Successfully managed this on a Asus and gigabyte 300 series board. happy to say both are now fully working. Been trying for months. one thing that I found though is that if you also grasp the pin with the tweezers as you are heating it you actually get better heat conducted through the pin and down to the bottom to the solder.
Nice video. I managed to do this on my z97 OCF not that long ago and it works just fine. I can only imagine this board would be much more nerve racking lol. Nice job
his motherboard looks like a custom made for competition. I have seen many versions of the Rampage Extreme before but never this one. Nice Mobo.
Successfully managed this on a Asus and gigabyte 300 series board. happy to say both are now fully working. Been trying for months. one thing that I found though is that if you also grasp the pin with the tweezers as you are heating it you actually get better heat conducted through the pin and down to the bottom to the solder.
Impressive! I get nervous just having to bend cpu pins back straight.
Socket surgery is never fun, Good job.
Hello, what temperature did you use on the heat gun to extract the pin? Did you preheat from below?
Nice video. I managed to do this on my z97 OCF not that long ago and it works just fine. I can only imagine this board would be much more nerve racking lol. Nice job
@Christoph Kemmelmeier As long as you have a spare board for parts just take your time and be careful GL man!
...was that an LN2 testboard?
gratz on fixing it
good job but why do you have past all over that good board like that it's all over it by the cpu socket
Wow that's really interesting
Approuved !!! 👍
Socket don't give picture on screen even if one pin are bent or?
Nice and helpful video. Thanks
The best!
That is why PGA is better. =x
Depends, on PGA I hate that CPU comes off with the cooler.
@@LuumiJuhani but this is much less problematic thean LGA pins bending/broking! ;)
Hate Intel because they must be different they have to use defective socket