doesnt help much with the short lasting hardware and technical advantages over time making repairs very often more expensive than a new device. Also, repair shops should really think about their prices... thats by far one of the biggest problems, repairing anything doesnt make sense since repair shops are also getting greedy. I buy from time to time "defect" subwoofers, mostly for 10-100$ or if its a cheaper model even for free, only the way to pick them up. In nearly every case the sub was repaired in 30 minutes up to an hour with components for about 10-90 cent. And these repaired subs were sold for 200-1000$, depending on the model.... Just said, I began selling them really cheap and also in the description: "repaired/refurbished", but somehow they were going away faster than i could repair them, most didnt even ask for a better price since they were anyways hilarious cheap compared to other used ones, so i decided to make more profit out of it (i also wanted to enjoy a few for a while myself...) and still, people bought them, also if i had to wait a few weeks or even months. Its ridicilous how much money repair shops can make. Only think about a battery replacement at an iPhone.... the battery cost about 10$, probably for the shop even much cheaper, and they want something about 100$ for the battery replacement. I mean yes, i dont pay taxes, i dont have to rent any shop or so, and the few things needed like soldering station, multimeter, a few components, mainly caps and co were already there. But in the end.... repair shops could easily be much cheaper and so more stuff, otherwise e-waste, could be still reused.
Alex great job honestly I thought it was going to the trash great job my son is very happy thank you so much keep up the good work God bless you and your family🙏🏼🙏🏼👍🏼👍🏼
I've never soldered in my life and probably won't, but I know if I ever try it won't be as good as you, you make this seem so easy and quick and do it with such ease 🤣🤣 It's always a joy to watch, from the commentary, to the "better than factory" catchphrase, even down to the words of wisdom and accent, keep up the great work 🔥🔥💪
So many bad repair shops giving the industry such a bad reputation. I wish there were some standards that these so called technicians need to meet. Your skills are off the chart.
Some folks don't realize, that, after doing this day in and day out, you can see it in your sleep. A heap of it becomes muscle memory, and that is what makes your talent look effortless. Continue to show what can be done, ALEX! You Rock!
Everyday I'm learning new things in this channel. It also helps me helping my friends fixing their devices for a low fee or just a snacks. I really want to purchase some amtech from you but I can't afford it right now. But still thank you for this kind of videos sir!
I love the work this guys does. He seems very capable and is extremely honest and upfront. Being a small mom and pop business, I hope he makes it through these tough times.
I've been in the electronics repair game for decades and I still learn things from watching other people doing their repairs. Everyone has their own way of doing things too so what works for one person may not for another. This is an excellent channel, keep up the good work. 😎
This is awesome. After two repairs and each different shops and none of them couldn’t fix it. I couldn’t believe how bad of a job those previous shops did to that mother board. That’s the reason your Job quality is unique. Great Job!!!
I'M SO HAPPY I FOUND YOU GUYS!!! My PS5 fan wouldn't work, opened it up and turns out it came off the motherboard somehow. I'm paying you guys a visit tomorrow!
Actualy last 2 minutes are insane.....OMG ...BIG RESPECT SIR !!!! You fix all by yourself ???So mutch stuff to fix..Glad to see that my friend and i wish u all best, You know your work!!!
Its good to see out of 3 shops there is one decent repair shop that will go the full distance to please there customers something that a lot of the major repair shops have lost there care about over the years ..
this is a tough job, my father is a surgeon and I'm a researcher so I understand the difficulty and the artistic touch of this work. I truly enjoy and appreciate such hand skills at a mico and nano level on logic boards. godspeed
I’ve been in the business for what maybe 8-10 years. Most repair shops don’t do good work. They give the repair industry a bad name. I do this same type of repairs as Alex and I can honestly say “I don’t know how these businesses (competitors) stay in business.” Most use really shitty parts and a lot of them don’t know what they’re doing.
It's time there was a standard worldwide for people who do electrical repairs, much like mechanics/motor technicians with cars. Anyone who does any soldering on other people’s property needs to be able to guarantee that work, not make it look like they gave it to their dog as a chew toy. I’m a rank amateur of the lowest order and even I would leave a board in the same state as that one when you received it. It’s too easy for anyone to call themselves a repair shop when they have no idea at all. Very well done saving it, like all very skilful people you make it look easy.
I think Northridge fix has the best content I have ever seen cause you do repair so many things which is absolutely incredible much love from sendom computer's (Nigeria)
My goodness, you and your family are really the top deal in USA to repair this kind of stuff but you should really have someone more to help you there to solder. You are truly an inspiration and i wish i could afford a microscope and a nice workplace to begin micro soldering. All the best to you and your family 😃
Bro your work is impressive. I wish I would’ve learned how to do these things instead of being lazy… This looks so complicated, but you make it seem so damn easy!
Thank you for the video used it to fix an hdmi port and a broken fan connector. Wish I could add pictures. Been a long time fan. Keep up the great work.
In the last 10 years I had 5 phones (Samsung Galaxy S2, Samsung Galaxy Note 3, Samsung galaxy a3 2016, Xiaomi redmi 5 pro, Samsung galaxy s9 plus), 5 videocards (GTX 660, GTX 760, GTX 970, GTX 1060, GTX 1070), 3 tablets (all samsung), 3 laptops (1 ASUS and 2 Acer). From all this, only Acer laptop died due to a burnt small capacitor. I've fixed it myself. I cannot imagine how people must abuse their hardware, that you get so many repair requests. Furthermore, I'm still impressed by the fact that you actually have to deal (to talk) with these people, who cannot take care of their stuff properly. This job is not an easy one. One must have a lot of nerves.
umm..... ofc when you change your phones, notebooks and graphics cards like underwear.... My phone is 6, soon 7 years old (iPhone SE 2016), before i had a early iPhone long ago and between a garbage Samsung phone (Galaxy S2) My notebook is 11 years old ... MacBook Pro 15" 2010. But i have also a "replacement", a new, fat and heavy gaming notebook. So still, my notebook is the 2010 MBP, i see the gaming notebook more as a desktop replacement. My graphics card i used until some months ago was a GTX 1070 (since also about 6, 7 years!), but i sold it for a higher price i paid in 2016, so a good deal xD Only your videocards..........660 to 760 was a useless upgrade, the 970 was ofc "great", but why a 1060 then? And why tf you would upgrade from a 1060 to a 1070? I also had a 1060 6GB for one day, but i sent it back the next day and ordered a 1070 because..... the 1060 was too weak somehow. Would you use your things longer, i bet you would have encountered much more deaths of your hardware. Even my 2009 MacBook Pro once broke into 2 halfes apart in about 2013. Not my fault, the heat of the fan exhaust weakened the glue holding screen and bottom together, luckily fixed in the 2010 model. But even my 2010 MacBook Pro "died" in 2019, but it was as with your Acer.... a bad cap for the GPU power supply, replaced it and voila, no GPU errors anymore and it was working fine as meant to be with the dedicated GPU. Ohh and btw, smartphones barely die, mostly they are getting that old that they are useless and/or the batteries performance is getting very poor and replacing doesnt make sense anymore so its getting thrown in the trash. Pretty much the same for GPUs (normally xD) aslong they are constructed well (= proper cooling, proper contact of the VRam, VRMs), they barely fail if at all. I only lost one GPU in my whole history of about 10 GPUs (from 1999 to 2016), it was a Geforce 8800 GT and it only broke because the manual fan control/curve somehow regret to work properly while gaming and the GPU overheated that heavily so partially the VRam desoldered. Could "repair" it 2x with baking in the oven, but since it needed 100% fanspeed and a GPU well below about 65 degree C to be stable, it was time to throw away. And this job is pretty easy, especially when you are interested in working on PCBs and finding the problem and so a solution to fix. I personally get cheap, broken subs for free or buy for typically 10-100$, in 99% of the cases the Class D amp has one or maximum a few bad caps, easily replaced and this subs are then worth 200-1000$ depending on the model, with barely time invested and easy fixes. The most annoying part is only removing covers or tear apart a ton of sandwiched PCBs to get acess to the parts you work on, thats it.
Another job well done! I have been enjoying watching your videos. "Better than factory" is become the saying here. It is also the way I always try to work. Maybe that's why I like your videos so much. You have not only technical skill but a great work ethic. You remind me of a younger me. My old eyes have trouble even seeing some of these small components these days. So I will just have to keep watch you work while I enjoy retirement!
amazing job, however I was waiting for you to put solder mask on top of the fan connector wires and broken trace you did. It is true that nobody will even need to touch the connector, but its better to be solid.
I like how the other repair shops not only gave up on something that is seemingly a straight forward repair, they also damaged the customers item, didn't fix their damage, and probably charged the customer for it too.
Absolutely amazing fix. I joined your channel maybe a month ago and watched all your videos. Just getting into electronics and you have taught me quite a lot. Keep up the fantastic work.
Honestly, a shop like this should be named and shamed. Guaranteed the shop that did this didn't even tell the customer they damaged the fan connector Pathetic. Good job NorthridgeFix.
hi king the reason of using flux is preventing from oxidation and u do perfect but others think about its for greasy surface and i wanted to say that i have a uv timer box that when i use it i put all board vs holder in it and it works 1 min to all board and ur hands and time is free افضل من المصنع
I just don't get something. I see 11 people disliked the video. I went through all the messages to find out the reason of the dislike. The dislike i see as a window where someone has a fixing alternative which would be great to share it with us. I do not do this job but i have the knowledge about components from studies i did over years. By the way, you were late with this video today. You made me have a morning tea without repair video :).
nice work! i just did a series x with 4 torn HDMI traces the other day. tested continuity several times before reassembly and it worked the first time!
Amazing work. You saved another ps5 and one guys „freetime“. You are the man. The BTF-man😂. Very nice video, thank you. And thanks for the tour on your next jobs you have to do
Hi Alex, maybe you would consider reinforce the same case connector job with UV cured epoxy in the future? I mean relying on solder itself does not look that strong. Just a suggestion.
If it is difficult for those who work in maintenance to deal with this type of repair, is it also difficult for them to do some research on the Internet to learn how they can work on such repairs, or at least not to damage the device? Amazing work Alex, wish you all the success.
Hello great video sir am from mauritius when I see your repairs I just buy a ps5 from mauritius when your video now I use my ps5 with precautions I think some people just conect and disconnect the ps5 so much time then the HDMI port damage thanks to let people see when buy expensive console should use it carefully
Another awesome video! I learn so much by watching these. Despite all of the videos I have seen, I think this is the first one where I've seen the Big Boss! Keep up the great work!!
dear sir. You seem to be a wiz at your craft. I use tweezers quite often my self. i have found that the opening can be manually changed to easy widen the pinch. you will need to use a perfect wedge to insert in the tweezer and there is only so much you can widen it. However the amount of opening you can get with this wedge is quite satisfactory. it takes a few tries to get right. start off with and old pair. :=) Best regard from a dronerepper
NICE NICE NICE... I've learnt so much from you. So now I can do awesome job too. Hope you always good. Thank you my "Suhu" hehe. that means "teacher or trainer".
Yet another Quality fix for certain, as ive mentioned I have purchased the real nice tweezers / blue with trangle holes in the handle and it totally rocks for SMD parts. I do alot of ch340C and E's for robotics projects. I will be purchasing other tweezers from the shop to make my life easier most likely with some flux also as yes it is the best.
If you are a PS5 owner or Xbox owner think twice before you go to repair shop. Make sure you do your research on where you take your system. I would personally take it with Northridgefix because with his experience and expertise with mircosolder best. Each repair is different so make sure you do your research on your local repair shops 👌
love the videos, been binge watching them as of late, one thing to point out at 7:00 you mentioned how the ps5 is "a vertical console" this is both true and not true, at its core design its designed to be a horisontal console, however it has the base plate that screws in on the bottom that comes stock in the box along with the console which allows for vertical placement without scratching the panels etc. bit of usless information i know, thought id mention it anyway :P hope you and everyone else has a good day.
I made my own flux... Just took some pine sap, and dissolved it in some 99% isopropanol and then filtered out all the solid bits with a coffee filter... Not the best stuff but it's a hell of a lot better than using nothing, and it's FREE
Guys i never have my console vertical. yes its nice if u wanna present it, but for daily or weekly use i ALWAYS have it horizotnal. Great fix my friend. I love how wicks cleans up the soilder on the power headers. very nice i always wanted to know how to fix traces on pcb's. good to know
So may devices needing repair. Imagine how many others are just thrown away. If only there were more skilled repairers like you.
Would be nice to have schematics and SMD specs too, to make the repair of those that are in more reliable, wouldn't it?
Alas!
doesnt help much with the short lasting hardware and technical advantages over time making repairs very often more expensive than a new device.
Also, repair shops should really think about their prices... thats by far one of the biggest problems, repairing anything doesnt make sense since repair shops are also getting greedy.
I buy from time to time "defect" subwoofers, mostly for 10-100$ or if its a cheaper model even for free, only the way to pick them up. In nearly every case the sub was repaired in 30 minutes up to an hour with components for about 10-90 cent. And these repaired subs were sold for 200-1000$, depending on the model....
Just said, I began selling them really cheap and also in the description: "repaired/refurbished", but somehow they were going away faster than i could repair them, most didnt even ask for a better price since they were anyways hilarious cheap compared to other used ones, so i decided to make more profit out of it (i also wanted to enjoy a few for a while myself...) and still, people bought them, also if i had to wait a few weeks or even months.
Its ridicilous how much money repair shops can make. Only think about a battery replacement at an iPhone.... the battery cost about 10$, probably for the shop even much cheaper, and they want something about 100$ for the battery replacement.
I mean yes, i dont pay taxes, i dont have to rent any shop or so, and the few things needed like soldering station, multimeter, a few components, mainly caps and co were already there. But in the end.... repair shops could easily be much cheaper and so more stuff, otherwise e-waste, could be still reused.
I wish I was able to buy some broken electronics to try and fix them. I have no idea where to get my hands on any unfortunately.
@@m.e.h.8304 ebay and Facebook marketplace
@@m.e.h.8304 i know techtronics fix buys them off ebay
Alex great job honestly I thought it was going to the trash great job my son is very happy thank you so much keep up the good work God bless you and your family🙏🏼🙏🏼👍🏼👍🏼
How do I get him to do some work for me? I have a rtx 3090 going out, I need help!
@@nicholasvetitoe2538 send it to hil. He did the same graphics card on another video. Send it to him and he’ll try to repair it.
@@nicholasvetitoe2538 how could ur 3090 fuck up so quick?
@@pumpkin4391 3090s tend to do that
Very kind words
If there is one thing I’ve learned from watching Alex, it is send it to him in the first place. Not the last place.
I've never soldered in my life and probably won't, but I know if I ever try it won't be as good as you, you make this seem so easy and quick and do it with such ease 🤣🤣
It's always a joy to watch, from the commentary, to the "better than factory" catchphrase, even down to the words of wisdom and accent, keep up the great work 🔥🔥💪
Nothing better than watching a real professional doing great work.
So many bad repair shops giving the industry such a bad reputation. I wish there were some standards that these so called technicians need to meet. Your skills are off the chart.
Some folks don't realize, that, after doing this day in and day out, you can see it in your sleep. A heap of it becomes muscle memory, and that is what makes your talent look effortless. Continue to show what can be done, ALEX! You Rock!
That's very technical, i don't know if you realize that, the way you're doing it is smooth, no stress, no hesitancy, that's just wholesome
Everyday I'm learning new things in this channel. It also helps me helping my friends fixing their devices for a low fee or just a snacks. I really want to purchase some amtech from you but I can't afford it right now. But still thank you for this kind of videos sir!
Really admire your passion to fix things. It reminds me of myself.
Much love from Africa, Nairobi, Kenyai, As an electrical engineering student, I must say that I love your work! Kudos!!!
I love the work this guys does. He seems very capable and is extremely honest and upfront. Being a small mom and pop business, I hope he makes it through these tough times.
He’s not long posted about buying a $1.4m house. I think he’s doing alright.
He’s not long posted about buying a $1.4m house. I think he’s doing alright.
I've been in the electronics repair game for decades and I still learn things from watching other people doing their repairs. Everyone has their own way of doing things too so what works for one person may not for another. This is an excellent channel, keep up the good work. 😎
This is awesome. After two repairs and each different shops and none of them couldn’t fix it. I couldn’t believe how bad of a job those previous shops did to that mother board. That’s the reason your Job quality is unique. Great Job!!!
I'M SO HAPPY I FOUND YOU GUYS!!!
My PS5 fan wouldn't work, opened it up and turns out it came off the motherboard somehow. I'm paying you guys a visit tomorrow!
Actualy last 2 minutes are insane.....OMG ...BIG RESPECT SIR !!!! You fix all by yourself ???So mutch stuff to fix..Glad to see that my friend and i wish u all best, You know your work!!!
I can’t believe I threw my PlayStation 4 board away. I didn’t realize once the leads are ripped that you could fix it. Thank you for all you show us.
Its good to see out of 3 shops there is one decent repair shop that will go the full distance to please there customers something that a lot of the major repair shops have lost there care about over the years ..
The first time i see, you lose one connector pin, but no problem and soldering twice for the first time. Great job.
I really love to hear "Better than the factory condition" and "The job is done".
this is a tough job, my father is a surgeon and I'm a researcher so I understand the difficulty and the artistic touch of this work. I truly enjoy and appreciate such hand skills at a mico and nano level on logic boards. godspeed
Man I couldnt stop watching...so glad I found this channel. Glad to see there are people who still know this trade and have the skill you have.
Rally great to see someone who is direct and professional. Really great work and some fixes are showing amazing skills but also great intelligence.
Amazing combination of skill and professionalism.
What kind of repair shop that doesnt know how to repair things? Good thing we have northridge fix to save the day great.
I’ve been in the business for what maybe 8-10 years. Most repair shops don’t do good work. They give the repair industry a bad name. I do this same type of repairs as Alex and I can honestly say “I don’t know how these businesses (competitors) stay in business.”
Most use really shitty parts and a lot of them don’t know what they’re doing.
It's time there was a standard worldwide for people who do electrical repairs, much like mechanics/motor technicians with cars. Anyone who does any soldering on other people’s property needs to be able to guarantee that work, not make it look like they gave it to their dog as a chew toy. I’m a rank amateur of the lowest order and even I would leave a board in the same state as that one when you received it. It’s too easy for anyone to call themselves a repair shop when they have no idea at all.
Very well done saving it, like all very skilful people you make it look easy.
I think Northridge fix has the best content I have ever seen cause you do repair so many things which is absolutely incredible much love from sendom computer's (Nigeria)
My goodness, you and your family are really the top deal in USA to repair this kind of stuff but you should really have someone more to help you there to solder.
You are truly an inspiration and i wish i could afford a microscope and a nice workplace to begin micro soldering. All the best to you and your family 😃
Loving this so much. No dumb bullshit and trying too hard to be funny, just honest work, helpful explanations and a sincere man doing his best.
Great! Easy fix for you. The world needs more skilled repair experts like you!
From last few weeks we are not listing the magical words from you
Solid .super solid..
Love from 🇮🇳 india
It’s great to see all these devices getting fixed and not just thrown in the bin. Keep it up from 🇦🇺
Bro your work is impressive. I wish I would’ve learned how to do these things instead of being lazy… This looks so complicated, but you make it seem so damn easy!
so satisfying to watch a successful repair.
Alex, you’re simply BETTER THAN FACTORY!!
Can't believe shops take money from customers and give customer devices back in even worse condition. Appalling. Great job as always Alex.
Thank you for the video used it to fix an hdmi port and a broken fan connector. Wish I could add pictures. Been a long time fan. Keep up the great work.
In the last 10 years I had 5 phones (Samsung Galaxy S2, Samsung Galaxy Note 3, Samsung galaxy a3 2016, Xiaomi redmi 5 pro, Samsung galaxy s9 plus), 5 videocards (GTX 660, GTX 760, GTX 970, GTX 1060, GTX 1070), 3 tablets (all samsung), 3 laptops (1 ASUS and 2 Acer).
From all this, only Acer laptop died due to a burnt small capacitor. I've fixed it myself.
I cannot imagine how people must abuse their hardware, that you get so many repair requests. Furthermore, I'm still impressed by the fact that you actually have to deal (to talk) with these people, who cannot take care of their stuff properly.
This job is not an easy one. One must have a lot of nerves.
umm..... ofc when you change your phones, notebooks and graphics cards like underwear....
My phone is 6, soon 7 years old (iPhone SE 2016), before i had a early iPhone long ago and between a garbage Samsung phone (Galaxy S2)
My notebook is 11 years old ... MacBook Pro 15" 2010. But i have also a "replacement", a new, fat and heavy gaming notebook. So still, my notebook is the 2010 MBP, i see the gaming notebook more as a desktop replacement.
My graphics card i used until some months ago was a GTX 1070 (since also about 6, 7 years!), but i sold it for a higher price i paid in 2016, so a good deal xD
Only your videocards..........660 to 760 was a useless upgrade, the 970 was ofc "great", but why a 1060 then? And why tf you would upgrade from a 1060 to a 1070? I also had a 1060 6GB for one day, but i sent it back the next day and ordered a 1070 because..... the 1060 was too weak somehow.
Would you use your things longer, i bet you would have encountered much more deaths of your hardware.
Even my 2009 MacBook Pro once broke into 2 halfes apart in about 2013. Not my fault, the heat of the fan exhaust weakened the glue holding screen and bottom together, luckily fixed in the 2010 model.
But even my 2010 MacBook Pro "died" in 2019, but it was as with your Acer.... a bad cap for the GPU power supply, replaced it and voila, no GPU errors anymore and it was working fine as meant to be with the dedicated GPU.
Ohh and btw, smartphones barely die, mostly they are getting that old that they are useless and/or the batteries performance is getting very poor and replacing doesnt make sense anymore so its getting thrown in the trash. Pretty much the same for GPUs (normally xD) aslong they are constructed well (= proper cooling, proper contact of the VRam, VRMs), they barely fail if at all.
I only lost one GPU in my whole history of about 10 GPUs (from 1999 to 2016), it was a Geforce 8800 GT and it only broke because the manual fan control/curve somehow regret to work properly while gaming and the GPU overheated that heavily so partially the VRam desoldered. Could "repair" it 2x with baking in the oven, but since it needed 100% fanspeed and a GPU well below about 65 degree C to be stable, it was time to throw away.
And this job is pretty easy, especially when you are interested in working on PCBs and finding the problem and so a solution to fix. I personally get cheap, broken subs for free or buy for typically 10-100$, in 99% of the cases the Class D amp has one or maximum a few bad caps, easily replaced and this subs are then worth 200-1000$ depending on the model, with barely time invested and easy fixes. The most annoying part is only removing covers or tear apart a ton of sandwiched PCBs to get acess to the parts you work on, thats it.
I really love the content. I'm so happy I found this channel!!!
One of few channels I really like 😁
Iam also love from india
Took the words right out my mouth!!!
Another job well done! I have been enjoying watching your videos. "Better than factory" is become the saying here. It is also the way I always try to work. Maybe that's why I like your videos so much. You have not only technical skill but a great work ethic. You remind me of a younger me. My old eyes have trouble even seeing some of these small components these days. So I will just have to keep watch you work while I enjoy retirement!
I am a big fan of all your content but specially those that involve running wires to fix damaged traces or connections. Thanks so much.
This is great knowledge for everyone and always inspiring knowing the person behind this is also a great person with great values.
amazing job, however I was waiting for you to put solder mask on top of the fan connector wires and broken trace you did. It is true that nobody will even need to touch the connector, but its better to be solid.
I really love that you test the products before you sell them... Guys the wick is amazing!!!
I like how the other repair shops not only gave up on something that is seemingly a straight forward repair, they also damaged the customers item, didn't fix their damage, and probably charged the customer for it too.
Amazing work man thank you
Plus 1
I've seen a bunch with broken joints but good ports. We remove old solder and reflow it. Works like a charm.
Thanks to your video i was able to repair a ps4 hdmi connector for a friend as he was going to trash it. Awesome job!
Dr. Alex performing a procedure this a.m. on a MoBo... ;) Better than Factory, patent pending..
Absolutely amazing fix. I joined your channel maybe a month ago and watched all your videos. Just getting into electronics and you have taught me quite a lot. Keep up the fantastic work.
Thank you soo much northridge am herman from kenya your channel has increased my experince on handling electronics and my confidence too
Hi i m from india .u doing soldering like awsome i learned lots from you .thanx sir.keep teaching us .realy appreciate.
Better than factory 🔥🔥👍
Great work 👍😎
Amazing work! I've always admired folks that can repair these sorts of things.
I hope someday my soldering gets to even 1/10000th of yours.
these videos are so odly relaxing/satifying ! I know nothing about, but I've been mesmerized
14:16 that shine 👌even before the cleaning, great Job Hussain.
Honestly, a shop like this should be named and shamed. Guaranteed the shop that did this didn't even tell the customer they damaged the fan connector
Pathetic.
Good job NorthridgeFix.
The amount of work to do is relentless.
hi king the reason of using flux is preventing from oxidation and u do perfect
but others think about its for greasy surface
and i wanted to say that i have a uv timer box that when i use it i put all board vs holder in it
and it works 1 min to all board and ur hands and time is free
افضل من المصنع
I just don't get something. I see 11 people disliked the video. I went through all the messages to find out the reason of the dislike. The dislike i see as a window where someone has a fixing alternative which would be great to share it with us. I do not do this job but i have the knowledge about components from studies i did over years. By the way, you were late with this video today. You made me have a morning tea without repair video :).
You make repairs seem so easy and fun as well
nice work! i just did a series x with 4 torn HDMI traces the other day. tested continuity several times before reassembly and it worked the first time!
Man, i'm learning a lot and having so much fun watching your videos (better than Netflix!). Thank you so much!
im amazed you are able to keep up with daily videos. Thank you for these, they are very entertaining and educational!
Amazing work. You saved another ps5 and one guys „freetime“. You are the man. The BTF-man😂. Very nice video, thank you. And thanks for the tour on your next jobs you have to do
Superb fix... And wow, was that better than factory! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏That soldering was precise. 👌
Better then factory wow I m waiting for
Hi Alex, maybe you would consider reinforce the same case connector job with UV cured epoxy in the future? I mean relying on solder itself does not look that strong. Just a suggestion.
WoW thats eVGA's 3090 kingpin, its like the Rolls-Royce of the video cards... please let it be your next video
You would love these foam swabs I use. They never leave fibers behind. I work as a Field Engineer on Lab Equipment.
If it is difficult for those who work in maintenance to deal with this type of repair, is it also difficult for them to do some research on the Internet to learn how they can work on such repairs, or at least not to damage the device?
Amazing work Alex, wish you all the success.
in each video you make, you make my day!
Thank you Alex
See you soon!
You would be a great surgeon
Great t shirt opportunity!
Tools of the trade:
-Flux
-Low-Melt Solder
-Tweezers
-Thick Jeans
Hello great video sir am from mauritius when I see your repairs I just buy a ps5 from mauritius when your video now I use my ps5 with precautions I think some people just conect and disconnect the ps5 so much time then the HDMI port damage thanks to let people see when buy expensive console should use it carefully
this guy is a repair god and 4 sure knows what hes doing
It's crazy how many new products need repairing
no thats intentionally so we always have to buy new stuff from this greedy companies
Another awesome video! I learn so much by watching these. Despite all of the videos I have seen, I think this is the first one where I've seen the Big Boss! Keep up the great work!!
dear sir. You seem to be a wiz at your craft. I use tweezers quite often my self. i have found that the opening can be manually changed to easy widen the pinch. you will need to use a perfect wedge to insert in the tweezer and there is only so much you can widen it.
However the amount of opening you can get with this wedge is quite satisfactory. it takes a few tries to get right. start off with and old pair. :=)
Best regard from a dronerepper
What a solid work man! I'm so inspired clean and precise!
Probably the second workshop might be the customer itself who Ended up breaking the fan Connector 🌝
The first one was Hiroshima Soldering Service?😁
NICE NICE NICE...
I've learnt so much from you. So now I can do awesome job too. Hope you always good. Thank you my "Suhu" hehe. that means "teacher or trainer".
Yet another Quality fix for certain, as ive mentioned I have purchased the real nice tweezers / blue with trangle holes in the handle and it totally rocks for SMD parts. I do alot of ch340C and E's for robotics projects. I will be purchasing other tweezers from the shop to make my life easier most likely with some flux also as yes it is the best.
I like watching your repairing video man, new subscriber here from Indonesia. Sorry for bad english.
Moving the fan connector to the back was a very good 👍 idea 💡 job well done
If you are a PS5 owner or Xbox owner think twice before you go to repair shop. Make sure you do your research on where you take your system. I would personally take it with Northridgefix because with his experience and expertise with mircosolder best. Each repair is different so make sure you do your research on your local repair shops 👌
I watch every day! Love it!!! Greetings from Germany! Apply some Flux and the job is done. Better then factory :-)
i'm always happy for the devices that was fixed :)
I would love to see more GPUs. Please make a vid of the 3090 kingpin repair.
50 minutes in LA could be less than 8 miles. 😂
@asdrubale bisanzio scooters/ebiles/moto is a winner in LA.
I will buy reasonably priced "Better than factory" merch. Great video once again.
Showed how this guy works to my local repair guy. He has shut his shop and looking for other jobs.
love the videos, been binge watching them as of late, one thing to point out at 7:00 you mentioned how the ps5 is "a vertical console" this is both true and not true, at its core design its designed to be a horisontal console, however it has the base plate that screws in on the bottom that comes stock in the box along with the console which allows for vertical placement without scratching the panels etc. bit of usless information i know, thought id mention it anyway :P hope you and everyone else has a good day.
You also need to make a tee shirt with “...and the job is done!”.
perfect
Why not sending it back to Sony it has 2 year warranty and this isn't out for 2 years
Better than factory as always!!
imagine this as tv show, half hour 5 days a week episodes. you could attract some more people.
I have learned so much from watching you. Thank you so much for the videos and keep them coming. You’re a Master at your craft.
I could watch this stuff all day, Really amazing skill.
I made my own flux... Just took some pine sap, and dissolved it in some 99% isopropanol and then filtered out all the solid bits with a coffee filter... Not the best stuff but it's a hell of a lot better than using nothing, and it's FREE
Totally worth the drive up to Northridge if I ever need a gpu fixed. You da man.
Guys i never have my console vertical. yes its nice if u wanna present it, but for daily or weekly use i ALWAYS have it horizotnal. Great fix my friend. I love how wicks cleans up the soilder on the power headers. very nice i always wanted to know how to fix traces on pcb's. good to know