Hey all.
I've done a few DC jack replacements in the past, not as easy as every single youtube video seems to make it appear, but most of them have been successful.
I've got a D531 I want to sell but the DC jack has a lot of wiggle in it, and I don't want the buyer to have to experience the jack snapping a few months after buying it.
What worries me it's one of those horrid 7-pin things Dell seem to love.
On one of these same jacks, on a Dell X1, I could not get it removed at all. Despite a rediculous amount of wicking and flux it just refused to go anywhere. Eventually I lost my patience, and took a heatgun and a pair of pliers to it. It still would not move in the slightest, as if it were bloody fused to the board or something. I did eventually get it replaced, it took about an hour, and having the board flex about 45* and spray capacitors at my face.
I did manage to reattach them all believe it or not.
I'm worried the same will happen again. My procedure is as follows:
1) Cover both sides of the jack in flux where it meets the board.
2) Melt leaded solder onto the tip of my iron, use solder wick to pull the solder.
3) Repeat for each joint.
But every time I have done this, there seems to be a tiny little bit still on the joints, and the jack refuses to budge. And I end up putting it under a heatgun every time.
I use a 15W Antex chisel-tip but I've tried a 40W iron too. Could it be crappy flux? Wick??
Any advice would be appreciated!
Cheers
I've done a few DC jack replacements in the past, not as easy as every single youtube video seems to make it appear, but most of them have been successful.
I've got a D531 I want to sell but the DC jack has a lot of wiggle in it, and I don't want the buyer to have to experience the jack snapping a few months after buying it.
What worries me it's one of those horrid 7-pin things Dell seem to love.
On one of these same jacks, on a Dell X1, I could not get it removed at all. Despite a rediculous amount of wicking and flux it just refused to go anywhere. Eventually I lost my patience, and took a heatgun and a pair of pliers to it. It still would not move in the slightest, as if it were bloody fused to the board or something. I did eventually get it replaced, it took about an hour, and having the board flex about 45* and spray capacitors at my face.

I'm worried the same will happen again. My procedure is as follows:
1) Cover both sides of the jack in flux where it meets the board.
2) Melt leaded solder onto the tip of my iron, use solder wick to pull the solder.
3) Repeat for each joint.
But every time I have done this, there seems to be a tiny little bit still on the joints, and the jack refuses to budge. And I end up putting it under a heatgun every time.
I use a 15W Antex chisel-tip but I've tried a 40W iron too. Could it be crappy flux? Wick??
Any advice would be appreciated!
Cheers
Comment