Have you ever been playing your Wii and have it go blank on you and felt completely lost with nowhere to turn to repair you Nintendo Wii? Are you like me and do not trust the UPS, Fed X, USPS shipping centers with your precious electronics nor do you trust the so called repair centers that employ not-so competent technicians? Don't feel like you are alone. There are plenty of us that have been in your situation and frantically working to come up with a viable solution to get your Wii repaired and running again without having to send it half way around the world and risk loss or damage. I came up with what I thought would be the best option, repairing my own Nintendo Wii. You heard me right, I said repairing my own Wii. From what I understood, there are a handful of things that go wrong with the Wii console and with a helpful troubleshooting guide it is fairly easy to repair your Wii. Especially if there is some sort of support system in place to ask your own specific questions if needed.
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.
I bypassed all of the usual conventional options such as shipping my Wii for repair to a repair facility. I did not want some guy named Bubba messing with my beloved gaming console and felt that would be risking more damage to my Wii. No way. To reiterate there is no way I am going to trust the shipping and freight centers to get my Wii in one piece without adding extra damage to my Wii and not to mention the hi cost of shipping.
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.
In plain words this is my second Wii gaming console and I am not what you would consider wealthy by any means and I do not feel like flipping the bucks for a new console. Particularly knowing this is probably some common problem that happens with a lot of Wii's and can easily be fixed using a good Wii repair guide. Though I do not have much technical training I am good with my hands and love to tinker with things so this is the route I am choosing to take.
So I searched the web (Yes - there are some sites that are legit and knows what their talking about) for solutions to my issue. After visiting numerous pages and joining different forums, I stumbled to one saying that he repaired his Wii using a simple and easy to follow Wii fix guide. He claims that Wii repair has never been easier since the instructions are orderly and describes different Wii problems.
So I took his advice and followed the link to the website. The website was professionally designed and made several valid points about it being the best solution for those that are not afraid to spend a little time learning to perform their own Wii repair. Again, the email support was the final sales pitch that sold me completely. It was totally a no brainer.
So long story short, I downloaded the Wii repair guide and had my Wii up and running the same night and I was a much happier with my stress gone and my Wii fixed.
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.
I bypassed all of the usual conventional options such as shipping my Wii for repair to a repair facility. I did not want some guy named Bubba messing with my beloved gaming console and felt that would be risking more damage to my Wii. No way. To reiterate there is no way I am going to trust the shipping and freight centers to get my Wii in one piece without adding extra damage to my Wii and not to mention the hi cost of shipping.
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.
In plain words this is my second Wii gaming console and I am not what you would consider wealthy by any means and I do not feel like flipping the bucks for a new console. Particularly knowing this is probably some common problem that happens with a lot of Wii's and can easily be fixed using a good Wii repair guide. Though I do not have much technical training I am good with my hands and love to tinker with things so this is the route I am choosing to take.
So I searched the web (Yes - there are some sites that are legit and knows what their talking about) for solutions to my issue. After visiting numerous pages and joining different forums, I stumbled to one saying that he repaired his Wii using a simple and easy to follow Wii fix guide. He claims that Wii repair has never been easier since the instructions are orderly and describes different Wii problems.
So I took his advice and followed the link to the website. The website was professionally designed and made several valid points about it being the best solution for those that are not afraid to spend a little time learning to perform their own Wii repair. Again, the email support was the final sales pitch that sold me completely. It was totally a no brainer.
So long story short, I downloaded the Wii repair guide and had my Wii up and running the same night and I was a much happier with my stress gone and my Wii fixed.
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