Repairable? The pcb is damaged.You repair it by replacing pcb.Hey there, I would like to ask if this card is repairable. It appears that the PCIe was loose and caused this issue. Card is not working at the moment.
Is there any chance this can be repaired, or is it dead for good ?
Repairable? The pcb is damaged.You repair it by replacing pcb.Hey there, I would like to ask if this card is repairable. It appears that the PCIe was loose and caused this issue. Card is not working at the moment.
Is there any chance this can be repaired, or is it dead for good ?
Yes. At the factory.I would like to ask if this card is repairable.
I was expecting that the board would be done for good. Well, I don't think so, probably is off to be used for spare partsRepairable? The pcb is damaged.You repair it by replacing pcb.
That means -
getting a new pcb,removing all components from old pcb,soldering them onto new pcb.Considering number of elements and complexity ... doesn't seem to be doable.
Do you think, you can do it?
Pretty sure, it's not going to be that easy.could hypothetically be fixed by cutting off the charred area, scratching off layers to access the 12V/5V/3.3V/ground traces further up the PCB and gluing+soldering in a replacement edge connector.
It may be multiple layers but multiple layers of mostly power/ground planes, not something that requires exhaustive layer-by-layer comprehension of the board's layout to figure out. You can probably live without re-routing the JTAG pins and with a little luck, the SMB pins resurface elsewhere on the board to jumper to instead of having to dig them out, though they may not be essential either.Pretty sure, it's not going to be that easy.
It's multiple layer pcb after all.