How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • caspian
    Badcaps Legend
    • Oct 2015
    • 1589
    • Laptop

    #1

    How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

    Dear Technicians,

    I have a bad experience in soldering:
    Two months ago, I soldered the point of PJ801 (in the photo) on a laptop mainboard using flux and leaded solder. Then, I cleaned the area using pure paint thinner. I did not used any other substance. but there was still some flux residues which I refused to clean. I did this because I did not want to use too much thinner.
    Today, the customer came back. I opened the laptop and observed one side of the capacitors in the area got a dark color. Even the solder of PJ801 became dark. This is what happens to capacitors when they get liquid damaged. but the other pins of the components look shinny.
    In the photo, I noticed that the flux residues are gray-colored too. Probably, the thinner made brown flux turn gray.

    Now my questions are:
    Why have this liquid-damage happened?
    What did I do wrong in that soldering?
    Was the liquid-damage due to flux residues or something else?

    note: I do not use my isopropyl alcohol because I used it sometimes but it had the following problems:
    1- It could not clean the flux completely.
    2- It could not clean glue from the board.
    3- It leaded to liquid damage too. It may be mixed with water by the maker.
    Then, I decided to use paint thinner which is stronger and can clean flux and glue completely.

    thanks
    Attached Files
    Last edited by caspian; 03-12-2018, 01:23 PM.
  • diif
    Badcaps Legend
    • Feb 2014
    • 6978
    • England

    #2
    Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

    I always and only use 99% Isopropanol for cleaning boards and flux. It doesn't cause any damage and dries perfectly leaving no residue. IPA is hydroscopic, it absorbs water but stored and dispensed properly and this isn't an issue. I use an antistatic brush for stubborn parts and foam swabs to clean up. I've never had any issue with a board after repair and clean up.

    What's in the paint thinner you used ? there's many types/formulations.
    The customer either spilled liquid in the exact same place, or what was in your paint thinner/flux did the damage, not being cleaned properly.
    What flux do you use ? some are water based.

    Comment

    • caspian
      Badcaps Legend
      • Oct 2015
      • 1589
      • Laptop

      #3
      Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

      The thinner is colorless and is called "Instant Thinner". Its ingredients were not mentioned by the maker. It was recommended for cleaning nitro cellulose paint, clear lacquer, polyester lacquer, putty, primers, and washing industrial components. It does not seem to contain water, because it completely evaporates when I leave a drop of it on a surface.
      The flux is an ordinary liquid flux made by an unknown maker. It may contain water, but I do not know. It is pretty oily and looks like a solid paste flux that was heated and became liquid. When I leave a drop of it on a surface, it gets dry and solid after a few days.
      The flux is brown. When I pour thinner or isopropyl alcohol on it, it turns dark gray.

      I found a photo that looks like the thinner which I use.

      Any ideas on why the capacitors turned gray in one side?
      In general, what substances can make such a damage on capacitors?
      Attached Files
      Last edited by caspian; 03-12-2018, 03:07 PM.

      Comment

      • diif
        Badcaps Legend
        • Feb 2014
        • 6978
        • England

        #4
        Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

        Only you can tell if the liquid has come from the customer.
        If its not from the customer it's from you. I use genuine Amtech 599 no clean tacky flux, cleans away easily with Isopropanol.
        Perhaps when you didn't clean the board properly, heat made what was left on the board flow towards the caps and that's what damaged them.

        Comment

        • caspian
          Badcaps Legend
          • Oct 2015
          • 1589
          • Laptop

          #5
          Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

          Probably, there was no liquid by the customer.
          can flux residues damage the capacitors like what happened?
          Last edited by caspian; 03-12-2018, 03:46 PM.

          Comment

          • diif
            Badcaps Legend
            • Feb 2014
            • 6978
            • England

            #6
            Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

            Decent flux won't, neither will isopropanol.

            Comment

            • caspian
              Badcaps Legend
              • Oct 2015
              • 1589
              • Laptop

              #7
              Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

              I have to change my cleaning methods.
              If we consider flux residues that were mixed with thinner and turned dark gray, cam them damage the capacitors like what happened?
              Is it possible the instant thinner makes solder joints weak? or no such problem to worry about?

              Comment

              • caspian
                Badcaps Legend
                • Oct 2015
                • 1589
                • Laptop

                #8
                Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                Oops, I had typing mistake.
                Edition of the previous post:

                If we consider flux residues that were mixed with thinner and turned dark gray, can they damage the capacitors like what happened in the photo?
                I can think dark gray flux may be not the same substance as brown flux. it may be a harmful substance to solder joints.

                Is it possible the instant thinner makes solder joints weak? or no such problem to worry about?
                Last edited by caspian; 03-13-2018, 04:05 AM.

                Comment

                • stj
                  Great Sage 齊天大聖
                  • Dec 2009
                  • 30979
                  • Albion

                  #9
                  Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                  does that chemical feel greasy on your fingers?
                  it looks like white spirit.

                  post a foto of the label, there should be an MSDS datasheet for it.

                  Comment

                  • storm12
                    New Member
                    • Feb 2018
                    • 8
                    • United Kingdom

                    #10
                    Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                    As diif said above, best thing is to use quality flux and 99.9% purity IPA. I use amtech 559 no clean flux as well and never had problems. Since you are not sure what that thinner contains I don't think it's a good idea to use it as you don't know how it will affect the components or how the chemicals react to the flux you're using and may cause more damage.

                    Comment

                    • stj
                      Great Sage 齊天大聖
                      • Dec 2009
                      • 30979
                      • Albion

                      #11
                      Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                      amtech flux may be a problem,
                      the u.s. sellers may refuse to ship because of sanctions and getting it via china is asking for trouble.
                      probably 95% of it would be fake.

                      Comment

                      • diif
                        Badcaps Legend
                        • Feb 2014
                        • 6978
                        • England

                        #12
                        Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                        There is no problem with genuine Amtech 559, agreed most on ebay is fake, insatint is a genuine UK seller on ebay though.

                        Comment

                        • storm12
                          New Member
                          • Feb 2018
                          • 8
                          • United Kingdom

                          #13
                          Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                          I think problem might be procuring genuine amtech in Iran.

                          Maybe insat are shipping there? caspian, it might be worth asking http://www.insatinternational.com/

                          Comment

                          • caspian
                            Badcaps Legend
                            • Oct 2015
                            • 1589
                            • Laptop

                            #14
                            Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                            Thanks for all the replies.
                            Finally I found the problem:
                            I discovered that the board was exposed to a bit of water. most areas of the board are clean now. but the points that contained my flux residues, absorbed the water. So only those points were damaged on the board because those points made the water to stay. This is what happened to the capacitors.
                            The flux residues did not damage the capacitors directly. because I used the same flux and thinner on another board and it is still fine.
                            At least, we learned something.
                            Last edited by caspian; 03-13-2018, 11:21 AM.

                            Comment

                            • storm12
                              New Member
                              • Feb 2018
                              • 8
                              • United Kingdom

                              #15
                              Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                              Glad you figured it out!

                              Comment

                              • Th3_uN1Qu3
                                Believe in
                                • Jul 2010
                                • 6031
                                • Romania

                                #16
                                Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                                Never trust the customer when they said they haven't spilled anything...
                                Originally posted by PeteS in CA
                                Remember that by the time consequences of a short-sighted decision are experienced, the idiot who made the bad decision may have already been promoted or moved on to a better job at another company.
                                A working TV? How boring!

                                Comment

                                • sam_sam_sam
                                  Badcaps Legend
                                  • Jul 2011
                                  • 6033
                                  • USA

                                  #17
                                  Re: How to avoid Liquid Damage due to Soldering

                                  This is the flux remover that I use it works very good and you only need a little bit dose a lot
                                  Attached Files
                                  Last edited by sam_sam_sam; 03-16-2018, 06:31 PM.

                                  Comment

                                  Related Topics

                                  Collapse

                                  • acedogblast
                                    Guide to transplant MEC1503 EC chip and EEPROM reprogamming for T14s gen 2 and X13 gen 2
                                    by acedogblast
                                    This is a guide that I am writing for helping others to replace their MEC1503 EC chip if it breaks (or to get around an inconvenient prompt to the BIOS). This forum has been extremely helpful to me so I would like to contribute to help others. I will tell you right now that this task is very difficult to do. You MUST have experience and tools to do precision micro-soldering, BGA reballing, trace repair, and general laptop repair skills.

                                    There are some specialty tools needed to do this task. The replacement MEC1503 chips can be acquired from Aliexpress. Do not buy the bare chips as...
                                    11-02-2024, 05:13 PM
                                  • rilley
                                    MacBook Pro 13inch 2017mid (A1706 820-00923-A) - liquid damage - USBC and Display short circuit
                                    by rilley
                                    Hello everyone,
                                    I am new into this, sorry to post it here. I want to make this as a pet hobby project, as this mac is not urgent.

                                    I have (Macbook Pro 13inch 2017mid) A1706 820-00923-A

                                    My mac had liquid damage a long time ago, the connector from J8500 is damaged on pin 46 (PP5V_S0_ALSCAM_F), I guess the LCD/display panel is in short circuit, as I saw the connector from the LCD burned as well.

                                    And the resistor L4004 is literally burned.

                                    From what I see from the schematics, it does not affect any other rails, only the connection to the display...
                                    07-10-2024, 01:57 AM
                                  • mitchw
                                    MacBook Pro 16 M1 Pro Liquid Damage (820-02100)
                                    by mitchw
                                    Got a MacBook Pro M1 Pro 16'' to rescue immediately after liquid accident - I got it in less than 30 minutes after the spill.
                                    It got spilled from behind when the laptop was closed. It mostly affected the rear of the mainboard and the bottom of the LCD.

                                    I quickly took it apart and washed the liquid residue off the mainboard.
                                    The area around the UP800 had some light corrosion, but it just washed away with some IPA. Other areas looked undamaged.

                                    The mainboard got a thorough cleaning, as did the top case and LCD connectors / cables.

                                    Now the laptop...
                                    07-16-2025, 07:55 AM
                                  • larrysito111
                                    dell alienware m17 r5 LA-L761P liquid damage no image on lcd 2red 7blue runs on external
                                    by larrysito111
                                    got here a liquid damaged alienware

                                    the laptop had damage in the area of the kb9542qf2 all sorted and now laptop working and turns on but i have no display

                                    so if i start and connect usb-c display it works otherwise it is giving me the 2red and 7blue

                                    so with the usb-c external monitor is getting to bios and OS

                                    otherwise not

                                    so if it is in the os and i connect another lcd via onboard hdmi it is working no problem 2 lcds (1 usb-c + 1 hdmi)

                                    but still not the internal monitor

                                    (tested 3V and 5V going to the...
                                    06-12-2025, 04:16 PM
                                  • grimacelord
                                    Lenovo IdeaPad 5 ITL05 | LA-K321P | Liquid Damage & No Charging
                                    by grimacelord
                                    Hello,

                                    I have an LA-K321P board here that came to me for no power. Upon visual inspection of the board, I found some liquid damage around PQB13 area. Replaced PQB1, PQB2, and PQB13. Laptop will power on if the battery has a charge, but the computer will not charge the battery. USB Type C meter shows 20V being negotiated, but virtually zero amp draw (0.0100 at most that appears for a brief second about once every 5 seconds or so). Looking through thermal camera, UT1 (SN2001024YBGR) is getting hot. I have schematic, but no board view. Was hoping someone could help me get this charging...
                                    01-06-2025, 09:23 AM
                                  • Loading...
                                  • No more items.
                                  Working...