Wow! It is nuts seeing this unwanted mess of a board from CR getting the attention it needed to return to life, against all odds. Fantastic work, and much respect for putting in all the time and effort to get it going 👍
Hours and hours. I can only imagine that working on the board and then editing the video took an incredible amount of time. Awesome, thank you very much
That ranks as a legendary fix. One of the best board repairs I've ever watched. You brought that thing back from the grave. You have earned the sub and bell.
Congrats on repairing this board! You did a great job. GadgetUK would be proud. And screw anybody who thinks this is a waste of time. GadgetUK can tell you, most boards are able to be saved and are worth saving. Gotta give them the Rick Astley treatment, never give them up.
Nice repair - I relate to the "why wasting so much time on this?" as the reward when all works is immense! The only thing is that you end up with so many bodge wires which make the MoBo not appealing! But who cares! Well cone for the repair! The green rubber tool is indeed amazing, I got them some time ago after watching Necroware's videos. I tend to use them by hand, they work well anyways.
This may be your magnum opus, take a bow sir. That board was so wrecked only a person who had lost their mind would attempt a repair, but it sure did make some great video content!
That was quite overwhelming as the extent of the damage became evident. I'm beyond impressed that you were able to rescue this board. I don't recall anything about Shuttle after all these years but that seems like a very interesting and advanced board which makes the repair even more satisfying. Nice job!
Haha, I have a crate full of boards ...a few 486 and one HOT shuttle for p2 lol. I figured I was the only one interested in this old junk. It takes love to do this stuff. Thanks for sharing.
👌👏👏👏👏 I watched the full video, amazing job what you have done. I have a 486 computer found on the garbage, complete, only thing that I see damaged (after fully cleaning it) is PSU with sulfate. But I have a more or less functional 386 with a very good psu working, I installed in the 486 but well 😅 it only runs CPU fan. I think that some day if I get to know more about these things or with help from anyone in my city the 486 might work well, because I swear it's in pristine condition. Doesn't boot or beeps but someday maybe. Thanks for the video and greetings from Argentina ❤
Hats off. This is True computer necromancy. World be grest ifcyou could run Heretic on vlb video card. You have done a lot of work. Cant believe this board was saved from death
Incredible. Funny thing is I was showing my wife the trace repairs and explaining that I've fixed a couple of traces on a radio before but nothing like that, and she was asking if it was a rare board. I was saying that vesa boards are somewhat rare since pci came in shortly after but just couldn't convey the message across of why to fix the board. Looking forward to seeing this board being overclocked to an inch of it's life in the future. It really makes me want to get a vesa board and get my old setup back in action, as my board died but I still have all the vlb cards and amd 5x86 cpu I used back then.
Our rotary tool came with an analog foot pedal to operate it with. I highly recommend getting one of those so it's much easier to control the speed of it while working.
I love that I get a preview for the tool I have bough myself but not yet used. Bought the same Dremel and extension combo a few weeks ago, for various jobs, like also going at corroded PC cases. Seems to work f´great with the traces.
Я бы хотел сказать, что это отличный ремонт, но не могу. По тому что это не ремонт, а вскрешение мертвого, очень многие за такую работу просто не взялись бы. Хорошая работа, одобряю.
This project might give Necroware a "run for his money," so to speak. This board was definitely dead, and, sadly, I was one of those people that rejected it. I'm happy that it went to the right person.
I'd like to congratulate you to the successful repair. What gets easily forgotten is the insecurity that travels along during these long hours of diligent repairwork. You never know whether it will be fixable at all until it's actually fixed. The doubts - what if the chipset is dead anyway? It's an excercise in mental strength to put so much work, effort and hope into something that will most likely not be coming back from the dead - and in many cases actually isn't. Congratulations again. a well deserved payoff.
Incredible work with this repair! I honestly thought it was going to be a futile effort, but once again you proved me wrong. It wouldn't surprise me if you could've got away with leaving a few of those bodge wires off around the SIMM slots, since they'd just be there to connect the address/data lines to those slots. I should definitely pick up some of those rubber bits for my dremel. I always thought it was way overpowered for this kind of work, but I guess it's not so bad if you're not using a hard abrasive.
Computer Reset was right down the road from an arcade and pinball repair company that I used to work for when I was in high school. It also wasn't too far from Cyrix's old location either. I miss that place, and met Richard when he was a bit younger and CR had only been open a few years.
You are the man, resurrecting this piece of history. You tackle some of the toughest electronics repair work on UA-cam, and some really uncommon and unique stuff, too. I appreciate the rubber Dremel suggestion. I have a knock off portable unit I'll try with the rubber pads and see how I do.
Really nice work on those traces; incredible dedication! I had a 286 I was working on for doscember that took a long time to boot with bad keyboard traces too.
I SO wanted to go to Computer Reset, but unfortunately, I was broke, and had no job, so I ended up missing out on a HUGE opportunity to nab some vintage computer stuff. Still, cool video, dude. :)
Excellent work. I have one of those Techmedia VLB boards that won't post if you want to try and correct the battery corrosion on it. You are welcome to it. When I got one that wasn't working the seller sent me a replacement that worked. He didn't want the bad one back, so if you want to take a crack at it and see if you can fix it, let me know.
Thank you. I'm actually looking for a Techmedia case for a planned video. When I eventually find a case, I'd love to try to repair your spare board. Please send me an email at epictronicsyt@gmail.com
@@Epictronics1 I have three tech media cases as well, but they are all in use. I recommend seeing if you can find one of the desktop ones that has speakers built into the front of it. They are surprisingly decent sounding. I do have one of the tower cases that is not in use, but the shipping from the US would probably be life ending.
@@helldog3105 That's actually what I'm looking for too. One of the desktop cases :) Let me know if you ever see one up for sale for a reasonable price. Shipping is not a problem
Thanks for the inspiration! I also have a different 486 board, with battery damage, that I tried to repair but got stuck at the POST 14 error. Think I will try to take the SIMM slots off and keep going...
@@Epictronics1 If you could allow me a little follow up ... That PCB you tested your dremel on, (around 10:30) ... That IC just under TP10, WTH is that thing?!?
I would've got some fine stranded copper wire and pulled one out at a time, that way you can lay them exactly on the traces and they would be so thin you can put sockets on top of them. You can even put them through pin holes and there is enough room for the socket pins.
Wow, it almost seems like it would have been easier to design and build a brand new PCB lol! I admire your dedication. This would have gone into my soldering practice pile. Edit: my first and only socket 3 system had that graphical BIOS. I loved it...It felt so futuristic!
I thought it was pretty cool back in the day, too. :-) Now, while I have a bit of nostalgia for it, the normal text-mode Award BIOSes are so much less tedious to use, and usually a bit less finicky. Goes to show, though .. put a fresh coat of paint on a jalopy and it'll get looks. haha
@@nickwallette6201 I don't remember it being tedious at all but I was like 11 or 12 at the time. It was the first PC I built without help & with my own money, so I was certainly very biased & proud, blinded to any downside lol
Fantastic work, enjoyed every minute of this. I'm just about to revive a similar 486 board with battery damage and it's great to see your success before I do. Looking forward to what you do next with it.
That was some crazy damage, I think most people would have given up but you didn’t and it paid off! Interesting how that board wouldn’t even allow boot without the battery
I was happily surprised too! I thought this board had some additional faults since it was found on the workbench. I use 1N148 because they have a low voltage drop (0.72V) The original VARTA had 3.6v, but the CR2032 only has 3v. So, the low voltage drop may be quite important
Nice job on what was surely one for the scrap pile 👍 I usually use thinner wires than what you did (wire wrap size if anyone still remembers that) for running jumpers but hey it's whatever works you have on hand. After almost 40 years of doing this kind of work as a job though I'm looking forward to retiring soon. Stuff has gotten so teeny tiny anymore.
OMG dude, you're a wizard! Great job! I have an old 386 board that is kinda like this one that I gave up on, if you have a PO Box I can send it to you and it's yours to do whatever with.
This is going insanely deep. What's the next level? Getting a custom PCB and moving all the components to it, effectively building a custom motherboard? Maybe even fix a bug!
A worthy case to put it in? Like a dumpster? haha :-D Not sure I would want to use that board even now, since every crash would make me wonder whether it was just another day in the life of a VLB board running an OS without protected memory, or something wrong. ;-) But... that was a heck of a puzzle, solved. You have my respect. 10/10 on the "because I can" scale.
Ok, great thanks again. One last question - what diode did you use to prevent charging. Ok, I'll stop asking questions now haha. Keep those happy caps coming! @@Epictronics1
Fantastic job. I put a like regardless of the content. Always entertaining. It wasn't an easy task but you did it. I wish I had better eyes like I used to have ages ago, or I would try to fix a pentium board where I tried to replace the AT keyboard connector with a PS/2 keyboard connector and screwed up things. Pentium and 386/486 got expensive over the last years. They cost too much and ebay shippings aren't compelling. I wonder if there are websites that have high resolution schematics of old motherboards. I mean... an high resolution photograph of the bottom of the motherboard and top, so we could see perfectly the traces. Such sites could help us fixing motherboards instead of relying on video footage.
Thanks. There is a webpage with pictures of vintage motherboards. Unfortunately this revision of the board (R1) seems rare. I haven't been able to find any picture of it at all.
when ever you want to tin up traces try some solder wick full of solder with flux on the board pal it works fantastic plus the iron is not directly touching the board.
Just adding a diode to CMOS battery socket will drop the delivered voltage and so soon the board will lose its settings even when battery is still relatively fresh. It's better to find out where's a diode or resistor or something that has a charging trace on it and just remove that component instead.
Wow! It is nuts seeing this unwanted mess of a board from CR getting the attention it needed to return to life, against all odds. Fantastic work, and much respect for putting in all the time and effort to get it going 👍
Thanks Clint. It was super rewarding to see this board finally POST and pass all the tests!
Hours and hours. I can only imagine that working on the board and then editing the video took an incredible amount of time. Awesome, thank you very much
It was worth it :) Thanks
I thought i have already seen this video few Days ago
@@TymexComputing This is part 2
You are a wizard. And that poor, poor motherboard really should have filed a Do Not Resuscitate order in it's previous life.....
That ranks as a legendary fix.
One of the best board repairs I've ever watched. You brought that thing back from the grave.
You have earned the sub and bell.
Thanks :)
Wow I really didn't think this was fixable. You proved me wrong, and it was very impressive!
Thanks!
Man, I admire your work and level of knowledge.
Thanks
Congrats on repairing this board! You did a great job. GadgetUK would be proud. And screw anybody who thinks this is a waste of time. GadgetUK can tell you, most boards are able to be saved and are worth saving. Gotta give them the Rick Astley treatment, never give them up.
The 486 era holds a special place in my heart. I'm glad to see a happy ending for this board.
Nice repair - I relate to the "why wasting so much time on this?" as the reward when all works is immense! The only thing is that you end up with so many bodge wires which make the MoBo not appealing! But who cares!
Well cone for the repair! The green rubber tool is indeed amazing, I got them some time ago after watching Necroware's videos. I tend to use them by hand, they work well anyways.
Thanks Tony, Yeah, I tried the tip as an eraser by hand after your recommendation. it works great for cleaning up one or a few traces!
This may be your magnum opus, take a bow sir. That board was so wrecked only a person who had lost their mind would attempt a repair, but it sure did make some great video content!
Thanks!
That was quite overwhelming as the extent of the damage became evident. I'm beyond impressed that you were able to rescue this board. I don't recall anything about Shuttle after all these years but that seems like a very interesting and advanced board which makes the repair even more satisfying. Nice job!
Thanks :)
Haha, I have a crate full of boards ...a few 486 and one HOT shuttle for p2 lol. I figured I was the only one interested in this old junk. It takes love to do this stuff. Thanks for sharing.
HOW ARE YOU SO PATIENT. I would go mad and I dont know what I would do after that lol.
👌👏👏👏👏 I watched the full video, amazing job what you have done. I have a 486 computer found on the garbage, complete, only thing that I see damaged (after fully cleaning it) is PSU with sulfate. But I have a more or less functional 386 with a very good psu working, I installed in the 486 but well 😅 it only runs CPU fan. I think that some day if I get to know more about these things or with help from anyone in my city the 486 might work well, because I swear it's in pristine condition. Doesn't boot or beeps but someday maybe. Thanks for the video and greetings from Argentina ❤
Thank you :) And good luck with your project!
Can't wait to see your overclock video so I can try and duplicate your results and maybe even go faster!
You can always try! lol
Hats off. This is True computer necromancy. World be grest ifcyou could run Heretic on vlb video card. You have done a lot of work. Cant believe this board was saved from death
Thanks!
You gave me inspiration to carry on my journey into electronics repair. As others have said that's one hell of a repair. A great watch.
Thanks!
This is just mind blowing. Fully deserved win for what at times must have seen impossible!
amazing series so far! honestly i didn't believe it was possible to get this board working, glad i was wrong. those leaky batteries man... so evil lol
Thanks! Overclocking up next!
Incredible. Funny thing is I was showing my wife the trace repairs and explaining that I've fixed a couple of traces on a radio before but nothing like that, and she was asking if it was a rare board. I was saying that vesa boards are somewhat rare since pci came in shortly after but just couldn't convey the message across of why to fix the board. Looking forward to seeing this board being overclocked to an inch of it's life in the future. It really makes me want to get a vesa board and get my old setup back in action, as my board died but I still have all the vlb cards and amd 5x86 cpu I used back then.
Absolutely heroic effort in the service of retro computing! Amazing work. Thank you.
Thanks!
Congrats on getting everything fixed, it's gigantic task
Thanks!
can’t wait for you to add the rest of the ram slots, tidy up the wires, and max it out! i love this era
wow. i am absolutely speechless. a board so badly damaged, components on it disintegrated is now in a state in which it somewhat works.
Thanks. As far as I know it's 100% working now
Also that's amazing to watch you resurrect this board from probably the worst I've seen. Truly some epic PC necromancy.
Thanks!
Our rotary tool came with an analog foot pedal to operate it with. I highly recommend getting one of those so it's much easier to control the speed of it while working.
I love that I get a preview for the tool I have bough myself but not yet used. Bought the same Dremel and extension combo a few weeks ago, for various jobs, like also going at corroded PC cases. Seems to work f´great with the traces.
It is, but it's a bit overpowered for trace cleaning. When I practiced on a scrap board, it went through the outermost layer of the PCB in seconds
That was great to watch. I'm cheering this board on!
Extremely satisfying. Congrats and well done! You're definitely riding that fine line between genius and madness.
lol thanks!
Man, great job on that board! I am impressed at your repair capabilities on that motherboard.
Thanks!
Fantastic work! I was amazed to see that board POST again and at the same time so happy! I can't wait to see what comes next with it!
Thanks!
Я бы хотел сказать, что это отличный ремонт, но не могу.
По тому что это не ремонт, а вскрешение мертвого, очень многие за такую работу просто не взялись бы.
Хорошая работа, одобряю.
Thanks!
"The flexible shaft is quite a bit larger than my old tool", Mark Fixes Stuff would be proud
This project might give Necroware a "run for his money," so to speak. This board was definitely dead, and, sadly, I was one of those people that rejected it. I'm happy that it went to the right person.
Thanks :)
Don't think I've heard you so excited about fixing things in any other video before. Good work!
Thanks!
I'd like to congratulate you to the successful repair. What gets easily forgotten is the insecurity that travels along during these long hours of diligent repairwork. You never know whether it will be fixable at all until it's actually fixed. The doubts - what if the chipset is dead anyway?
It's an excercise in mental strength to put so much work, effort and hope into something that will most likely not be coming back from the dead - and in many cases actually isn't.
Congratulations again. a well deserved payoff.
Thank you. I was sure I had failed twice during this project. I'm glad I didn't!
Incredible work with this repair! I honestly thought it was going to be a futile effort, but once again you proved me wrong. It wouldn't surprise me if you could've got away with leaving a few of those bodge wires off around the SIMM slots, since they'd just be there to connect the address/data lines to those slots.
I should definitely pick up some of those rubber bits for my dremel. I always thought it was way overpowered for this kind of work, but I guess it's not so bad if you're not using a hard abrasive.
Thanks! You are right about the Dremel being overpowered for the task. Even at half-speed, I had to be very careful
Computer Reset was right down the road from an arcade and pinball repair company that I used to work for when I was in high school. It also wasn't too far from Cyrix's old location either. I miss that place, and met Richard when he was a bit younger and CR had only been open a few years.
cool. What was he like?
You are the man, resurrecting this piece of history. You tackle some of the toughest electronics repair work on UA-cam, and some really uncommon and unique stuff, too. I appreciate the rubber Dremel suggestion. I have a knock off portable unit I'll try with the rubber pads and see how I do.
Thanks!
Wow great work. I have also have an opti 486 mainboard with an leaked battery and I didn't was able to do such a great job like you did
Thanks!
Really nice work on those traces; incredible dedication! I had a 286 I was working on for doscember that took a long time to boot with bad keyboard traces too.
Thanks John, I was surprised to find the keyboard controller could do that. I expected a bad crystal or clock multiplier chip.
Incredible piece of work. It was a joy to watch. Savored every moment !!!!
Thank you!
"Screw you, Varta!" 😂😂😂
:)
I SO wanted to go to Computer Reset, but unfortunately, I was broke, and had no job, so I ended up missing out on a HUGE opportunity to nab some vintage computer stuff.
Still, cool video, dude. :)
Thanks
Incredible! so good that you got it working. What a huge amount of work.
Thanks!
Awesome job ... and without schematics or extensive documentation! This was really a miracle that you pulled off.
Thanks :)
I was sure you'd give up on this one. And then you made it work! Delightful!
Thanks, sometimes I wish I would give up lol
I like your backdrop. Very scandinavian 👌
This is freaking amazing! Congratulations, a wonderful job
Thank you :)
This has been a great series. A MB with this much damage ressurected from the dead. Thank you for sharing :)
Thanks :)
DANG!!!! You got that board working!!!!!!
You bet! VARTA isn't getting this one!
Excellent work. I have one of those Techmedia VLB boards that won't post if you want to try and correct the battery corrosion on it. You are welcome to it. When I got one that wasn't working the seller sent me a replacement that worked. He didn't want the bad one back, so if you want to take a crack at it and see if you can fix it, let me know.
Thank you. I'm actually looking for a Techmedia case for a planned video. When I eventually find a case, I'd love to try to repair your spare board. Please send me an email at epictronicsyt@gmail.com
@@Epictronics1 I have three tech media cases as well, but they are all in use. I recommend seeing if you can find one of the desktop ones that has speakers built into the front of it. They are surprisingly decent sounding. I do have one of the tower cases that is not in use, but the shipping from the US would probably be life ending.
@@helldog3105 That's actually what I'm looking for too. One of the desktop cases :) Let me know if you ever see one up for sale for a reasonable price. Shipping is not a problem
@@Epictronics1 if I see one I will let you know ASAP.
@@helldog3105 Thanks!
You absolute madman! Gz on fixing this poor board! Reminds me of robocop oddly enough lol, after all it went through, it still boots and functions :p
Thanks for the inspiration! I also have a different 486 board, with battery damage, that I tried to repair but got stuck at the POST 14 error. Think I will try to take the SIMM slots off and keep going...
Good luck!
Amazing video. I'm surprised that you managed to make it work again. Great job!
your very smart man fixing that old board they are good i had one long time ago to same board as yours there
Thanks :)
I would like to point out the Trident VGA card telling all of us to Foff.... hehehe
Awesome work! I never thought that thing could be saved
Thanks!
@@Epictronics1 If you could allow me a little follow up ... That PCB you tested your dremel on, (around 10:30) ... That IC just under TP10, WTH is that thing?!?
@@charlesdorval394 That is an empty socket with a strange looking heatsink
What a crazy job, well done
Thank you
Patience level: Over 9000! ;) Excellent repair!
Thanks!
This board should be named Frankenstein.
I would've got some fine stranded copper wire and pulled one out at a time, that way you can lay them exactly on the traces and they would be so thin you can put sockets on top of them. You can even put them through pin holes and there is enough room for the socket pins.
That works great too. On this repair, I wanted to be able to move the wires around, while I was adding more wires
Holy frig, that's a CRAZY repair. God tier. Good job.
Thanks :)
Great win, it was great to watch
Thanks
Wow, it almost seems like it would have been easier to design and build a brand new PCB lol! I admire your dedication. This would have gone into my soldering practice pile.
Edit: my first and only socket 3 system had that graphical BIOS. I loved it...It felt so futuristic!
Thanks!
I thought it was pretty cool back in the day, too. :-) Now, while I have a bit of nostalgia for it, the normal text-mode Award BIOSes are so much less tedious to use, and usually a bit less finicky. Goes to show, though .. put a fresh coat of paint on a jalopy and it'll get looks. haha
@@nickwallette6201 I don't remember it being tedious at all but I was like 11 or 12 at the time. It was the first PC I built without help & with my own money, so I was certainly very biased & proud, blinded to any downside lol
Fantastic work, enjoyed every minute of this. I'm just about to revive a similar 486 board with battery damage and it's great to see your success before I do. Looking forward to what you do next with it.
This project is gonna go weird places :) Thanks
Use Rose's alloy for desoldering, it mixes with regular solder nicely and lowers melting temperature to around temperature of boiling water.
Interesting. I love that stuff for other applications, but never tried it for socket and slot removal. I'll give it a try
That was a legendary repair!
Thanks!
Congratulations on "another job well done".
Thanks!
Wow, way beyond my patience
That was some crazy damage, I think most people would have given up but you didn’t and it paid off! Interesting how that board wouldn’t even allow boot without the battery
Thanks. I think I only have one other board with the same boot issue
Can't believe you managed to get it working! Very exciting.
Q: What type of diode are you using for the battery circuit?
I was happily surprised too! I thought this board had some additional faults since it was found on the workbench. I use 1N148 because they have a low voltage drop (0.72V) The original VARTA had 3.6v, but the CR2032 only has 3v. So, the low voltage drop may be quite important
@@Epictronics1welp I only need a couple of them, so Amazon will send me like 200 for $5. Guess I’ll have enough to last me a while
@@madmanfrommars lol. I guess you need to extend your vintage computer collection ;)
Well, that was crazy! I loved it.
Thanks Bo :)
Nice job on what was surely one for the scrap pile 👍 I usually use thinner wires than what you did (wire wrap size if anyone still remembers that) for running jumpers but hey it's whatever works you have on hand. After almost 40 years of doing this kind of work as a job though I'm looking forward to retiring soon. Stuff has gotten so teeny tiny anymore.
Yeah, components are huge on these 486s compared to modern stuff. I use 30AWG wire with PTFE coating. It's easy to work with
You deserve many more subs, great job!
Thanks!
OMG dude, you're a wizard! Great job! I have an old 386 board that is kinda like this one that I gave up on, if you have a PO Box I can send it to you and it's yours to do whatever with.
Thanks :) Can you send me a picture of the board? at epictronicsyt@gmail.com
Amazing Getting that board working.
The partition label on that drive!
ADAVIS is an evil wizard from the Quest For Glory series from Sierra.
Oh, man, I wish that drive hadn't been cleaned. It probably had some Sierra goodness on it back in the day
Awesome. You have resurrected the motherboard. :)
What an amazing job! Thank you for the video
Thanks!
That looks so bodgy but it was absolutely worth it to see that board going again!
Totally worth the win!
Great video✌
Thanks!
@@Epictronics1 thanks
Well done!! What a mission 😊
Thanks!
This is going insanely deep. What's the next level? Getting a custom PCB and moving all the components to it, effectively building a custom motherboard? Maybe even fix a bug!
That would be sweet. I'd better start learning how to design PCBs
Next let's replace a South Bridge chip with a custom FPGA!
IT'S ALIVE - Frankenstein
Simply incredible repair work
Thanks :)
Thank you. I like videos like that
A worthy case to put it in? Like a dumpster? haha :-D
Not sure I would want to use that board even now, since every crash would make me wonder whether it was just another day in the life of a VLB board running an OS without protected memory, or something wrong. ;-) But... that was a heck of a puzzle, solved. You have my respect. 10/10 on the "because I can" scale.
I kinda wish I had a really bad case in need of extreme repair. That would have been a perfect match :)
Very nice job!
Thanks!
Great work as always. What brand / type of flux are you using? I use a pen, but I like the consistency of the stuff you are using.
Thanks. For new PCBs, I use a pen too. For crazy projects like this, I use AMTECH NC-559-ASM
Ok, great thanks again. One last question - what diode did you use to prevent charging. Ok, I'll stop asking questions now haha. Keep those happy caps coming! @@Epictronics1
Fantastic job. I put a like regardless of the content. Always entertaining. It wasn't an easy task but you did it.
I wish I had better eyes like I used to have ages ago, or I would try to fix a pentium board where I tried to replace the AT keyboard connector with a PS/2 keyboard connector and screwed up things. Pentium and 386/486 got expensive over the last years. They cost too much and ebay shippings aren't compelling.
I wonder if there are websites that have high resolution schematics of old motherboards. I mean... an high resolution photograph of the bottom of the motherboard and top, so we could see perfectly the traces. Such sites could help us fixing motherboards instead of relying on video footage.
Thanks. There is a webpage with pictures of vintage motherboards. Unfortunately this revision of the board (R1) seems rare. I haven't been able to find any picture of it at all.
Epictronics indeed, wow!
Good stuff right here
Thanks for the title suggestion :)
when ever you want to tin up traces try some solder wick full of solder with flux on the board pal it works fantastic plus the iron is not directly touching the board.
I use that method sometimes too. This tip is great though
I think it's because I own a shuttle motherboard that was made in 1998. That I love seeing one get repaired.
That was a great fix!
Thanks Tommy!
Heroic repair
That was crazy and amazing! I love it. Thanks!
Thanks :)
Just adding a diode to CMOS battery socket will drop the delivered voltage and so soon the board will lose its settings even when battery is still relatively fresh. It's better to find out where's a diode or resistor or something that has a charging trace on it and just remove that component instead.
Yeah, I've heard of that hack. I'll try it out someday. Seems like a better solution for sure
What. A. Repair!!
I have some VLB boards I started repairing years ago, but i've since learned better techniques. i should reapproach those.