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Old 17-09-2021, 07:31 PM
DJT (David)
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DJT is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Sydney
Posts: 1,452
Hi Greg
Thanks for the detailed response. Will thanks a look as well. How hard can it be!

Quote:
Originally Posted by gregbradley View Post
Hi David,

I recently damaged a USB 2.0 port on my mount by accidentally tripping on a cable.

I found a good You Tube video on how to replace it. I bought a new soldering iron, some USB 2.0 vertical ports (most are horizontal this one was standing up). I bought some USB ports (I have quite a few if you want one, they are hard to find, ebay has them).

I removed the circuit board from the mount making marks where plugs had to go in a certain orientation.

I then desoldered the remains of the old port and cleaned up the 4 little metal holes in the circuit board plus the 2 side holes which take the tabs that hold the port in.. You heat the hole until the solder melts then ream it out clean using a pointed toothpick. Repeat until clean.

Then test fit the new port and make sure it fits. I then soldered the new port in with the fine soldering iron I got from Jaycar with fine wire solder wire plus some flux to make the solder take.

Took about half an hour and it works just like new.

I can probably find the you tube video that showed how to do it if you want.

I did replace a broken usb 2.0 port once before and messed it up by going too hard in removing the solder. I had to get a replacement circuit board which wasn't that expensive really. This time I had a fine soldering iron with a temperature control knob and I used a solder remover tool, like a little manual suction pump.

If this all sounds a bit daunting then its best to get a local electronics guy to do it as they use soldering irons all the time I imagine.

Greg.
Hi Steve
Thanks for the heads up on Gootwick

Much appreciated.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pepper View Post
Get gootwick. Gootwick is fine copper braid is the best for removing solder. Sucks it all up and leaves everything clean. Much much easier than a vacuum sucker.
Sit it on the solder you want to remove and press your iron on top.
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