Hi there Buddy! I Love your repair videos, I've watched them all and you've actually helped me resolved a couple issues already. I would really love to see how difficult it is for you to replace a defective CPU socket due to too many bent pins (RE: Intel Socket LGA) and even an AM4 socket, like the Gigabyte B550 you tried that had a shorted pin at the bottom left corner that corresponded to a memory trace. I am sure you can manage it from what I have seen on your video posts. This would be a great video and could help me as I have an ASUS ROG STRIX Z490-E Gaming WIFI with a bad trace to my primary PCIE x16 Slot which causes my video card to run in 4x mode. Once again great work!
@@MainboardMedic That is unfortunate to hear, I guess a very expensive infra red type PCB Heater as well as a proper ref-low for the hot air. What was you main reason of the failure was it heat distribution? I've heard that the right hot air nozzle like the kind used on a gpu core. I was going to attempt this myself but now I am thinking I will need to invest in some better hardware. I look forward you succeeding in this as I believe you have the skills to successfully accomplish this task given the right or adequate tools. Cheers!
@@MasterJediSean The main problem is a good pre heater! My main hot air station is powerful enough, but what happened was that the board did always bent to much at the socket, because the board was cold in most spots execpt the socket! So a big pre heater would be neccecary!
I though about making a custom board and order it from pcbway to make it clean, but as shown later, the SIO still needs replacement, so this sadly isnt permanent!
Nice trick replicating some of the SIO sequences with this method, some of the russian repair channels i've seen are very good at repairing these stuff and personally i would keep that motherboard as long as it's working nice job
very good frankenstein job haha
Great repair, well done, I learned something else from you, very pleased, thank you
What an awesome experiment. You did it! 555 to the rescue.
Hi there Buddy! I Love your repair videos, I've watched them all and you've actually helped me resolved a couple issues already. I would really love to see how difficult it is for you to replace a defective CPU socket due to too many bent pins (RE: Intel Socket LGA) and even an AM4 socket, like the Gigabyte B550 you tried that had a shorted pin at the bottom left corner that corresponded to a memory trace. I am sure you can manage it from what I have seen on your video posts. This would be a great video and could help me as I have an ASUS ROG STRIX Z490-E Gaming WIFI with a bad trace to my primary PCIE x16 Slot which causes my video card to run in 4x mode. Once again great work!
Hey there i would love to do that, but i sadly havnt been succsesful yet with a socket replacement! All of them failed, that i attempted so far!
@@MainboardMedic That is unfortunate to hear, I guess a very expensive infra red type PCB Heater as well as a proper ref-low for the hot air. What was you main reason of the failure was it heat distribution? I've heard that the right hot air nozzle like the kind used on a gpu core. I was going to attempt this myself but now I am thinking I will need to invest in some better hardware. I look forward you succeeding in this as I believe you have the skills to successfully accomplish this task given the right or adequate tools. Cheers!
@@MasterJediSean The main problem is a good pre heater! My main hot air station is powerful enough, but what happened was that the board did always bent to much at the socket, because the board was cold in most spots execpt the socket! So a big pre heater would be neccecary!
Very interesting video, for me especially the troubleshooting part. Maybe you can make a video about using the diagnostic card in the future?
Absolutely masterpiece!!!!
Nice debugging job! I would perhaps mount the 555 and components on a perfboard with a pin header and just hot glue it to the board :)
I though about making a custom board and order it from pcbway to make it clean, but as shown later, the SIO still needs replacement, so this sadly isnt permanent!
cpu temp -24C 😅 superIO is probably toasted and it´s a miracle the motherboard still works, Nice video btw 😊
Love it! Nice job!
where did you get boardview files
I mostly just google the Board modell nummber and then "Boardview" after that and see what i can find.
very interesting thank you
Great job 👏
Nice trick replicating some of the SIO sequences with this method, some of the russian repair channels i've seen are very good at repairing these stuff and personally i would keep that motherboard as long as it's working nice job