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Solve : How to bake your Motherboard in the Oven @ 350 F? |
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Answer» This is so hilarious http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yFCFiSB2Fuk Quote How to repair a motherboard by baking it in an oven. Form another source: Quote Depending on the alloy, 100% (PB) lead melts at 620F He used to Post advice here...most was reckless. So take it with a grain of salt... P.S....i'm very tempted to remove the link and i don't know why you would even post it...It would be more worthwhile if he did a batch of brownies at the same TIME. Could you fix the title. ?How would you like me to misspell it ? ? Title corrected...Thank you. It is so funny watching him try to ruin a motherboard. Really, nobody should try this. If a motherboard needs rework, let it be done by people who know how. You Never, Never run components up to 400 F or 190 C. Most electronic devices will failure if brought up to 190 °C f. The proper way to rework a board to repair bad solder joints is with wave soldering. With wave soldering, a shallow pool of molten solder is used. The motherboard is held just above the surface. The pool is gently moving to crate a wave of hot solder that hits the component legs under the board, caucusing broken joints to re-flow and fix the problems. The components themselves stay WELL under the 190 ° of the liquid solder bath. Quote Soft solder is typically thought of when solder or soldering is mentioned, with a typical melting range of... {190 °C or 450 °F}... It is commonly used in electronics, plumbing, and ASSEMBLY of sheet metal parts. Manual soldering uses a soldering iron or soldering gun. Alloys that melt between 180 and 190 °C (360 and 370 °F) are the most commonly used. Soldering performed using alloys with a melting point above 450 °C (840 °F) is called 'hard soldering', 'silver soldering', or brazing.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solder So if ever a new motherboard and if fails to work , send it back . Never try the stunt in the You Tube Video. But I still think it was hilarious. Like the grandma that tried to dry her poodle in the microwave. Do not try it at home. BTW. The use of 'silver solder' is now more politically correct. In time electronic boards will be 'hard soldered' by brazing. No lead. Lots and Lots of destructive videos on youtube for COMPUTERS and computer components...in addition to other stuff like an idiot who put a 50 cal live shell in a microwave. But I think the most creative video was one in which someone wired up the coil of the arm of a hard drive to an audio amp and was able to play music through a hard drive which sounded very MIDI audio. This baking process reminds me of the people who tried to fix their console systems from the ring of death by wrapping the system up in towels and forcing the CPU to roast to reflow poor solder connections, which to me, I would think the CPU's would melt down/fail with permanent damage before reaching the necessary temp to reflow the solder balls to the processor. http://www.wikihow.com/Do-the-Xbox-360-Towel-Trick Things You'll Need : - An Xbox 360 with the Red Rings of Death (3 flashing red lights on the front) - 3 towels45-60 minutes to waste - Optional: A fire extinguisher for electrical fires |
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