It’s a finicky process. If you turn the potentiometer too much, you'll instantly fry the laser. Also, this doesn't fix a dead laser; it only fixes a weak one. Expect to have to replace the laser deck entirely in 6-12 months. Great as a diagnostic fix, not a permanent solution.
If you have a rare console you need working right now to finish a save file, do it. But if this is for long-term collecting, save your money and just buy a new laser assembly (they are $15) instead of paying $40 for a calibration. Option 2: The "DIY Guide" Review (e.g., following an online tutorial)
This laser calibration got my old phat PS2 reading blue discs again after 10 years of gathering dust. No more "Disc Read Error."
It’s a finicky process. If you turn the potentiometer too much, you'll instantly fry the laser. Also, this doesn't fix a dead laser; it only fixes a weak one. Expect to have to replace the laser deck entirely in 6-12 months. Great as a diagnostic fix, not a permanent solution.
If you have a rare console you need working right now to finish a save file, do it. But if this is for long-term collecting, save your money and just buy a new laser assembly (they are $15) instead of paying $40 for a calibration. Option 2: The "DIY Guide" Review (e.g., following an online tutorial)
This laser calibration got my old phat PS2 reading blue discs again after 10 years of gathering dust. No more "Disc Read Error."