2009 @ 4:43 PM

More on the power supply:

Does it say on the outer (on the PS3 unit) label that the input voltage rating is 100-240?

Flag Reply by xcalibur7th Sep 1 2009 @ 11:56 AM

Hi Guys, After reading through, I tested the PS3 slim at Malaysia. It works!! It works!!!

For second opinion,

I refer to this site for the serial number of the power supply

http://database.ul.com/cgi-bin/XYV/template/LISEXT/1FRAME/showpage....-+Component&objid=1073787731&cfgid=107374...

Flag Reply by eithan Sep 4 2009 @ 1:02 AM

Quote from xcalibur7th:

Hi Guys, After reading through, I tested the PS3 slim at Malaysia. It works!! It works!!!

For second opinion,

I refer to this site for the serial number of the power supply

http://database.ul.com/cgi-bin/XYV/template/LISEXT/1FRAME/showpage....-+Component&objid=1073787731&cfgid=107374...

xcalibur7th, where did u get your ps3 slim, the US?

and what is the power supply in Malysia?

just trying to make sure i got this post right and I can plug my US bought ps3 slim in a 220v socket.

much appreciated.

thanks

Flag Reply by Yupe Sep 10 2009 @ 2:41 PM

By any chance... Do anyone know for sure if the PS3 Limited Edition Metal Gear Solid(the one that can read the PS2 games) has the power supply designed for inputs ranging from 100V to 240V AC ??? I have the USA version but Im living now on Europe and nobody has give me a clear answer yet.

Flag Reply by Arup Nov 22 2009 @ 4:45 AM

I got an PS3 slim from US, Model CECH 2001A. Though the label on the body says power supply needed is 110V only, works fine in 220V. I tried and it worked fine in India in 220V.

Flag Reply by mica Nov 22 2009 @ 10:22 AM

I'm from india , i recently bought a ps2 slim 250gb CECH-2001B from the US and am succesful in playing it in india. I connected to the 220v plug using an older ps2 220-240v cable. No step down transformer is needed. Am using a power strip with fuse for protection.

Flag Reply by mica Nov 22 2009 @ 10:27 AM

Quote from mica:

I'm from india , i recently bought a ps3 slim 250gb CECH-2001B from the US and am succesful in playing it in india. I connected to the 220v plug using an older ps2 220-240v cable. No step down transformer is needed. Am using a power strip with fuse for protection.

Flag Reply by mica Nov 22 2009 @ 7:30 PM

Use a 5A kettle cord , the ps2 power cord is 2.5A ~250v , it will heat up. Buy a power cord with 5A ~250v (5A kettle cord with fuse) and use it on a US ps3 slim, it will not heat up.

Flag Reply by pbang Nov 26 2009 @ 5:35 AM

Quote from mica:

Use a 5A kettle cord , the ps2 power cord is 2.5A ~250v , it will heat up. Buy a power cord with 5A ~250v (5A kettle cord with fuse) and use it on a US ps3 slim, it will not heat up.

oh and also where can i get this 5A kettle cord??

Flag Reply by JON Jan 17 @ 2:56 PM

IM VERY NERVOUS I HAVE A PSOP3 SLIM BOUGHT IN usa LAST WEEK I AM IN AUSTRALIA, WE HAVE 240V 60HZ........SHOULD I BE NERVOUS!! OR IS IT OK TO USE THE US PSP3 THAT SAYS ON THE STICKER ON CONSOLE 120V 60HZ

Flag Reply by James Jan 24 @ 5:26 AM

Quote from pbang:

oh and also where can i get this 5A kettle cord??

Did you have any luck finding a 5A kettle cord? i bought a PS3 Slim 120gb(CECHs2001A) from amazon. i live in germany and would like to hook it up to 220v.

Add NoteNotes: Step 13

Flag Reply by Kalyan Aug 25 2009 @ 8:17 PM

Can you please confirm if this can work on 240Volts~AC

Flag Reply by Mobe1969 Aug 26 2009 @ 1:23 AM

Can anyone confirm if the PSU is universal like all the previous PS3 models?

Flag Reply by hansbe Aug 26 2009 @ 4:46 AM

Please please have a deeper look at the PSU and see if it works with 220/240V. I know it says 110/120V on the back, but the PSU might support 240V too. There is a big pricedifference from US to eg. Denmark so I would consider bringing one home on my next trip to the US if this will work. Thank you :)

Flag Reply by jriquelme Aug 26 2009 @ 8:21 AM

Quote from hansbe:

Please please have a deeper look at the PSU and see if it works with 220/240V. I know it says 110/120V on the back, but the PSU might support 240V too. There is a big pricedifference from US to eg. Denmark so I would consider bringing one home on my next trip to the US if this will work. Thank you :)

yes.. i want know this too. Is a universal power supply like te ones in PS3 phat?

Can yo take a closer picture on te PSU specs

iFixit Staff

Flag Reply by Andrew Bookholt Aug 26 2009 @ 10:23 AM

Quote from jriquelme:

yes.. i want know this too. Is a universal power supply like te ones in PS3 phat?

Can yo take a closer picture on te PSU specs

To all those who asked, it is universal! I added a picture of the power input specifications to step 12. Game on!

iFixit Staff

Flag Reply by Miroslav Djuric Aug 26 2009 @ 12:16 PM

Quote from andrew:

To all those who asked, it is universal! I added a picture of the power input specifications to step 12. Game on!

Just to add to Andrew's post:

The power supply can accept a 240V AC input. Here's the hi-res version of the power supply specifications picture.

Flag Reply by jriquelme Aug 26 2009 @ 12:21 PM

Quote from andrew:

To all those who asked, it is universal! I added a picture of the power input specifications to step 12. Game on!

Yeeeeeah!!! Thanks very much for the fast reply. Btw, im form Paraguay-South America... and im waiting for my PS3 Slimmer from amazon.

Thanks again

Flag Reply by Mobe1969 Aug 26 2009 @ 1:42 PM

Quote from miro:

Just to add to Andrew's post:

The power supply can accept a 240V AC input. Here's the hi-res version of the power supply specifications picture.

Man, I love you guys. I mean it!

Flag Reply by jpm Aug 26 2009 @ 6:39 PM

Quote from andrew:

To all those who asked, it is universal! I added a picture of the power input specifications to step 12. Game on!

This news is just three kinds of awesome! Thanks, guys!

Flag Reply by Kalyan Aug 28 2009 @ 9:23 AM

Quote from miro:

Just to add to Andrew's post:

The power supply can accept a 240V AC input. Here's the hi-res version of the power supply specifications picture.

Thanks for posting that Hi-Res Pic.. We are all happy. You guys are awesome

Flag Reply by Anonpkmn Sep 5 2009 @ 4:40 AM

What about Japanese PS3 slim ? Does anybody know if it works on 240V ?

Flag Reply by Beachnut Sep 5 2009 @ 4:46 AM

I've read that the US version works on 220/240V but anyone know about the Japanese version CECH2000A - the case says "100V @ 2.5 50/60 Hz".

Flag Reply by cloud84 Sep 5 2009 @ 4:44 PM

Quote from Beachnut:

I've read that the US version works on 220/240V but anyone know about the Japanese version CECH2000A - the case says "100V @ 2.5 50/60 Hz".

I bought my Slim in Japan, and as I'll be moving back to Europe soon, I tried looking for that info on Japanese sites. This is what came up:

http://pocketnews.cocolog-nifty.com/pkns/2009/09/ps3-120gbcech-1.html

If you scroll down a bit you can see pictures of the power supply. Obviously the serial number is the same as with the US version and it also clearly says "100-240V". Hope that helped!

Flag Reply by Beachnut Sep 7 2009 @ 12:57 AM

cloud84, that's reassuring if it is the Japanese version pictured. The US version is CECH2001A.

Flag Reply by Kunal Sep 15 2009 @ 6:29 PM

I just bought the ps3 slim from USA. It says its a 120V~2.1A 60Hz. Will this work in Europe where there is 220V ? Its a CECH2001A model. If no then where can i get a slim with 110-220V?

Flag Reply by jvsexy Sep 16 2009 @ 1:50 AM

Hi, I am from Fiji Islands. We use 240v here. My relative is getting the PS3 Slim for me from USA. So the PS3 slim will work here in Fiji with no problems rite??? or do i need a step up transformer to be sure?? thanks alot !!

Flag Reply by bayareagnar Sep 16 2009 @ 5:24 PM

Is there any chance we can get a higher res photo of the power board PCB and maybe even a top down so we can see the floor plan?

thanks!

Flag Reply by Verbl Sep 17 2009 @ 10:52 PM

This certainly helped a lot as I bought my PS3 in Akihabara and brought back home to the Philippines (220v country).

Many thanks!

Flag Reply by jvsexy Sep 21 2009 @ 1:15 PM

Quote from jvsexy:

Hi, I am from Fiji Islands. We use 240v here. My relative is getting the PS3 Slim for me from USA. So the PS3 slim will work here in Fiji with no problems rite??? or do i need a step up transformer to be sure?? thanks alot !!

Hi,i just got my PS3 Slim yesterday & with a sense of suspense & fright, i plugged it in my home socket (220v)..then i turned it on...one small red standy mode appeared on the PS3s power button...then i pushed the power button !!!!!!!!!!

ITS WORKING PERFECTLY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Now i can finally play Metal Gear Solid 4 !!!!

:)

Flag Reply by ronenl Oct 4 2009 @ 1:47 PM

Quote from Beachnut:

I've read that the US version works on 220/240V but anyone know about the Japanese version CECH2000A - the case says "100V @ 2.5 50/60 Hz".

Guys,

Bought my PS3 Slim 7 days ago through Amazon. Model CECH2000A on it. It says it is 120V only, but works perfect with 220V in Israel. Only replaced the cable who just doesn't fit the wall. As simple as that. Sony just lies about it.

Flag Reply by pbang Nov 25 2009 @ 8:56 PM

okay so obviously according to this site and most people here it works aboard in countries with higher voltage. But what about prolonged usage. has it given anyone any problems?

Flag Reply by Schmendrik Dec 1 2009 @ 12:03 AM

Now there's a new PlayStation 3 Slim with a 250GB hard drive. I know you've done the 120GB teardown, and found that it has a universal power supply. Does this hold true for the new 250GB? I work for Uncle Sam overseas and want to ensure it'll work if I plug it into the wall as is. Sure, I could use a step-down transformer, which would change the voltage from 220-240v to 110v, but it would do nothing to step-up the 50Hz current coming out of the wall to the 60Hz one in the U.S... and that could spell disaster for anything with a disk drive.

According to the PlayStation official website: http://playstation.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/playstation.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp....

Flag Reply by Fameleaf Dec 13 2009 @ 6:26 PM

Quote from Schmendrik:

Now there's a new PlayStation 3 Slim with a 250GB hard drive. I know you've done the 120GB teardown, and found that it has a universal power supply. Does this hold true for the new 250GB? I work for Uncle Sam overseas and want to ensure it'll work if I plug it into the wall as is. Sure, I could use a step-down transformer, which would change the voltage from 220-240v to 110v, but it would do nothing to step-up the 50Hz current coming out of the wall to the 60Hz one in the U.S... and that could spell disaster for anything with a disk drive.

According to the PlayStation official website: http://playstation.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/playstation.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp....

250GB (CECH-2001B) one also has a universal power supply. Had no issues connecting it to 240 volts in India. One has to use a Indian cable (tape recorder cable or a sony cybershot camera ac cable etc o Indian make).

Flag Reply by Sadsurfer Jan 4 @ 2:16 PM

Lots of people asking about US to Europe but what about the other way around? If I have a UK brought PS3 phat (40GB) and PS3 Slim (120GB) would these both work with a change of kettle lead or would I need a step up/down convertor?

Flag Reply by Vinod Jan 19 @ 4:26 PM

I am about to buy PS3 250GB in US in an hour and bring it to India with me. Are there any issues about playing Blue-Ray disks or Play Station games which I buy from India?

Flag Reply by arnab221 Feb 1 @ 11:51 PM

Quote from Schmendrik:

Now there's a new PlayStation 3 Slim with a 250GB hard drive. I know you've done the 120GB teardown, and found that it has a universal power supply. Does this hold true for the new 250GB? I work for Uncle Sam overseas and want to ensure it'll work if I plug it into the wall as is. Sure, I could use a step-down transformer, which would change the voltage from 220-240v to 110v, but it would do nothing to step-up the 50Hz current coming out of the wall to the 60Hz one in the U.S... and that could spell disaster for anything with a disk drive.

According to the PlayStation official website: http://playstation.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/playstation.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp....

All electronics work ONLY in DC and not AC that's what the power suppy is for , to convert AC to DC . DC does not have any frequency , so the input freq of 50 or 60 hz is immaterial