For a while now I have an old Samsung S4 Mini (GT-I9195) lying around. It doesn't boot at all, gives no response whatsoever. It has some data on it still that may be useful to me however (I don't really know, maybe some old photos). Anyway, mostly for the fun of it I want to try to get the data.
Now I'm not particularly skilled at working electronics, so actually fixing the device is something that probably will be quite difficult (if I want to do this myself). I don't even know where the problem is on the motherboard. It's probably some kind of chip that is broken, or a short on the motherboard. And repairing the old device is not worth it anyway, although I might try that later.
Anyway, lacking the necessary skills, I think my best option is to just transfer the EMMC chip to a replacement motherboard. For the GT-I9195 they run quite cheap (although they are probably used but who cares as long as it works). So for that I need to remove the EMMCs from both the old and the new board and swap them. My question is if I can just reflow the old chip on the new board. Or do I need reballing? I've never done this, so not sure if a reflow is possible when you put the chip on a different board.
A second option is, since I don't need the device working anymore anyway, to get the data from the flash chip directly. It's possible to get a new chip to practice with even: this one is the exact same SDIN7DU2 chip (datasheet) with a BGA153 interface. Since it's just an EMMC chip I should be able to connect it to a USB SD card reader. Or even simpler, I can use a simple USB drive with a BGA153 pad like this one. Even easier is a hot-swap reader, like this one, but it's quite expensive (no idea why such a thing (essentially an LGA socket for a BGA153 chip) should be so expensive; I guess a low turnover).
As a third option, this guy here did something even more impressive: He just looked at the schematics and simply connected wires to hook up to the chip to his computer while still on the motherboard. However, I cannot find any schematics. (Does anyone have them for the GT-I9195?) I've even seen people solder tiny wires to the EMMC, but that is far beyond my capability I think (and I don't have the tools).
So I think I'm gonna go ahead with option 1 and buy a replacement motherboard and transfer the chip. I wonder if people agree that's the way to go under these circumstances? I'd be grateful for any comments or guidance from experts. And some help along the way would be great as well.
Now I'm not particularly skilled at working electronics, so actually fixing the device is something that probably will be quite difficult (if I want to do this myself). I don't even know where the problem is on the motherboard. It's probably some kind of chip that is broken, or a short on the motherboard. And repairing the old device is not worth it anyway, although I might try that later.
Anyway, lacking the necessary skills, I think my best option is to just transfer the EMMC chip to a replacement motherboard. For the GT-I9195 they run quite cheap (although they are probably used but who cares as long as it works). So for that I need to remove the EMMCs from both the old and the new board and swap them. My question is if I can just reflow the old chip on the new board. Or do I need reballing? I've never done this, so not sure if a reflow is possible when you put the chip on a different board.
A second option is, since I don't need the device working anymore anyway, to get the data from the flash chip directly. It's possible to get a new chip to practice with even: this one is the exact same SDIN7DU2 chip (datasheet) with a BGA153 interface. Since it's just an EMMC chip I should be able to connect it to a USB SD card reader. Or even simpler, I can use a simple USB drive with a BGA153 pad like this one. Even easier is a hot-swap reader, like this one, but it's quite expensive (no idea why such a thing (essentially an LGA socket for a BGA153 chip) should be so expensive; I guess a low turnover).
As a third option, this guy here did something even more impressive: He just looked at the schematics and simply connected wires to hook up to the chip to his computer while still on the motherboard. However, I cannot find any schematics. (Does anyone have them for the GT-I9195?) I've even seen people solder tiny wires to the EMMC, but that is far beyond my capability I think (and I don't have the tools).
So I think I'm gonna go ahead with option 1 and buy a replacement motherboard and transfer the chip. I wonder if people agree that's the way to go under these circumstances? I'd be grateful for any comments or guidance from experts. And some help along the way would be great as well.

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