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Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : totally give up

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Warpspeed
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Joined: 09/08/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 4406
Posted: 11:11pm 28 Nov 2017
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Almost anything works, from silicone sealer to the wife's nail polish.
The very few times I need to do this, I can usually scrounge something.
Cheers,  Tony.
 
djuqa

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Joined: 23/11/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 447
Posted: 11:41pm 28 Nov 2017
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Another thing that worked for me.
I got the MONGREL 44pin PIC32 and Crushed it between the jaws of my pliers.
"Fixed" it permanently.
Only Pre-SOLDERED/ Assembled / Working / Cheap development/Project boards from now on.
I don't have the time, patience, desire, motivation to bother with something when a pre-made, cheap, ARDUINO board is available for a few bucks.
I have ordered 2 explore28 pre-assembled from Richtech, not their Explore64 kit which is not even pre-programmed with MMbasic (my 2 SiliconChip kits were).
MMbasic is good (I have 13 DuinoMites & Maximites),but C++/C via the Arduino IDE is just as OK to program.

Edited by djuqa 2017-11-30
VK4MU MicroController Units

 
Warpspeed
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Joined: 09/08/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 4406
Posted: 01:09am 29 Nov 2017
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[quote]I got the MONGREL 44pin PIC32 and Crushed it between the jaws of my pliers.
"Fixed" it permanently.[/quote]
All those little bent and broken binary 0's and 1's in there, never to be programmed again.
Cheers,  Tony.
 
djuqa

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Joined: 23/11/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 447
Posted: 02:05am 29 Nov 2017
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The magic smoke had already left the building so the binary electrons would have starved anyway.

VK4MU MicroController Units

 
Azure

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Joined: 09/11/2017
Location: Australia
Posts: 446
Posted: 02:14am 29 Nov 2017
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Are (were) they MM+ 64 LCD Backpacks or Explorer 64 PCB's?
 
djuqa

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Joined: 23/11/2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 447
Posted: 02:17am 29 Nov 2017
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the explore64 kits from SiliconChip (Rob Rozee design)

VK4MU MicroController Units

 
redrok

Senior Member

Joined: 15/09/2014
Location: United States
Posts: 209
Posted: 04:24am 29 Nov 2017
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Azure
  Azure said   I remember back in the day when I was involved in mass PCB production.

For SMD parts they used to use a tiny droplet of something like a locktite before placing the components.

Held part in place but could still be removed for repair/rework later if needed.
That stuff was essentially a type of RTV that contained a high percentage of solvent. A small dot of the stuff was placed under the chip along with the solder paste.

After the solvent evaporated the dot shrank in size causing tension and pulled the chip down. When the board went into the reheat oven the solder paste melted and the leads, now under tension, squeezed the solder connection together. That system was
flawless.

redrok
 
bristan8
Newbie

Joined: 13/11/2017
Location: Australia
Posts: 16
Posted: 11:39pm 30 Nov 2017
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There is no way I can hold a smd and solder

it so I made up the device in the photo. I roughly position the device under the pin, clamp it slightly , then position it accurately. I fully clamp it using the pcb holder screw which I leave about a quarter turn from fully tight. Clamping with the screw alone rotates the device out of position. I put the point of the iron on the pin of the smd and then use RC solder applied directly to the pin. It works quite well.
 
Boppa
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Joined: 08/11/2016
Location: Australia
Posts: 816
Posted: 11:09am 01 Dec 2017
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I used to both make and repair smd pcbs for use in the mining industry, for single component use (replacing or first use) I just put flux on the pads, a tiny dab of superglue applied with a pin to the body of the component and place in position, then solder
You sometimes got a bit of a whiff of melting superglue, but as I was working with extractors, didnt particularly care much (a good fan blowing across the pcb and away from you will work just as well)
 
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