kagman
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Careful now, don't overload them in one day. Maybe we need to make a Multimeter 101 post with short lessons.
That would be great guys... I mean it...
Hey, keeperofthecode, thanks for the short info..
Careful now, don't overload them in one day. Maybe we need to make a Multimeter 101 post with short lessons.
I would be dead without my multimeters. From the very basic stuff like checking a customers AC adapter to looking for voltages or continuity on the motherboards, I must spend 30 minutes a day or more with one of those meters in my hand.
Just this morning I was trying to find the fault on a DV1000 motherboard and it turns out the CMOS battery holder solder point on one side was broken off. There is a cable that raps half way around it and it was tight, if you flex the chassis a little it strains the surface mount point and in this case snapped it off. It looked fine from a few inches away but there was no voltage coming from the cmos. Pressing it down made it work again, so I just resoldered the holder to the mobo and relocated the wire and VOILA, working machine again.
i feel that all computer techs should have at least a basic knowledge on how to solder, espically if you are repair motherboards and laptops. laptop boards solder issues are so common
Basic soldering knowledge doesn't make a person capable of soldering a lot of the small components found in laptops.
+10
If you work on laptop motherboards you have to get in real small. I am now comfortable with things like power regulators, BIOS chips, tiny ceramic capacitors and resistors but it took months to get there. You need several kinds of soldering irons, including a real precision soldering iron, several kinds of magnifiers and light sources and know the tricks to dealing with really fast surface contact work.
Anybody can do it, honestly, but you have to put in alot of time and spend some money buying the gear.
The reward for this effort is out there, trust me.![]()