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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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John Rumm wrote:
Component level SMD repair is pretty commonly done stuff... For example, go have a look at Louis Rossmann or Jessa Jones (iPad Rehab) on youtube, they routinely fix stuff that apple claim can't be fixed. They have posted tons of detailed walk-throughs of many repairs. There's a board/component level repair tradeoff. If it's a washing machine and the board is simple, it might only cost ÂŁ50. Not worth doing component level fault diagnosis when you could just swap it out. If it's a laptop and they soldered the CPU, the RAM and the SSD to the motherboard, the board might be ÂŁ2000 to replace. That's a very strong motivation to go in at component level, especially if the fix is something at the simpler end of things (dead charging chips and similar). In both cases, if the manufacturer refuses to supply parts (that charging chip is often custom, in the case of Apple) all you're left with is getting one from scrap. And then you might find you can't pair it because they fitted DRM, even though there was no actual reason to need to pair it in the first place. While certain brands are notorious for this, it's only a matter of time before their competitors jump on the same bandwagon. Hence needing laws to prevent this behaviour. Theo |
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