Hey guys,
Some of you may remember years ago when i baked the 02 headlights to get them apart, i have been at it again :smile:
I have a high end laptop that i had custom built 2 years ago and the video card (HD 6990M) recently died. The LCD on the laptop was completely gone, i could use the HDMI out to a external monitor but only in VGA mode with the AMD drivers removed. I really like the laptop and it's still in excellent shape so i started looking for a replacement card but the only ones available to fit the laptop were old models from $460 to $975 that are less powerful then the card the pc came with.
Over time the continued heating up and cooling down of a circuit board can cause fractures in the solder connections of the pins they connect. I thought this may be the problem and the card would be going to the trash anyway so i re-flowed the solder on the board. The idea here is to get the solder hot enough to melt so any break in the connection is re-soldered. I removed the video card from the laptop and placed it in a preheated oven at about 385 degrees for 10 minutes. Removed the card, allowed it to cool down and re-installed it in the computer. To my surprise it works perfect again in all it's 1080P glory.
Thought i would share.
Cheers
Mike
Some of you may remember years ago when i baked the 02 headlights to get them apart, i have been at it again :smile:
I have a high end laptop that i had custom built 2 years ago and the video card (HD 6990M) recently died. The LCD on the laptop was completely gone, i could use the HDMI out to a external monitor but only in VGA mode with the AMD drivers removed. I really like the laptop and it's still in excellent shape so i started looking for a replacement card but the only ones available to fit the laptop were old models from $460 to $975 that are less powerful then the card the pc came with.
Over time the continued heating up and cooling down of a circuit board can cause fractures in the solder connections of the pins they connect. I thought this may be the problem and the card would be going to the trash anyway so i re-flowed the solder on the board. The idea here is to get the solder hot enough to melt so any break in the connection is re-soldered. I removed the video card from the laptop and placed it in a preheated oven at about 385 degrees for 10 minutes. Removed the card, allowed it to cool down and re-installed it in the computer. To my surprise it works perfect again in all it's 1080P glory.
Thought i would share.
Cheers
Mike