Among the technical solutions Sony implemented in its PlayStation 5 to enable the system to reach maximum performance without issue is a liquid metal cooling solution, which helps keep temperatures down when the system is pushed to its limits.
This cooling solution, however, led to significant issues, as the liquid metal can leak and leave dry spots on critical components, resulting in various malfunctions. Although Sony made some changes for the PlayStation 5 Pro and some of the latest base console models, liquid metal cooling issues can still affect systems, potentially even all of them, according to a technician.
Over on X, modder and service technician modyfikatorcasper shared a new report on a PlayStation 5 Slim (CFI-2016) system with less than one and a half years of life, which has been impacted by liquid metal issues. In this case, however, the liquid metal leak wasn't caused by the system's position, but by application quality and degradation over time and temperature. As such, the service technician believes all PS5 systems will eventually require maintenance, regardless of the model and its position.
While the claim that all PlayStation 5 models will eventually require maintenance is bold, it is undeniable that the liquid metal issues have affected a lot of systems. Earlier this year, Alderon Games founder Matthew Cassels highlighted how these issues are becoming more widespread, with an increasing number of users reporting various malfunctions over the past few months.
As most current reports of PlayStation 5 units malfunctioning due to liquid metal issues involve older systems, it will take some time to determine if the new liquid metal TIM layout of the newly released CFI-2100 model has been accompanied by improved application to prevent degradation over time, as it should with leaking issues.
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