![]() |
|
#321
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
nice! the success stories keep coming in!
|
|
#322
|
|||
|
|||
|
Worked for my 8800ultra so why not try a non booting motherboard i have
![]()
|
|
#323
|
|||
|
|||
|
Wow, now that is some story I didn't expect to find. Nice job!
|
|
#324
|
|||
|
|||
|
Since soldering is my everyday job I thought I'd ring in.
I work for Esterline in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho and I see electronics all day. 4 SMT lines, 4 Selective Soldering lines, and countless 2nd Operation and Final Assembly lines. I'm amazed this trick works so well. Usually reflowing of solder (specifically lead free which is my specialty on Selective Soldering line #1) requires some sort of flux, oa (organic acid, water-soluble) or no-clean, in order to reflow properly. Using a home oven is ghetto at best but hey, if it works it works and its free!! Just be careful at how high of temperature you guys use. I hear a lot of arguing in here about what solders reflow at certain temps. I can say with confidence that lead solder will flow at 190°C and lead free will flow at 220°C. But that's minimum. In order to reflow properly we are talking 260°C for lead and 290°C for lead free and that includes flux application. I'm happy to hear that so many of you are having success with this. Just be careful and don't expect miracles. Last edited by Mister E; 06-06-2009 at 09:00 PM..
|
|
#325
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
. I've pretty much taken apart my 360 and planning to try this, but I need to get a hold of a t9 screwdriver to take the mobo apart from the metal tray.
|
|
#326
|
|||
|
|||
|
Count me in on those who tried this and it worked on a 6600GT that was completely dead but I hadn't thrown away. Baked it at 385 for 10 minutes. Cooled overnight and dropped into a computer. Started right up at bios screen and kept on going. I too will try it again on any board that just quits. Can't lose anything since it's not working anyway. Thanks to all.
|
|
#327
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
![]() Quote:
I think that some PCBs (especially large ones) go through hot ovens to get most of the components on, and then go through slightly cooler ovens for the ports and whatnot. So if I want to reflow the solder that requires higher temps, the stuff that works with lower temps might melt. =/
|
|
#328
|
|||
|
|||
|
thanks godman, I will try your steps
I'll do lower temps I guess since I'm not that experienced.
|
|
#329
|
|||
|
|||
|
didn't work on my old 1900xtx
and since it was broken anyways after I put it all back together I went ahead and put it in the oven again to see what would melt, surprisingly only the heatsink shroud, and the sticker come off pretty easily after that, and you know what I found under it? ANOTHER STICKER!
|
|
#330
|
|||
|
|||
|
Godman: I put the motherboard on at 200c - 392f for 8 mins and nothing melted, although the motherboard's still dead, lol.
|
|
#331
|
|||
|
|||
|
GASP!
|
|
#332
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
So 4 min is all I heated the board up b/c I got scared off from the smoke... should I have left it in there another 4 min? I keep thinking to myself that I should have left it in there... I guess the smoke and smell is part of the process... I know solder smokes when melted when I'm soldering something.
|
|
#333
|
|||
|
|||
|
Just curious godman, has your xbox 360 been working fine with no problems ever since you baked it? And did you wrap the bottom of the motherboard really well with clothing and foil, or does the bottom not matter as much?
Also, I think im going to use some rope twine that's meant for tying down thanksgiving turkeys instead of metal twine LOL. It's all i got in the house :P. Still haven't gotten around to getting myself a t9 screwdriver ugh. Thanks!
|
|
#334
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
I already have other plans. I'm going to bake it again, only this time I'm going to do this mod: Team Hybrid's Ultimate X-Clamp Fix I might BUY a few of the kits. If I buy 3 it'll cost me about $30. I have 3 xbox 360s that get the 3RLOD that I want to hopefully fix permanently. I've revived 2 of the 3 (still have to open up the 3rd), but you need to fix the mount. You see... the one I baked that lasted a week... I did the 12v fan mod, I cut out the fan grill in the back of the case with a dremel, I cleaned the GPU/CPU thoroughly with ArctiClean, I put AS5 on there, I did the X-plate mod (the original), and on top of all of this I run the 360 caseless... with the DVD player outside of the case and a 120mm fan blowing over the GPU heatsink... I have a feeling the team hybrid mod is the last solution left. If that doesn't work, I'm giving up on fixing 360s b/c they ALL come back to the same problem...
|
|
#335
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
|
|
#336
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
Apple flavor baby!!
|
|
#337
|
|||
|
|||
|
i wrapped some solder around the copper heat pipe, and just moved the torch around the heatsinks for a while on and off. i did it long enough to melt the solder and then for a few minutes after that on and off.
|
|
#338
|
|||
|
|||
! Now I'm debating whether I should just bake it first or try to get this dude I found on craigslist who fixes xbox360's with a bga reflow station. Oh I'm too indecisive!!! But thanks for all your info godman, but I might just go with the reflow dude, and hope that it might be a "permanent" fix.
|
|
#339
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
Remember, a reflow is half the battle (the easier part). The HARD PART is PREVENTING it from happening again. His reflow may fix the 360 and make it work, but remember that the engineering of the 360 is still JUNK and it WILL mess up again and any given/random moment... maybe it'll last a few months, but it WILL mess up again due to the design of the system as a whole. You have to mod something different into the system to even think you have a chance at preventing the RROD. Trust me...
|
|
#340
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
![]() Last edited by moogle; 06-10-2009 at 12:52 AM..
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|
|