Yes never tried a cpu yet but will do as have several faulty sockets. Looking at another video the under board heater 200°c then reduced to 80°c until all the pads are clean. The top heater/blower with a fixed nozzle large enough to cover the whole cpu just and applied at the same time as the lower at 250°c. Will try and get the lower heater and modify my hot air gun and see if successful. Great video as can see the good and bad points so all good as a learning curve. Practice makes perfect 😁. Thanks
I've just had a go at this, bought a re-workstation from amazon 853aaa and it removed the socket perfectly, I had to put the bed temp to 380c to get the top of the motherboard to around 180c, put loads of flux in then I set hot air gun to 280c and it came off easy, all pads perfect, I've just put the new socket in today, just waiting on a i9 10900k to test it, I'm praying it's worked.
I wonder if slower circles with the hot air around the socket would have allowed it to desolder without melting the plastic. This doesn't look impossible surprisingly enough. Thanks!
Wonder if you put a thin aluminum or steel plate underneath tightly close as possible that way you avoid the cinging and overburn of the socket points and distribute the heat underneath evenly
I have been wondering if I can do this I have a few boards laying around I need to replace the sockets for and I wanted to see if I could do it instead of replacing the board this is a great video and I just found the channel and you have a new subscriber as I love working on electronics
100 ways to skin a cat but I found if you preheat the PCB and Socket to around 100'c and then syringe the flux around the socket it seems to suck it right underneath. Its quite satisfying to watch and a bit less messy.
Yeah I can see that would work also. When I made this video I was using a different flux to normal - I thought it was NC-559-ASM as I ordered five tubes of that, but one of them was this one and hard to dispense. At first I thought the flux had gone off, only later did I realise one of the tubes was not the same as the other four, clearly sent by mistake.
So, are you indeed living in Spain? Tengo la sospecha de que quizá Gibraltar? Anyway, thanks for the video! You got another subscriber, your content seems pretty interesting to me. Cheers!
No, vivo en Maspalomas, Gran Canaria. Hablo algo de español pero no lo suficiente para hacer videos. (I live in Maspalomas, Gran Canaria and speak some spanish but not enough to make videos)
@@LearnElectronicsRepair Nice region that one you chose (not to say less of the rest, indeed I obviously deem La Rioja to be the best since I was born and raised here -I'm human after all, I guess ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ ). It's OK that you don't use Spanish for your channel, AFAIC your channel's name and contents are in English, so it'd be weird if one would hear a "Qué pasó muyayos como están..." after clicking in one of your videos... :D Anyway, glad I found your stuff. Wish you're enjoying your life in Canarias (shouldn't take much effort to do so ^_^) Take care!
i removed a gpu on an 2008 mac book pro using a cheap heat gun. Ended up pulling up a few pads. I would add a lot more flux to the socket beforehand as it distributes and hold the heat.
im going to attempt this and proibably video it and make it my debut entry to yt. Only difference is my hot air "gun " is way bigger, looks like a turbocharger/hair blow dryer with adjustable air inlet and nozzles. plan out surround the outter bits and stuff with tinfoil sheets, folded layers creating a perimiter shield. I think you rushed this and couldve done a better job if you mounted your temp probes decent and not had then uselessly kinda dangling against the board. or atleast covered it with thh mylar tape and used a wide tipped iron at the endto clean up. it works like a squeegee
Excellent video. Very bold to have a video like this and also show us what works and what doesn't. Thank you.
Yes never tried a cpu yet but will do as have several faulty sockets. Looking at another video the under board heater 200°c then reduced to 80°c until all the pads are clean. The top heater/blower with a fixed nozzle large enough to cover the whole cpu just and applied at the same time as the lower at 250°c. Will try and get the lower heater and modify my hot air gun and see if successful. Great video as can see the good and bad points so all good as a learning curve. Practice makes perfect 😁. Thanks
I've just had a go at this, bought a re-workstation from amazon 853aaa and it removed the socket perfectly, I had to put the bed temp to 380c to get the top of the motherboard to around 180c, put loads of flux in then I set hot air gun to 280c and it came off easy, all pads perfect, I've just put the new socket in today, just waiting on a i9 10900k to test it, I'm praying it's worked.
And it works?
@@kupak9537 🍿
And it works?
I wonder if slower circles with the hot air around the socket would have allowed it to desolder without melting the plastic. This doesn't look impossible surprisingly enough. Thanks!
Wonder if you put a thin aluminum or steel plate underneath tightly close as possible that way you avoid the cinging and overburn of the socket points and distribute the heat underneath evenly
I have been wondering if I can do this I have a few boards laying around I need to replace the sockets for and I wanted to see if I could do it instead of replacing the board this is a great video and I just found the channel and you have a new subscriber as I love working on electronics
100 ways to skin a cat but I found if you preheat the PCB and Socket to around 100'c and then syringe the flux around the socket it seems to suck it right underneath. Its quite satisfying to watch and a bit less messy.
Yeah I can see that would work also. When I made this video I was using a different flux to normal - I thought it was NC-559-ASM as I ordered five tubes of that, but one of them was this one and hard to dispense. At first I thought the flux had gone off, only later did I realise one of the tubes was not the same as the other four, clearly sent by mistake.
Thermal camera is what you normally use to check uniform heat?
Also a cheap ir thermometer could be a go for the blokes like me.
So, are you indeed living in Spain? Tengo la sospecha de que quizá Gibraltar? Anyway, thanks for the video! You got another subscriber, your content seems pretty interesting to me.
Cheers!
No, vivo en Maspalomas, Gran Canaria. Hablo algo de español pero no lo suficiente para hacer videos.
(I live in Maspalomas, Gran Canaria and speak some spanish but not enough to make videos)
@@LearnElectronicsRepair Nice region that one you chose (not to say less of the rest, indeed I obviously deem La Rioja to be the best since I was born and raised here -I'm human after all, I guess ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ ). It's OK that you don't use Spanish for your channel, AFAIC your channel's name and contents are in English, so it'd be weird if one would hear a "Qué pasó muyayos como están..." after clicking in one of your videos... :D
Anyway, glad I found your stuff. Wish you're enjoying your life in Canarias (shouldn't take much effort to do so ^_^)
Take care!
Where to get new LGA 1151 socket?
please give a link🔗 please i really need it...
Here is a link...
i removed a gpu on an 2008 mac book pro using a cheap heat gun. Ended up pulling up a few pads. I would add a lot more flux to the socket beforehand as it distributes and hold the heat.
Very nice job!
Thank you very much!
what type of gluw did you use?
im going to attempt this and proibably video it and make it my debut entry to yt. Only difference is my hot air "gun " is way bigger, looks like a turbocharger/hair blow dryer with adjustable air inlet and nozzles.
plan out surround the outter bits and stuff with tinfoil sheets, folded layers creating a perimiter shield. I think you rushed this and couldve done a better job if you mounted your temp probes decent and not had then uselessly kinda dangling against the board. or atleast covered it with thh mylar tape and used a wide tipped iron at the endto clean up. it works like a squeegee
Heya, oke so whiteout a rework station this is not something that can be done by hand
100% agree only with bga station, :/
isnt that facemask just for bacteria? Not sure it filters out solder smoke ...
it only filters some... Fume extractors are the proper way.
I'm sorry, you should use a respirator in this situation -- no breathing problems then. The paper mask is really useless. AnN95, is no better.
in my opinion the motherboard after all that heating time is completely damaged
-> 23:08 We got liftoff, all systems nominal.
If that mask is not N95, it doesn't help with those fumes... trust me.
Sand is delicious isn't it?? (No)
Looks hopeless