Beautiful work Livyu! I had a horrible day at work, was super stressed and then I watched this and somehow all my stress and worries melted away. Thank you for a moment of instant zen!
I've tried this very same thing before and came out as f***ing disaster that took WAY to long to do. He made it look easy. I almost suffered an aneurism in the process.
A mi parecer está bien si no hay el stencil pero sería mejor con una plancha con la que quitas y pones led y más seguro que no se vuelan la bolitas con la pistola de aire
I tried doing this on a PowerPC processor from a powerbook g4. I put ALL of the solder balls on by hand with tweezers which only took me about an hour but when I got to the end of it I started to slowly heat up the chip and on a low heat setting but the solder balls just keep coming off. Wasted my time and effort doing that 😡. And I DID apply flux before putting the solder balls on, and I spread it all around the bottom of the chip but it made no difference. I was also keeping my heat gun a big distance apart, but when I heated up the chip, the solder balls don't stick to the pads!!!! What am I doing wrong?
airspeed needs to be low enought so that it will not push the balls... and put air from up top so that any force it puts on the balls are from the top.
@LivyuFPV I'm using a heat gun with only two heat settings: low and high. It has a max temperature of 600 degrees celsius. I don't have hot air station.
Thank you so much for this method. Unfortunately, this method is quite time consuming especially if the BGA IC chip is a 153 that I'm trying to solder on properly and onto the board. It's also going to be even more time consuming if you aren't using a quality flux; cheap flux will not help you with this method unless you do research on their effectiveness. I'm using SRA flux #135. It's a great flux that can easily flow the solder balls even at the lowest Air speed with a relative temperature of at least 350 °C. Just confirming that a quality flux will make the job easier for this method on your behalf. I tried a different method by flooding the whole IC with flux in liquid form AFTER putting all of solder balls on. In my practice, you can move the solder balls by periodically heating the IC and the flux; this way you won't lose any solder balls unless tension from the tweezers are being heated where the solder balls can climb up on the edges of the tweezers. You need to keep the tweezers as close as you can to the IC where the flux is being heated where you have a low chance of loosing them in between the tweezers; if so, you just need to clean the tweezers and grab a new solder ball.
this sort of thing depends on the station (air flow will be different and temperature is not always calibrated the same. can even lose calibration after a while) The best thing is to get a scrap board of ebay or something and practise it yourself. That way if you rip a pad or something you won't lose anything important, and you will understand which air flow is low enough and which temp is right. I use a BST863 which is a knockoff of the 861 DW (but everything is very similar) and my findings have been different of someone with an actual 861dw, so it's important to try and find out with your own station.
@@LivyuFPV You can buy universal stencil matching the grid size and pour the balls. It easily less time to arrange the balls because all the balls already near the pads
i tried this on gddr5 chip but the balls keep sticking to each other. it's like the solder balls have magnet and they will push, attract or stick to nearby balls. i use 63/37 lead balls... in the container some balls are floating, i guess it's static charge and how to get rid if them?
@@C_2n876 forsho stencil is the easy version... but if you ever need to fix something fast! And cant wait for stencil then you have this... or even worst iron made balls :p
Beautiful work Livyu! I had a horrible day at work, was super stressed and then I watched this and somehow all my stress and worries melted away. Thank you for a moment of instant zen!
Explained my feelings too
Precision of a deity - even after 6 years of practice I still can’t clean up as nicely as you - your reworking is absolutely insane 🙃
right!
Change flux. Bad flux u have...
Can i do the same thing? I want to reball a gddr5 memeory. I dont have a stencil, and its my first time doing a reball
I've tried this very same thing before and came out as f***ing disaster that took WAY to long to do. He made it look easy. I almost suffered an aneurism in the process.
LoL
😂😂😂😂😂😂 I can relate.
You gave me the confidence to repair a USB port. Works great! Now to replace the USB port that got ripped from my flight controller.
With H7 BGA chips coming. I think it's time I learn this too. Great Work !
a lot of people who are into FPV also get into electronics repair and vice versa. It's cool
On my part I was an electronics guy all my life :p started rc 15 years ago
Mesmerizing.
WOW!!! Thats is trully amazing!!! And always 1 last ball is out of the line! ;)))
I'm speechless, that was awesome !
I like to use this technique but I use a pipette , poor on the solder balls, and separate them with a probe needle. light flux, 250 reflow.
6:35-6:45... That’s some crazy visual ASMR man 🤣🤣🤣
Nice! Have you tried a soldering skillet/soldering plate? They’re great mostly for initial builds, but in situations like this they’re awesome too
I don't know what that is, but you always grab my attention!!!
A mi parecer está bien si no hay el stencil pero sería mejor con una plancha con la que quitas y pones led y más seguro que no se vuelan la bolitas con la pistola de aire
which PCB was that in the end? cmon, we are still waiting :)
Nice job Livyu!
Really well done!
I tried doing this on a PowerPC processor from a powerbook g4. I put ALL of the solder balls on by hand with tweezers which only took me about an hour but when I got to the end of it I started to slowly heat up the chip and on a low heat setting but the solder balls just keep coming off. Wasted my time and effort doing that 😡. And I DID apply flux before putting the solder balls on, and I spread it all around the bottom of the chip but it made no difference. I was also keeping my heat gun a big distance apart, but when I heated up the chip, the solder balls don't stick to the pads!!!! What am I doing wrong?
airspeed needs to be low enought so that it will not push the balls... and put air from up top so that any force it puts on the balls are from the top.
@LivyuFPV I'm using a heat gun with only two heat settings: low and high. It has a max temperature of 600 degrees celsius. I don't have hot air station.
@maxplayz1219 then... don't bother it will not work, unfortunately.
Great work. Thank you
Amazing work
Wonderful how did u make balls
Please show me
Balls can be ordered in different sizes ;l
@@LivyuFPV what is name
I want order for it
@@LivyuFPV please how can I know the size of the ball
The cpu is spd 6531e
I want replace on mobile phone
Teach me please
Thank you so much for this method. Unfortunately, this method is quite time consuming especially if the BGA IC chip is a 153 that I'm trying to solder on properly and onto the board. It's also going to be even more time consuming if you aren't using a quality flux; cheap flux will not help you with this method unless you do research on their effectiveness. I'm using SRA flux #135. It's a great flux that can easily flow the solder balls even at the lowest Air speed with a relative temperature of at least 350 °C. Just confirming that a quality flux will make the job easier for this method on your behalf.
I tried a different method by flooding the whole IC with flux in liquid form AFTER putting all of solder balls on. In my practice, you can move the solder balls by periodically heating the IC and the flux; this way you won't lose any solder balls unless tension from the tweezers are being heated where the solder balls can climb up on the edges of the tweezers. You need to keep the tweezers as close as you can to the IC where the flux is being heated where you have a low chance of loosing them in between the tweezers; if so, you just need to clean the tweezers and grab a new solder ball.
What exact flux and solder do you use?
how many mm soldering balls are
I think can follow your steps with small chip but with larg chip, so need more more time to complete process. Good job
This was a one time job for myself. Other wise a stencil would be way faster :)
nice job man
what ball size do I need for iphone repair?
Nice Job!
how many mm solder ball did you use? and what is the air and temperature setting?
this sort of thing depends on the station (air flow will be different and temperature is not always calibrated the same. can even lose calibration after a while)
The best thing is to get a scrap board of ebay or something and practise it yourself. That way if you rip a pad or something you won't lose anything important, and you will understand which air flow is low enough and which temp is right. I use a BST863 which is a knockoff of the 861 DW (but everything is very similar) and my findings have been different of someone with an actual 861dw, so it's important to try and find out with your own station.
very good job! What kind and size of solder balls did you use?
Good job 👍
Wow very nicely done!
Did you get a P1 IC?
nope :) that one had waaaaaaaaay more pads :P
How if we heat the ic from the bottom
Hi. What do you use to clean off flux residue?
Normally isopropyl alcohol
have you tried 3d printing stencils?
Please tell me what is your flux name😬😬
Your eyes CCD camera placement die bonding machine 👍
Its very slow if you must pickup the tiny ball one by one. Instead you can spread all ball on pads and arrange it from there
Well the easiest onr would be stencil and paste... but I just wante to loose some tine I guess :p
@@LivyuFPV You can buy universal stencil matching the grid size and pour the balls. It easily less time to arrange the balls because all the balls already near the pads
Solder balls size also 0.8mm?
Oh been there, done that
I need video how to reball without those little balls. 😀
i tried this on gddr5 chip but the balls keep sticking to each other. it's like the solder balls have magnet and they will push, attract or stick to nearby balls. i use 63/37 lead balls... in the container some balls are floating, i guess it's static charge and how to get rid if them?
You are one crazy ....
when we dont have any service , we can try this type , for making time pass
Well that's my OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder) fixed.
I am gonna have a punt on shark byte lol
Do it on 450 pin ic . I am sure you will never do it again.
Poor's man reballing
I fu&*** stay 2 hiurs with 5 pins damn he make it looke easy every one watch the video just go buy a standard stencil
@@C_2n876 forsho stencil is the easy version... but if you ever need to fix something fast! And cant wait for stencil then you have this... or even worst iron made balls :p
long time
Not very practical for high pin counts.
good try
Ribet banget 😅
Best patience 💪 wow
Exchange visit😜wow y2y 😜