Have you ever encountered a damaged Nintendo Wii gaming system and you do not know where to turn to repair your Wii? Don't trust those individuals that do the delivery and shipping or the repair centers as you know deep down inside that most of them are simply self-taught technicians with no formal training? Well you are not alone. I have been there frantically thinking of what to do to get my Wii up and running again without having to send it out to untrustworthy repair centers or having to pack the heck out of the box so the brutal shipping services don?t do more damage to it or worse yet, lose it somewhere between New York and Seattle. I came up with my own solution, I did my own Wii repair. You notice I said my own repair? Yes, your hearing is good, Nintendo Wii repair is not all that hard and in fact fairly easy and fast with a nice Wii Fix Guide and email support to answer questions that might come up while you have your Wii disassembled.
This is my own story on how my Wii went bad and I had to come up with a solution. Playing one night on my Nintendo Wii with several friends and my Wii went dead! Playing Wii with my friends and family is one of my favorite pass times.
Now just exactly what do I do? The Wife and kids are residing at the in-laws house until the next day and this is the perfect time to spend having Wii competitions with my friends. But I have to come up with a solution to get my Wii up and running.
Of course I did explore a few conventional options such as sending my Wii in for repair. To one of those no-name repair shops with some guy named Bubba sticking his dirty fingers in my faithful Wii companion. No way. For starters who is going to guarantee fast and safe shipment to the center and secondly who says the shop is going to not cut and run with my Wii or try to fool me into paying hefty prices for un-needed parts and repairs or just keep my Wii and never send it back.
This is my second Wii, my first underwent the knife at one of these so-called Wii repair centers and came back in much worse condition than it was before I shipped it out. The amount of surface damage to my gaming console upset me badly. So who can I place the blame on? The shipping company or the Wii repair center? I could not live with it and just ended giving my Wii away to a family member and went out and made a new purchase.
Bottom line, this is my second unit and as much as possible I don't want anybody touching it but me - since I know this is just a simple problem that I can fix if I have an easy to follow Wii fix guide. I mean, I work at a bank and though I don't have much technical training, I am not totally technically impaired.
So I decided to follow my memory of seeing something on DIY Wii repair or a Wii fix it guide and did what I always do and Googled it. I found a few possible solutions to my dilemma. After doing about an hour of research and reading reviews and following links I came across a friend on a gaming forum that gave me his story about using The Wii Fix Guide to repair his Wii. He claimed that it only took a short time to follow the guide to troubleshoot his problems and then repair his Wii. To top it off there was free email support. Something that appears to be lacking in all other products or guides.
So I followed the link to the website. The website looked great and made plenty of valid points on it being the best solution for those of us not afraid to do a little dis-assembly. Again, reading the part about free email support just completely sold me. No way was I going to pass up on attempting to fix my own Wii.
To finish my story I followed the Wii Fix Guide and I was up and playing my Wii that same night. Yay!
This is my own story on how my Wii went bad and I had to come up with a solution. Playing one night on my Nintendo Wii with several friends and my Wii went dead! Playing Wii with my friends and family is one of my favorite pass times.
Now just exactly what do I do? The Wife and kids are residing at the in-laws house until the next day and this is the perfect time to spend having Wii competitions with my friends. But I have to come up with a solution to get my Wii up and running.
Of course I did explore a few conventional options such as sending my Wii in for repair. To one of those no-name repair shops with some guy named Bubba sticking his dirty fingers in my faithful Wii companion. No way. For starters who is going to guarantee fast and safe shipment to the center and secondly who says the shop is going to not cut and run with my Wii or try to fool me into paying hefty prices for un-needed parts and repairs or just keep my Wii and never send it back.
This is my second Wii, my first underwent the knife at one of these so-called Wii repair centers and came back in much worse condition than it was before I shipped it out. The amount of surface damage to my gaming console upset me badly. So who can I place the blame on? The shipping company or the Wii repair center? I could not live with it and just ended giving my Wii away to a family member and went out and made a new purchase.
Bottom line, this is my second unit and as much as possible I don't want anybody touching it but me - since I know this is just a simple problem that I can fix if I have an easy to follow Wii fix guide. I mean, I work at a bank and though I don't have much technical training, I am not totally technically impaired.
So I decided to follow my memory of seeing something on DIY Wii repair or a Wii fix it guide and did what I always do and Googled it. I found a few possible solutions to my dilemma. After doing about an hour of research and reading reviews and following links I came across a friend on a gaming forum that gave me his story about using The Wii Fix Guide to repair his Wii. He claimed that it only took a short time to follow the guide to troubleshoot his problems and then repair his Wii. To top it off there was free email support. Something that appears to be lacking in all other products or guides.
So I followed the link to the website. The website looked great and made plenty of valid points on it being the best solution for those of us not afraid to do a little dis-assembly. Again, reading the part about free email support just completely sold me. No way was I going to pass up on attempting to fix my own Wii.
To finish my story I followed the Wii Fix Guide and I was up and playing my Wii that same night. Yay!
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