Hi I've got a question for everyone.
Is anyone familiar in component level repair on motherboards?
If so could you tell me what tools you use and some tips and tricks?
I'm trying to get my foot in the door with this type of work.
Thanks![]()
I get stencils from eBay, then just cut them up and customise them as needed. Make sure to get a high quality no-clean solder paste, it makes life a lot easier.Thanks for the advice
I've been looking into re-balling but I can't find a respectable seller for the stencils. Any advice on where to get the stencils? I already have the rest of the equipment required. Also do I need a special kind of stencil for lead solder?
Thanks![]()
I think you'll find that the end of the heat tube on that unit is slightly small for the standard nozzles used for BGA rework, requiring an adapter that you need to make up yourself. This W.E.P. unit has the right sized heat tube end and it fits the standard and commonly available Hakko-style nozzles perfectly. One problem with these, is the unit has a magnetic switch that senses when the hand-held unit is removed from the cradle and turns on/off the unit. I added a switch to mine so I can over-ride that switch, as described in a post on the CVX game console repair site. (I'll add a link on how to do this later if I can find it.) That switch lets you keep the unit off while you mount it in a stand, which is another essential. There is an excellent thread in the CVX forum on how to do reballing with inexpensive equipment, and yes, it is possible. (I'll add that link later, too, when I find it.) Another essential, is a preheater. You can modify a Presto griddle to use a Rex PID controller for a cheap solution, or just buy a T-8280 IR preheater. It costs around $200 and works well by all accounts. The cheapest commercially made uints you can buy that are up to the job, cost around $1200 USD, as you'll find by reading the CVX forum mentioned. Oh, you will also probably need a 110v to 220v transformer or to have a 220v line installed to handle the power required. Don't forget about flux, solder balls, stencils, stencil-holding jig, solder wick, safety mask+filters, K-type thermocouples and temperature meter....I would love to get into this too. I called around and didn't any competitors in my area that do any type of reballing. Would something like this work well? I don't want to spend a lot, but I also don't want to have to buy something better later because its specs aren't good enough. http://www.ebay.com/itm/SMD-REWORK-...886?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item256c4c5956
I know this would be fine for jack repairs, but with it's specs, could I do full reball repairs (lets say a dv6000 gpu reball) with the right attachments?
Thanks!
Reflowing is a joke - if it failed from a factory, shooting hot air at it isnt going to be reliable. Reballing is too expensive for the right tools + time spent to bother, and I still don't trust it as a solid repair. Laptops with a failed bga are a flawed design and will most likely fail again in the near feature, even with shims.
Like PCX said in another thread, if you can't guarantee the repair, is it worth risking your name?
Motherboards are made up of several layers, usually 4 or 6 depending on the complexity of the design. Could possibly be more than 6 now?
These layers carry interconnecting tracks which are connected by "vias'", the small plated through holes on each side of the motherboard.
Without the aid of a circuit diagram it is nigh on impossible to trace a particular voltage or signal along its' intended path. It is also extremely difficult to source a diagram.
I have had limited success with motherboard repairs and I was in the tv repair trade for 30 years. My most recent success, an HP Probook 4525S, was a complete stroke of luck.
The jack socket would flash amber 8/9 times and nothing else. The 19v input was present so I started taking voltage readings at various points and found it again at a resistor. My probe accidentally made contact with a nearby transistor and the jack socket went a nice solid blue.
There was a dry joint on the transistor which was invisible with the naked eye. The accidental contact could easily have went the other way though and I could then have been looking for 2 faults.
So I was just considering reballing them and seeing how many of them I can use.![]()
Before I started with computers I was building and designing circuit boards for everything from remote control cars to robotics that I entered in competitions. So tracing wires and that sort of stuff I can do with ease.
"Tracing wires and that sort of stuff" is a lot different to tracing invisible circuits on multilayer boards Hitman.
During my 30 years in the tv trade I was probably repairing on average 10 units per day. Even with lean times and holidays' took into consideration I reckon well over 1500 repairs per year.
That comes to an awful lot over my career. Never entered competitions but bought a big house, looked after my wife and 5 children and ran my own repair business for 14 years.
Met a lot of electronics design engineers in my time but yet to meet one who can do a logical, time and cost effective repair.
"Tracing wires and that sort of stuff" is a lot different to tracing invisible circuits on multilayer boards Hitman.
During my 30 years in the tv trade I was probably repairing on average 10 units per day. Even with lean times and holidays' took into consideration I reckon well over 1500 repairs per year.
That comes to an awful lot over my career. Never entered competitions but bought a big house, looked after my wife and 5 children and ran my own repair business for 14 years.
Met a lot of electronics design engineers in my time but yet to meet one who can do a logical, time and cost effective repair.
Sorry to just jump in, bu i was wondering if anybody could help? I have a laptop to repair and it appeared to be a standard dc jack repair, but i have replaced the dc jack on the motherboard. I have tested the dc jack with a multimeter and there is power but nothing happens when i try to power it up.
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Joe Sales
FixmiPhone