Nintendo Switch - Charging Port repair - USB C - Tutorial

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июл 2024
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Комментарии • 252

  • @j.keithgreene7753
    @j.keithgreene7753 2 года назад +60

    I needed a video to show me how to open my son's switch, pertaining to a charging issue. Your video was the first one on the list. Very informative, allowed me to do what I needed to do and the switch is now charging as it should be. Thank you so much.

  • @redstonemacanic2434
    @redstonemacanic2434 2 года назад +65

    Honestly? I trust this gut to fix my switch more than I trust myself, Nintendo, or Best Buy. I wish I could just send mine to him

    • @coryhaldeman7020
      @coryhaldeman7020 Год назад +1

      Can we send them to him? Lol

    • @NicVandEmZ
      @NicVandEmZ Год назад

      It would be interesting if you switched usb-c to different port

  • @GrandmasFolly
    @GrandmasFolly Год назад +20

    Awesome video, thank you! I was able to get everything done after 3.5 hours. Hardest part was clearing the old solder out of the holes. Flux is literally your best friend.

    • @mrlynx1202
      @mrlynx1202 Год назад

      I was wondering, how do you do that btw?

    • @portableteejay
      @portableteejay Год назад +5

      @@mrlynx1202 Check out 10:08 until 10:38. He says that he's gonna apply some more flux to the area to clean it up. He doesn't show the process then, but if you're curious he does it earlier at 8:15. Flux allows the solder to melt and flow easier. He then uses a solder wick (also known as copper braid) and a soldering iron to heat up the solder. Once in a flowing state, the solder will be drawn into the braiding of wick, off of the board and out of the holes. Hope that helps!

    • @baltaorel
      @baltaorel 10 месяцев назад

      @@portableteejay sorry im confused i was trying to get a soldering set and flux paste but i see that there is flux remover are those different thing? or how does it work do i need flux and flux remover and soldering stuff im confused...

    • @kdoubleg
      @kdoubleg 2 месяца назад +1

      I agree that was definitely the hardest part for me too. Then on re assembly i didnt quite plug the screen in fully and i thought i fried it. This whole thing was tough but it works now.

  • @jasonm.6936
    @jasonm.6936 3 года назад +33

    I have to say good job on this video. Clear hd camera work and everything. I'm comfortable doing most repairs but will pass this one along as I don't have all the equipment. Nice vid!

    • @sirgamezalot2623
      @sirgamezalot2623 3 года назад +1

      same here! did you have yours repeir and did it cost much ?

    • @lvj778
      @lvj778 2 года назад +3

      @@sirgamezalot2623 i did and it was 200$ quote probably before tax or anything. So im about to attempt this fix..

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  2 года назад +1

      I have faith in you MR Jason

    • @cupcakemommy24cc
      @cupcakemommy24cc 2 года назад +1

      It's really easy I did it

    • @BartlettMorgan
      @BartlettMorgan Год назад +1

      ​@@cupcakemommy24ccwhat tools did you have/use to fix it?

  • @tomashley9246
    @tomashley9246 Месяц назад

    It was so fun watching your video; I found myself watching simply to listen to your gleeful reassembly. Thank you for the video.

  • @soignesamurai2344
    @soignesamurai2344 Год назад +1

    Awesome energy, straight forward, quick. Subscribed

  • @rockyraccoon92
    @rockyraccoon92 Год назад +7

    I know its an old video, but thank you. I just finished up swapping the usb-c port on my friend's Nintendo Switch. Step by step, I followed along. I must admit I paused quite a few times, but that was only minor. My biggest trouble was clearing out the leg holes in the motherboard so the connector would seat correctly. I found out the hard way what a little gap will do; it will do nothing and you want it to charge. 4 hours later and a couple burnt fingers it is finished! Thanks again

    • @BartlettMorgan
      @BartlettMorgan Год назад

      Hey which tools did you have available to fix this? I want to attempt a fix but not sure exactly what I'll need

    • @rockyraccoon92
      @rockyraccoon92 Год назад +1

      @@BartlettMorgan I used an antistatic mat, y tip screwdriver, Phillips screwdriver, cotton swabs, rubbing alcohol, hot air station, soldering station, desoldering wick, flux, fine tweezers, and solder. Patience is key to get the connector hot enough without damaging any surrounding components.

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  11 месяцев назад +1

      Wow I love to read this kind of comments , we all start this way my friend and congrats on the repair , help to others 🫡

  • @cmscott
    @cmscott 7 месяцев назад +2

    Honestly, you make this look so easy. I used too much heat, too much flux, and had a mess to clean out of the leg holes. It can be more challenging that it looks! You did a great job, one of the better videos out there for this. Would have been nice to be zoomed in a bit more, but it was a great video.

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  7 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you so much 🙏🏻 , I will try to get a closer and more detail video in the next one

  • @kdoubleg
    @kdoubleg 2 месяца назад +1

    Huge thanks with this. I was actually successful hardest part seemed to be removing the old solder from the holes. And apparently maling sure the screen is plugged in the whole way. Scared myself at first. But thanks to you my sons switch is working again

  • @CoLPluto
    @CoLPluto 2 года назад +17

    Your video was great. This repair is for the advanced solderer. I'm beginner at best. The hardest part was trying to remove the solder in the through holes. Literally spent 6 hours just repairing this stupid port. Either way I somehow got the repair to work through many choice words and burns. I just have to practice removing solder in holes. Was not easy for me. I appreciate the video because there's no way I would've made it without it.

    • @MexhomieXlll
      @MexhomieXlll Год назад

      Lmao

    • @ryanjones7681
      @ryanjones7681 Год назад +1

      Solder sucker! That's EXACTLY what they're ment for.

    • @CoLPluto
      @CoLPluto Год назад

      @Ryan Jones yeah I had one but it wasn't doing it. Probably user error.

    • @mercedesgarrow2150
      @mercedesgarrow2150 Год назад +2

      I’ve never worked with soldering but I have worked with fixing switches do you think I could possibly do it or is it too hard for someone with 100% beginner trying to fix it?

    • @CoLPluto
      @CoLPluto Год назад +2

      @@mercedesgarrow2150 I was a 100% beginner when I did this. I think you can manage as well. Just follow the steps and have good solder wick and flux.

  • @baconlord00
    @baconlord00 3 года назад +17

    Thank you for a clear tutorial, I was able to fix my friends switch because of it

    • @Waddlejpg
      @Waddlejpg 3 года назад +1

      I don't have any soldering stuff, what do I need?

    • @JosshuaNieves
      @JosshuaNieves 3 года назад +1

      @@Waddlejpg google your area to see if you have a MicroCenter near by. It's nerd heaven!

    • @godsendme1194
      @godsendme1194 2 года назад +1

      What king of torch is good for this can you help bro ! Currently working on one but kind of missing some tools

  • @mannyrivera2581
    @mannyrivera2581 2 года назад +2

    This video is awesome iam doing the same thing soon just waiting on the heat blower n the flux. Love to do this jobs

  • @MysterSer333
    @MysterSer333 3 года назад +27

    Do i need the expensive soldering kit or does the $18 one work? could you post a list of items used? Missing out on your affiliate money there lol!

  • @jeffystevens
    @jeffystevens Год назад +3

    That's some skill there brother, i would most definitely man-handle it and break something

  • @nalogolas1396
    @nalogolas1396 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks mate, fixed it on a friends device. nice tutorial!

  • @emilylopez3752
    @emilylopez3752 3 года назад +7

    does it matter where you buy a new port? or what specific new port did you get to replace the broken one??

  • @melannieworld
    @melannieworld Год назад +3

    Awesome video. Question, what type of iron pen are you using , it looks really thin.

  • @ninjasonmylawn25
    @ninjasonmylawn25 Год назад +1

    Fantastic work!

  • @housamsayed4063
    @housamsayed4063 3 года назад +4

    Really professional thx

  • @UndeadBeans
    @UndeadBeans 2 года назад +2

    Very very helpful, if you could possibly drop the link to the tool set you have that would be great, can’t find anything like that around here

  • @josepalomo4435
    @josepalomo4435 Год назад +2

    I cant seem to get the old solder out so the port can sit flat before resoldering. I have the wick but I think my soldering iron doesn't get hot enough?

  • @timgarner3553
    @timgarner3553 Год назад +2

    Can you tell me what kind of solder to use and what temp to have the soldering iron on?

  • @MJAussie360
    @MJAussie360 6 месяцев назад +1

    NIce, what is that tiny soldering iron? Also what kind of microscope is that you are using?

  • @renefunes82
    @renefunes82 2 года назад +1

    Nice job thanks for share with us

  • @davidvalens3337
    @davidvalens3337 2 года назад +5

    where did you get the motherboard holder from?

  • @Mark6O9
    @Mark6O9 Год назад +2

    This will be useful in the future

  • @SimpleWireless
    @SimpleWireless Год назад +1

    what temperature is your heat station? is 480 ok?

  • @Miducuast
    @Miducuast Год назад +7

    Nice video. However, I do have a lot of questions pertaining the tools that you use on the video. You could have some commission by promoting them.
    1. What brand of soldering flux do you use?
    2. The brand and type of heat gun.
    3, I would love to know the brand and type of that soldering pencil. It really blew me off. Where did you get it? How much does it cost? I always really wanted one, yet I never thought one of them existed!!!
    Please reply!!!!!
    😊

  • @lvj778
    @lvj778 2 года назад

    What flux and solder is this? Im using rosin core solder and paste. It just dont seem to be working very well. I could just be sh*t at this but adding solder to the pins, the pins dont seem to want to accept the solder.

  • @pixelgl1tch
    @pixelgl1tch 3 года назад +2

    Where did you get your mat?

  • @ginamam2752
    @ginamam2752 Год назад +4

    My charger port is broken and I was like yeah I can do this myself.. * watches video * closes laptop * okay nevermind new switch it is 😊

    • @skipfire00
      @skipfire00 6 месяцев назад

      Me too lmao
      My dumbass didn't realize I needed a solder and all this other stuff. Shows how smart I am lmao

  • @chicagopasha
    @chicagopasha Год назад

    What kind of solder material did you use?

  • @itspoffy
    @itspoffy 10 месяцев назад

    I've got solder skills but small stuff I haven't been the best at. Wouldn't the heat gun melt the plastic of the charge port before melting the solder? I'm good with wick and flux to clean it up.

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  10 месяцев назад

      You need to make sure the inner line of pads make good contact with the new port , and that technique is the same one we use when we work on IC chips , you have to control the heat make sure don’t melt the new port

  • @mindhatch
    @mindhatch 2 года назад +3

    Great job! Nice solder work, but you seriously didnt replace that old dried out thermal compound?

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  2 года назад +3

      thanks we will take your advice. we keep doing better day by day , god bless

  • @jed2055
    @jed2055 Год назад +1

    Had to log in to comment but worth it. Good job Mr Morales. I know some of these tiny solder jobs can be a be-arch. I heard it in your voice that you were both surprised and happy that it had all gone so smoothly. I hope my job goes as smooth.
    Two important things I want to bring up.
    First very important point:
    Temperature of heat gun and time spent heating port. I suspect this part was heavily edited and we can't guess how long it took to heat the port or how hot the blower was.
    Second point:
    After having the motherboard and CPU at your mercy you didn't replace the thermal paste. It's a given that this is done and . . . gosh, dog or cat hairs everywhere. A quick blow out to begin with is mandatory.
    Thanks for the video. I will probably use yours to step me through when the port arrives. Thanks again Mr M.

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  11 месяцев назад

      heat i used is 350 to 400 °C from 1 1/2 to 3 min , and yes for the best replace termal paste

  • @BiGO3000
    @BiGO3000 3 года назад +22

    Great tutorial , was wondering if there is a specific temperature to have the iron and heat on?

    • @godsendme1194
      @godsendme1194 2 года назад

      Me too did you get the tip !?

    • @mrdanker6756
      @mrdanker6756 2 года назад +3

      300-400 is kinda standard. Assuming youve got a clean and fresh soldering tip, higher temperatures will melt quicker and transfer less heat to the board. But its easier to overheat if having trouble soldering.

    • @HeresMo
      @HeresMo 2 года назад

      Yeah I was going to ask. My old soldering station and irons used to have a dial of 1-6 or no control. My nee ones have temp controls. So I was working under temp. When I get back to it I’ll use a big nozzle on my blower and try to finish it off.

    • @nottodaymate6513
      @nottodaymate6513 2 года назад +2

      I used this video to do my first port replacement. I set my heat gun at 350c

    • @Miducuast
      @Miducuast 2 года назад

      @@mrdanker6756 300-400 Celsius or Fahrenheit?

  • @erickgonzalez5777
    @erickgonzalez5777 2 года назад +1

    how come no one ever replaces the thermal paste? Is it not recommended?

  • @AntiDoctor-cx2jd
    @AntiDoctor-cx2jd Год назад

    can you use regular propane? That is what I have at the moment.

  • @Blastrax302
    @Blastrax302 2 года назад

    Is this possible without heat gun? Only with the soldering ?

  • @FinalDeathZ
    @FinalDeathZ 3 года назад +4

    helped alot i fucked up the first time and redid it after i burned the first chip with the heat gun but after the second chip i got it done

  • @cysign07
    @cysign07 11 месяцев назад +1

    Not easy to get the old port off the PCB. I needed to hot-air solder it for more than 3 minutes at 440°C (with my cheap asian hot air soldering station). Ond of the little drills was still clocked - so I used a 0.4mm drill to open it. Now I wonder which flux to use to solder the new port.
    Which flux did you use? And what's your soldering temperature (both for classic soldering as well as hot-air soldering)?

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  11 месяцев назад +1

      Yea is not easy , what I notice is that temperature is different between equipment brand , the temperature in your hot-air probably is wrong , but I recommend apply low melt solder wire so the cleaning is easier , than my temperature I use is up to 400 °C on air but not for too long or will melt the new port and do t get to close to it , on the soldering iron I use 350 °C and I repeat , temperature is different between equipment , if you have to go on a higher temperature you can do , that means your equipment is not giving enough heat.
      I hope this help you and good luck

  • @sociallyresponsiblexenomor7608
    @sociallyresponsiblexenomor7608 2 года назад +6

    A list of all items used would help.

  • @emilyhj6320
    @emilyhj6320 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this. My concern is the soldering application: Does applying it in a line bridge the pins? Is it okay if it does? I was so worried I'd have to find a way to solder each tiny pin individually

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  11 месяцев назад

      im not goin to lie , it is a difficult job

  • @NanceLvr
    @NanceLvr Год назад

    Can you share what thin soddering iron you are using?

  • @robertespinoza7654
    @robertespinoza7654 2 года назад

    Thank you 😁

  • @davidvalens3337
    @davidvalens3337 2 года назад +7

    what temp and flow rate did you use for the hot air to remove the USB C port?

  • @baconlord00
    @baconlord00 3 года назад

    What kind of heat gun did you use

  • @PingoPlayz
    @PingoPlayz 8 месяцев назад

    Hello, I had a question regarding the testing process. I was wondering what tool you used to test the connection for the port towards the end?

  • @shannonmagann9009
    @shannonmagann9009 2 месяца назад

    What was that tool you used to heat it up? Was it a heat gun?

  • @Scooby00
    @Scooby00 2 года назад +2

    I'm trying to get rid of the old soldering in the leg holes. But it just won't flow in my deslodering braid. Any advise? I'm up to 400°C with my soldering iron. But still not better.

  • @zinqzinq
    @zinqzinq 3 года назад +5

    What heatgun temperature have you use to take that usb c port of mainboard?

  • @tonyaugust
    @tonyaugust Год назад

    What temperature was the heat gun at ?

  • @TaneDarius
    @TaneDarius 3 года назад +3

    Hello friend! I am just interested what kind of soldering iron do you use?

  • @juliianrbrito
    @juliianrbrito 4 месяца назад

    I d k what kinda solder they be using but I can’t get it to melt I put it all the way up to 900 and still doesn’t melt had the same problem with a ps4 ended up just trashing it ridiculous.

  • @martincramer9815
    @martincramer9815 3 года назад +2

    Where do I get replacement charging port to due exactly the repairs on video you just showed us?

  • @rarih100
    @rarih100 2 года назад

    geat one thank you

  • @oscper508
    @oscper508 2 года назад +1

    I am having the worst time trying to clear the holes for the legs on the switch. You made it look so effortless. I've tried applying more solder and heating it up and putting solderwick in there. But it doesnt want to clear. I can't get my new port to lay flush

  • @Chuyvega16
    @Chuyvega16 2 года назад +2

    It never unsoldered for me even after adding flux and new solder to them connectors. I thought I was taking too long with the heat gun and didn’t want the whole panel to start bending. How long did you leave the heat gun on for it to be unsoldered?
    I ended up breaking the motherboard by accident, I’m gonna have to buy a new one or a new switch 😭

    • @darrell5363
      @darrell5363 Год назад +1

      exact same thing for me, i held my hot air station maxed over it for over 5 minutes and black shit started to bubble from it and the port never budged

  • @patrickconway2587
    @patrickconway2587 Месяц назад

    just for clarity, you apply flux, then solder and it will flow where it needs to go when heated?

  • @therealblakekirkham5701
    @therealblakekirkham5701 6 месяцев назад

    How does the solder not short between pins of your melt that much

  • @ruancarlodop
    @ruancarlodop 7 месяцев назад

    Really nice vid, bro. Keep rockin'

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  7 месяцев назад

      Appreciate it! and thanks for the sub 🍕🍕🚀

  • @jessicamontoya9765
    @jessicamontoya9765 Год назад

    Hi, I accidentally ripped the cable for the digitiser connection. The one you unplugged first on 3:20-3:27. Any idea on how to fix it? Or do you know where could I get a spare one?

  • @Juice572
    @Juice572 2 года назад

    Can you post your soldering station so I can purchase one for myself?

  • @driveventures7445
    @driveventures7445 2 года назад

    What is that second line? And I thought all those contacts had to be seperated

  • @erincastillo7251
    @erincastillo7251 3 года назад

    Can you tell me all the tools you used

  • @jarrettfullerton2580
    @jarrettfullerton2580 Год назад

    The pads on the board must be soldered desperately right? They can't be tied together...honestly looks like some are just ruining a long bead and tying them together

  • @Sum1Fishy
    @Sum1Fishy Год назад +1

    my kids damaged it so rather than doing the repair, I did a hack job. I cut the actual battery cable and tunneled it out where I soldered a round headphone jack and wired a charger to a headphone plug. now they charge it directly to the battery 🤣 they haven't broke it either in a year. My buddy got his son's repaired. Lasted 2 months and it needed repair again.

  • @harrisonrodriguez7414
    @harrisonrodriguez7414 10 месяцев назад

    @JoseMoralesTech what heat/airflow ratio are you using here?

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  10 месяцев назад

      To remove between 50/70 air and 350 °C to 400 °C , all rework stations are set different so find the right settings for you using this numbers

  • @danbass6710
    @danbass6710 Год назад

    Does someone have a link to the heat gun used at 9:26 or a comparable one?

  • @andrersanchez
    @andrersanchez Год назад +1

    Hello there, what temperature did you use to desolder? Fahrenheit or Celsius?

  • @thephily7432
    @thephily7432 Год назад

    Why didn't you change the thermal paste? Hope this is your personal console.

  • @godsendme1194
    @godsendme1194 2 года назад +2

    Hey man currently working on one but im scare to burn it...😰 what kind of torch are good to take the port out... I'm using a lighter torch I haven't damaged nothing but seen you had a different one can you help or anyone here !

  • @rsin1991
    @rsin1991 Год назад

    Can I use a regular heat gun?

  • @asteffenson88
    @asteffenson88 Год назад +1

    Question: when you added solder to the entire section of connection pins, how does that not just attach all pins together essentially forming one big connection and frying the mother board when plugged in?

    • @davidandreozzi7339
      @davidandreozzi7339 Год назад

      Adding Flux first will allow the solder to attach to each individual pin rather than one solid strip of solder which would fry the board.

    • @jarrettfullerton2580
      @jarrettfullerton2580 Год назад

      I was wondering the same thing. If you watch him, it looks like he just lays a lond bead of solder covering all the pins...maybe it's just the view,but they appear soldered together

    • @jarrettfullerton2580
      @jarrettfullerton2580 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/0b_AA7uj388/видео.html
      I think it's like what this guy does ..but I didn't see the current guy wick up excess solder as I thought he would

  • @Madigon
    @Madigon Год назад +3

    The solder on my board was heavily corroded and I ended up having to add solder/flux over and over until I could get it clean enough to remove the old stuff. By the time I was done one of the board pins had come off. Maybe if it had been a cleaner board this would have worked, but you're leaving out major details such as gun temp and flow rate that is helpful.

    • @SteveOnStar
      @SteveOnStar Год назад +1

      I had two of the upper right pins come off as well. Luckily it appears those are unused. I hope.

    • @richardschmidt6473
      @richardschmidt6473 Год назад

      @@SteveOnStar thanks for the reply. Worth a shot to try and solder a new connector and see what happens.
      Maybe my equipment is just poor but even at 400C and low airflow setting on the heat gun the solder just isn’t liquifying to solder the pins down. How long before I should be worried I’m frying the internal traces? The flux is smoking pretty quickly so I know it’s hot but the connector just isn’t sticking even though I’ve gotten solder to stick to the pins prior

  • @papasmurfington5264
    @papasmurfington5264 Год назад

    What temperature hot air (celcius) did you use to remove the usbc port?

  • @69sexyladycat
    @69sexyladycat Год назад

    How much do you charge to change it

  • @alexsora3493
    @alexsora3493 2 года назад +2

    Nice support for the mainboard. Does it has a name? I was looking after one like that but couldnt find. About the replacement work, good and clean job. Congrats for the video

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  2 года назад +1

      I think the name of the holder is panavice , I have to doble check , thanks for the support mate

    • @alexsora3493
      @alexsora3493 2 года назад

      @@JoseMoralestech i wasnt even thought you will respond. Im impressed, keep up the good work, you just got another subscriber.

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  2 года назад

      @@alexsora3493 welcome to the family 🎉

  • @bdrembold
    @bdrembold Год назад +1

    How do you keep the solder from touching the other pins before putting the port back on? It appears that you just brush the solder across and yours doesn't appear to bridge multiple pins together? Maybe I'm using the wrong soldering iron, temperature, solder, etc? Any advise for my next attempt?

    • @hackeratore
      @hackeratore Год назад

      Hey, there! I might be a little bit late, but still. What you want to use on those situations is flux. With it, you're helping the solder's flow and it will basically work as shown in the video. For temperature, I would not go too high because that might rip off the pads and the traces if you struggle a bit and use the iron a little more. If you want a suggestion, start with 300° C and work your way up 10°C at the time until you see the solder liquify. Then, once you see it, add 10 more and try to work on it. If it's still struggling on bigger pads (Like ground ones), you can try to increase the temperature a little bit more or change your tip for a bigger one. Hope this will be helpful!

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  11 месяцев назад

      use lot of flux and good temperature

  • @felixgeier8211
    @felixgeier8211 Год назад +1

    Could someone please tell me what problem is being fixed here? Is this the fix for using a charging cable without the 56k resistor?

    • @RaidenKunii
      @RaidenKunii Год назад

      Likely one of the charging pins is busted and if you can’t bend it back down you’ll have to replace it

  • @stevenlanglois490
    @stevenlanglois490 3 года назад +2

    What temp was your hot air station set to you?

  • @micflop3394
    @micflop3394 Год назад

    Does it work on a switch lite

  • @jordano494
    @jordano494 Год назад

    How come you didn't replace the thermal paste

  • @stresss4188
    @stresss4188 4 месяца назад

    how did you know you had power? you said you saw "good numbers" where?

  • @VictorSanchez-he7vi
    @VictorSanchez-he7vi 6 месяцев назад +1

    Yo thank you for the video but looks hard .like how mmuch you charge ti fix it???

  • @ozzcar23
    @ozzcar23 2 года назад +2

    what temps did you use on your air gun and soldering iron?

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  2 года назад +4

      Heat gun 370 C° iron 350 C°

    • @ozzcar23
      @ozzcar23 2 года назад +1

      @@JoseMoralestech thanks for the info! I'm in the middle of replacing the USBC on an older switch but getting the old solder off was a hassle!

    • @davidbasara6162
      @davidbasara6162 2 года назад +1

      These high tin content solders are such a pain. Took me an hour to get all the port legs clear enough to insert a new port

  • @Focused2341
    @Focused2341 2 года назад +3

    Been trying to fix my water damaged switch. It wasn’t charging at all. I cleaned up some corrosion. Now I can get it to charge in the dock, but not with a USB-C cable. Any idea as to what I should check next? I don’t believe it’s the charge port if it’s allowing the dock to charge it. Make me think something else acts as a pass through when the dock is connected.

    • @crescentmoon610
      @crescentmoon610 2 года назад +2

      It's possible some corrosion had transferred to the USB cable you were using. Try cleaning the cable or using a different one.

    • @Focused2341
      @Focused2341 2 года назад

      @@crescentmoon610 unfortunately, I tried that with no luck. I also tried another Nintendo switch charger and it was the same outcome. I’ve come to learn that there is chip on the board that handles charging as well. What I’m thinking is that the chip distributes the charge differently to different routes, when plugged into the dock as opposed to being plugged into the wall. I’m looking into getting a multimeter to check this, but as for now I have the switch working, even if I do have to charge it up in the dock

  • @tjgalliher
    @tjgalliher 2 года назад

    What did you use to clean the contacts??

  • @brickbielstein7436
    @brickbielstein7436 2 года назад +1

    On 3:12 how did you do that?

  • @FuryousD
    @FuryousD 9 месяцев назад

    Hey i am just testing my new phone to see if a problem i have been having for ages now on my old phones youtube app is just my old phone (which would be weird as its only the youtube app it was doing it on) or something wrong with the app itself.
    Edit: it seems like it is just my old phone, dont know why its onlg the youtube app it does it on but it takes a bit to start texting (sometimes up to a minute) and it wont let me edit my comments most of the time.
    Sorry for using your video as a test, it was just the one i had open when i decided to do the test as i needed to repair my dads switch last time i was on the youtube app (which was yesterday), didn't get a chance to either because i realised i should of ordered thermal paste when i ordered the replacemwnt charging port as i have no idea what happened to the last one i bought when i needed to repair my step brothers switch lite (never again will i try thay) 😂.

  • @bah5310
    @bah5310 Год назад

    Mine charges but it won't connect to the TV. I'm guessing it's the port.

  • @I-have-someone-to-trust
    @I-have-someone-to-trust 2 года назад

    How much it cost to fix mine

  • @DaggerOneMike
    @DaggerOneMike 3 года назад +4

    No new thermal paste?

    • @CTKahuna
      @CTKahuna 3 года назад

      my exact thought

  • @FizzleFX
    @FizzleFX Год назад

    19:40 *if there is no smoke* you are good hah.

  • @KhanCassius
    @KhanCassius 2 года назад

    does a hairdryer do it? i dont have all this other stuff for soldering exept a soldering iron

  • @ziadsleiman9369
    @ziadsleiman9369 6 месяцев назад

    GJ

  • @deadpixeloc5047
    @deadpixeloc5047 5 месяцев назад

    Hardly a tutorial when you haven't mentioned temps for iron or hot air... or how long it took with hot air to remove?

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  5 месяцев назад

      Hot air at 70% air and 400 °c about 1 min to remove

  • @Dhtabyevjetbfuivvc
    @Dhtabyevjetbfuivvc Год назад

    My issue was that the screen lit up but was like black is there a fix for that

  • @taylorcooper8721
    @taylorcooper8721 3 года назад +2

    what temperature did you use ? and what flow rate

    • @joesphwarner8555
      @joesphwarner8555 2 года назад +2

      I used 230 celsius and 25 flow to warm the board for a minute then 450 Celsius and 25 flow to remove. Don’t want heat to spread to far into the board. So go in woth a lot of heat and remove quickly. Could go up to 500 Celsius but that’s getting dangerous.

    • @taylorcooper8721
      @taylorcooper8721 2 года назад +1

      @@joesphwarner8555 Thank you .

    • @joesphwarner8555
      @joesphwarner8555 2 года назад +1

      @@taylorcooper8721 even tho it’s 4 months later figured I’d leave a comment for anyone else having the same issue 😂

    • @wilwordsworth
      @wilwordsworth 2 года назад

      @@joesphwarner8555 Thanks really helpful. I got it off but my new one will not stick back on. What temp did you reattach it with? Did you use LMP solder?

  • @carterseeley1738
    @carterseeley1738 10 дней назад

    Great vidéo for a tech... im screwed. Charger port problems. Thats like 50 steps. How is this the only fix? I'm definitely not getting another switch pos

    • @JoseMoralestech
      @JoseMoralestech  День назад

      Not an easy job , hopefully they use replaceable charging port