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![]() ian field wrote: "Eeyore" wrote f825_677 wrote: Arfa Daily wrote: As Graham says, but be aware that unless you are a *very* experienced solderer, and posess the right desoldering equipment, you will struggle to do the job. These are some of the very worst bitches to get out of a board, that you will *ever* come across. And then some. You should try a Sony 1602 or 1601 IC from one of their broadcast mixer boards - it can take an hour if you're lucky and all day if you're not and we have professionaly desoldering vacumme equipment - the holes are barely larger than the pin its self every engineer working on these things in every broadcast engineering department complaints about these devices.. Give me a 100 pin BGA device any day.. If you know the IC's buggered (or even of low commercial value), cut every pin and remove them individually. Then clean the holes up. It always wins on time and cost. If you make sure none of the pins are bent on the solder side sometimes its possible to just lift the pins out one by one on the tip of the iron, if the pin is sheared off close to the IC body it leaves a slight hook on top, simply hook the tip of the iron under it and add fresh solder - this runs down the pin providing heat transfer to the solder joint and the surface tension holds the pin on the tip as you lift it out of the hole. Goes to show what a range of real skills the true repairman needs. And yes I've done it too. A magnetic Weller TCP tip and a pin containing steel helps ! Graham |
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