Hello everyone,
I’ve run into an issue after working with a laptop BIOS chip and wanted to get some advice.
I desoldered the BIOS chip using hot air and then read its contents with a CH341 programmer (only a read, no write or erase was done). The .bin file was not modified at all. After soldering the chip back, the laptop now no longer powers on.
For clarity:
No surrounding components were touched during the process.
All pads were checked with test points and were confirmed OK.
My question is:
Is it possible that the chip was damaged by the hot-air process in such a way that it still allows a successful read in the programmer but doesn’t work correctly on the motherboard?
Has anyone seen failure modes like this (e.g., weakened pins, internal damage, heat stress, etc.)?
What precautions or recommended temperature ranges do you suggest for safely removing and resoldering these chips?
Any advice or shared experience would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance!
I’ve run into an issue after working with a laptop BIOS chip and wanted to get some advice.
I desoldered the BIOS chip using hot air and then read its contents with a CH341 programmer (only a read, no write or erase was done). The .bin file was not modified at all. After soldering the chip back, the laptop now no longer powers on.
For clarity:
No surrounding components were touched during the process.
All pads were checked with test points and were confirmed OK.
My question is:
Is it possible that the chip was damaged by the hot-air process in such a way that it still allows a successful read in the programmer but doesn’t work correctly on the motherboard?
Has anyone seen failure modes like this (e.g., weakened pins, internal damage, heat stress, etc.)?
What precautions or recommended temperature ranges do you suggest for safely removing and resoldering these chips?
Any advice or shared experience would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance!
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