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#1 | |
I'm nuts for the place
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__________________
Curing the infection... One bullet at a time. |
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#2 | |
Grrrrrr
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Last edited by T.G; 02-03-2010 at 01:27 PM. |
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#3 | |
Jordan #2
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With a solder sucker and some flux, I could do 50 replacements in a few hours. Most tedious part would be recording polarity. |
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#4 | |
I'm nuts for the place
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Depending on the age of the machine, the reliability required and when it needs to be back up, it may be new server is required. If the piggy says no $$$, maybe buy the kit and and install it. I would wager a years' worth of cigars though, unless it's done by someone who has 2M skills and a 2M workstation, it will be an expensive failure. Those caps are a tight fit and power caps have to be done right.
__________________
Curing the infection... One bullet at a time. |
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#5 | |
Jordan #2
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I've done cap swaps on motherboards and PSU's with no ill-effects whatsoever. As long as a person cleans the through-holes cleanly with a solder sucker or wick(just be careful not to stray to other components), properly applies some flux to not burn out the components, double checks for no cold joints, and uses a soldering iron proper for the job. IE nothing over 50W with a fine tip. This should be easy as cake. |
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#6 | |
I'm nuts for the place
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![]() 1 years worth of cigars = all the Creamosas you can smoke.
__________________
Curing the infection... One bullet at a time. |
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#7 | |
Jordan #2
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![]() And I will agree that an untrained individual might not be able to do it. But technically I'm untrained aside from an intro class in college that pretty much just said don't burn your @&^# fingers ![]() I've just had a LOT of experience since then though. To me it's easy. The other day I had to solder a 64 pin TQFP microcontroller to a PCB. That's about what I'd consider moderate difficulty ![]() |
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