From the video title, I was hoping the project would look like the power button of an Xbox 360 and randomly produce actual "red ring of death" codes. This works too.
Solder paste & the hot air gun will to the trick, you won't need a stencil. Put a bead of paste down each row of pads. Place the chip close to the correct spot, as long a the pins are not touching the wrong pads, you will be fine. Use a low air flow and circle the chip. You want to heat all the pins evenly and not blow things off the board. When the melt comes, surface tension will draw the paste between the pads into the joints and center the chip as if by magic. Have fun!
The CD4017BM chip is a counter, which means it changes its outputs based on a consecutive sequence of pulses. Looking at the end-product, it is very likely to be the chip that "rotates" the output selection of which LED to light up in sequence. It counts up and changes its pin states based on that. This one is a Decade counter, which means it counts in multiples of decades of our numerical system -- multiples of ten. Hint: if you look really carefully, there's also a multiple of ten worth of LED's on that board! :)
Thanks for the input! When it comes to anything lower then 24v my knowledge is very limited. Like I say in my videos (complain about.. a lot) the instructions for these kits are terrible. They barely explain how to put them together never mind what the parts do. I guess you get what you pay for. That is my goal for the channel. To start a community for newbies (like myself) and veterans to share knowledge and maybe have a laugh. Everything I have learned about electronics has come from you tube. From how to micro solder to what tools to invest in. So I figured maybe some folks would enjoy my take on things and we could learn together. Again thanks for the lesson on the chips. That was one to grow on. And I Hope you continue to watch. Have some fun stuff coming in the next few weeks that is more then some old man trying to be funny while having no idea what's he's doing
If you look at the pins and where they go, you can see they all go to ground. That also means the heat goes to ground. And that ground plane is maaaaassive, both in size and in mass. Preheating the board in some way can do wonders. Even if that means you just place it under a hairdryer, or like I do, put it on my 3D printer's bed! Leaded solder is in ways better than lead-free, and one big one is the vastly lower melting point. That itself leads to some of the benefits/upsides.
Was looking forward to another XBox repair video. Never mind. You should try soLdering, it works much better (but you may have to leave your country to one that has an L in their alphabet LOL) Try soddering a single corner pin and then lining it up "best" and doing the opposite pin to hold it in place, speeds things up!
Funnily enough I say the same thing in my newest video about getting a corner pin. I also tried 2 neodymium magnets. It's works great! well if their strong enough
Like I said in the video I have no idea what I'm talking about. I just put something else together just for fun and used leaded solder. So... much... smoother. I think because I was using such fine solder .01" and only soldering 603 smd for the last few kits I didn't notice. But now I wished I had used leaded for those chips I bet it would have been much easier. Good luck to you in your new hobby. I too, as you can probably tell, am a beginner.
You tube😂. Is that an oh my God you're pretty good at this oh my God you're terrible at this kind of comment. I'm down for some constructive criticism. I've only been soldering for 6 months.
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx I alsp bet those chips might have been taken from scrap electronic circuit boards. I usually also take them of scrap pcbs just to practice smd soldering
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx Yes, age 69. Through hole is great. I love the Hakko solder sucker. Makes removing components so easy. Don't bother with solder wick.
Actually yesterday I tried using the mechanical one for the first time when I put some header pins in the wrong way I was like this is not going to work but I was pleasantly surprised.
Thanks for the sub sir. I have, in the next few weeks, what I think are some fun projects. More than just practice boards and fidget spinners. Gonna try my hand at adding some woodworking to these projects along with some Arduino board projects. Maybe even an hvac install, my speciality Hope to see you then
From the video title, I was hoping the project would look like the power button of an Xbox 360 and randomly produce actual "red ring of death" codes. This works too.
That's what I was going for. This protect made me feel like the red ring of death did when I got it on my Xbox 360. Sad confused and angry
You've earned a new sub, thanks for the honesty and the recommendations
Solder paste & the hot air gun will to the trick, you won't need a stencil.
Put a bead of paste down each row of pads. Place the chip close to the correct spot, as long a the pins are not touching the wrong pads, you will be fine.
Use a low air flow and circle the chip. You want to heat all the pins evenly and not blow things off the board.
When the melt comes, surface tension will draw the paste between the pads into the joints and center the chip as if by magic.
Have fun!
The CD4017BM chip is a counter, which means it changes its outputs based on a consecutive sequence of pulses. Looking at the end-product, it is very likely to be the chip that "rotates" the output selection of which LED to light up in sequence. It counts up and changes its pin states based on that.
This one is a Decade counter, which means it counts in multiples of decades of our numerical system -- multiples of ten. Hint: if you look really carefully, there's also a multiple of ten worth of LED's on that board! :)
Thanks for the input!
When it comes to anything lower then 24v my knowledge is very limited. Like I say in my videos (complain about.. a lot) the instructions for these kits are terrible. They barely explain how to put them together never mind what the parts do. I guess you get what you pay for.
That is my goal for the channel. To start a community for newbies (like myself) and veterans to share knowledge and maybe have a laugh.
Everything I have learned about electronics has come from you tube. From how to micro solder to what tools to invest in. So I figured maybe some folks would enjoy my take on things and we could learn together.
Again thanks for the lesson on the chips. That was one to grow on.
And I Hope you continue to watch. Have some fun stuff coming in the next few weeks that is more then some old man trying to be funny while having no idea what's he's doing
Let's appreciate the clean and tidy bench.
Thanks. I like a clean area. Makes things more efficient
If you look at the pins and where they go, you can see they all go to ground. That also means the heat goes to ground. And that ground plane is maaaaassive, both in size and in mass.
Preheating the board in some way can do wonders. Even if that means you just place it under a hairdryer, or like I do, put it on my 3D printer's bed!
Leaded solder is in ways better than lead-free, and one big one is the vastly lower melting point. That itself leads to some of the benefits/upsides.
I will now call it the hoof tip, thanks for that
The HOOF!
I think The Amazing Testo is a great name for the multi-meter. And that transition...chef's kiss.
The hoof
I liked the bench, clean and tidy.
Was looking forward to another XBox repair video. Never mind. You should try soLdering, it works much better (but you may have to leave your country to one that has an L in their alphabet LOL) Try soddering a single corner pin and then lining it up "best" and doing the opposite pin to hold it in place, speeds things up!
Potato potato it's all Greek to me
Funnily enough I say the same thing in my newest video about getting a corner pin. I also tried 2 neodymium magnets. It's works great! well if their strong enough
Personally, i preffer leaded solder. Way easier for a beginner like me, but hey, if it works, why change it? Nice video!
Like I said in the video I have no idea what I'm talking about. I just put something else together just for fun and used leaded solder. So... much... smoother.
I think because I was using such fine solder .01" and only soldering 603 smd for the last few kits I didn't notice. But now I wished I had used leaded for those chips I bet it would have been much easier. Good luck to you in your new hobby.
I too, as you can probably tell, am a beginner.
Where in the heck did you learn how to solder SMT devices?
You tube😂. Is that an oh my God you're pretty good at this oh my God you're terrible at this kind of comment. I'm down for some constructive criticism. I've only been soldering for 6 months.
Is there a reason for those DSP chips to be on that board?
Unfortunately... no
this is a practice board and those chips have no purpose except to make the installer 5 years older
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx I alsp bet those chips might have been taken from scrap electronic circuit boards. I usually also take them of scrap pcbs just to practice smd soldering
I like the hoof tip.
This is why I stay with tubes and through hole components.
Tubes?!? Like vacuum tubes. Sir you must be older than me. Seriously tho I did some through hole yesterday what a breeze. I'll do those all day.
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx Yes, age 69. Through hole is great. I love the Hakko solder sucker. Makes removing components so easy. Don't bother with solder wick.
Actually yesterday I tried using the mechanical one for the first time when I put some header pins in the wrong way I was like this is not going to work but I was pleasantly surprised.
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx You mean the hand held one with a plunger? They do work but are a pain and I don't like the way they kick back when they operate.
You could do the same thing with a 555 and 4017
meaning like I thought? you dont need both?
Cheaper to buy one lol!
Please keep making videos
Thanks for the sub sir. I have, in the next few weeks, what I think are some fun projects. More than just practice boards and fidget spinners. Gonna try my hand at adding some woodworking to these projects along with some Arduino board projects. Maybe even an hvac install, my speciality
Hope to see you then
I think you need a better flux
Got to get that amtech flux!!
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx Now we’re talkin’
@@LetsMakeSt-ll2wx No need. The cheap chinese ripoff from AliExpress is just as good.
Ohhh science!