Dear all,
I need to desolder a couple of surface mounted chips
from an HP71B board (actually the display drivers) since I would like
to swap these with those from another unit.
Does anybody has ever done something like this without burning
the board itself ??
Thanks for help, Alberto
Surface soldered chips (HP71B)
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11-22-2010, 11:03 AM
11-22-2010, 12:02 PM
There are several methods depending on the tools you have, the people you know and the utility of the chips you are about to desolder. This info is provided "as-is" without any explicit or implicit warranty or fitness, use at your own risk :). To not burn the board and other components you need to have some experience or know someone who does :), read below, please. If you are comfortable using a soldering iron and/or a hot air desoldering station, then it may be for you. If you don't, there are people who may help, maybe a cell-phone repair shop or similar. Someone you know may be of help. If you _do not_ need the chips you are about to desolder, the easiest is to cut (with a sharp-blade knife like a swiss-army one) the leads and then with the soldering iron and small pliers you remove the leads carefully. If you have the equipement but you are unsure, there are videos in youtube on how to rework with SMD parts, watch them and then practice with an old motherboard and so on before you touch the 71B.
Have fun,
11-22-2010, 02:49 PM
Thank you very much Alejandro,
11-22-2010, 02:51 PM
Use Chip Quik http://www.chipquikinc.com/index.htm They have a video demo on their website too. Chip Quik dramatically reduces the melting temperature of the solder so it stays liquid long enough to get all the way around the IC with the soldering iron and remove the IC before any of that solder hardens again.
11-22-2010, 05:40 PM
As a Amateur Radio person, I've been following the SDR (Software Defined Radio) kits which ave surface mounted devices. There's a lot of articles and videos where Ham's have used fairly standard tools for putting their kits together. There are a lot of videos on You Tube which show some of these techniques. While I do have an SDR kit, I haven't yet tried to assemble it - probaby will be a winter project. Not sure if these soldering techniques will work with what you have planned for the 71B, but might be worth a look. Good Luck. Bill |
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