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broken sata connector
posted in Hardware
1
#1
0 Frags +

Posting on behalf of my roommate who is too lazy to register on tftv

While I was cleaning my laptop I accidentally soldered off the SATA connector. On this connector I've had an SSD connected. Is it possible to solder the SATA connector back on the mother board or a new mother board is required. Also I bought an external casing for the SSD and connected it to the laptop through the usb 3.0 port. I have no idea if it slowed down the r/w speed of the SSD. In the link I provided below I have saved a report from HWinfo.
Thanks for your help

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1eUqNE1S1aWhXlSvUykV4mEjVnWvRZjWr/view?usp=sharing
Posting on behalf of my roommate who is too lazy to register on tftv

[quote]While I was cleaning my laptop I accidentally soldered off the SATA connector. On this connector I've had an SSD connected. Is it possible to solder the SATA connector back on the mother board or a new mother board is required. Also I bought an external casing for the SSD and connected it to the laptop through the usb 3.0 port. I have no idea if it slowed down the r/w speed of the SSD. In the link I provided below I have saved a report from HWinfo.
Thanks for your help

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1eUqNE1S1aWhXlSvUykV4mEjVnWvRZjWr/view?usp=sharing[/quote]
2
#2
4 Frags +

if you can desolder it you can resolder it

also usb 3.0 data transfer is 5gbit/sec and sata is 6 gbit/sec so it is slower, might be throttled even more depending on the way hes connecting the harddrive; whether it be sata to usb or an external mount

if you can desolder it you can resolder it


also usb 3.0 data transfer is 5gbit/sec and sata is 6 gbit/sec so it is slower, might be throttled even more depending on the way hes connecting the harddrive; whether it be sata to usb or an external mount
3
#3
-2 Frags +

good luck with that.
the good method needs a solder bath or one of those oven-like machines for boards.

bad ways can be epoxy or iron + wick. You may need a powerful iron as these boards have lots of layers and dont take heat too well + if you keep the iron too long you can lift the traces off the pcb

good luck with that.
the good method needs a solder bath or one of those oven-like machines for boards.

bad ways can be epoxy or iron + wick. You may need a powerful iron as these boards have lots of layers and dont take heat too well + if you keep the iron too long you can lift the traces off the pcb
4
#4
3 Frags +

Why was he cleaning the laptop with a soldering iron?

Pictures would be more important than HWinfo because that doesn't tell me anything.
If it's clean he can just solder it back on, but I highly doubt that he has properly and cleanly accidentally desoldered the SATA connector.

#2
Well no one should buy SSDs for the sequential speed. 400 or 500 MB/s doesn't matter that much. IOPS are more important.

#3
He doesn't want to resolder the whole board so wave soldering or a reflow oven is really not what he needs.
Hot air rework station would be nice but is not required.

Why was he cleaning the laptop with a soldering iron?

Pictures would be more important than HWinfo because that doesn't tell me anything.
If it's clean he can just solder it back on, but I highly doubt that he has properly and cleanly accidentally desoldered the SATA connector.

#2
Well no one should buy SSDs for the sequential speed. 400 or 500 MB/s doesn't matter that much. IOPS are more important.

#3
He doesn't want to resolder the whole board so wave soldering or a reflow oven is really not what he needs.
Hot air rework station would be nice but is not required.
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