OT: Removing Electrolytic cap residue

Antonio Carlini a.carlini at ntlworld.com
Tue Apr 5 12:41:19 CDT 2005


Jules Richardson wrote:

> If the motherboard is "valuable" in some way (containing the
> right slot layout for the user, or having a decent BIOS, or
> onboard SCSI or something) then one option might just be to
> replace the damaged PCI slot.
> 
> I've never tried this, but it can't be much harder than
> snipping a dead IC from a board, cleaning everything up, and
> replacing. Either buy a new PCI socket from a component place,
> or try removing one from a dead motherboard. I've never tried
> the latter (only with ISA sockets) - but a blowtorch on the
> underside of the donor board might do the trick without
> damaging the PCI slot.... 

I've removed a few ISA and PCI slots using a hot-air gun.
My success rate for ISA was quite good but PCI was less good:
I did salvage a few but most of the time part of the socket
also melted and one or more connectors moved.

I was doing this "just because I could" (I was scrounging 
other bits at the time) so I don't know whether the 
salvaged ISA or PCI slots would have worked again.

A blow-torch seems even more destructive than a hot air gun!

Antonio


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Antonio Carlini arcarlini at iee.org






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