Resurrecting a Broken Motherboard – Bent Socket Pins

Linus Tech Tips ·Linus Tech Tips ·2018-05-06 · 1,765 words · ~8 min read
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0:00 this is an ASUS zenith extreme
0:04 a 550 dollar
0:08 x399 motherboard for AMD's threadripper
0:11 CPU it was returned to me from one of the writers
0:15 and i was informed that it no longer
0:18 works uh okay well this is going to be and it's pretty anticlimactic here
0:24 i fixed it
0:33 hp's new omen x lineup comes equipped with Intel's seventh generation core i7
0:38 processors check them out at the link below
0:42 so what you observed just there was one of the many
0:46 peculiarities when it comes to bent pins
0:50 in a modern lga type CPU socket it can
0:53 manifest in any number of ways a failure
0:57 to post altogether an inability to detect memory inserted into certain
1:03 slots that one's actually very common or
1:07 the system can appear to be functioning completely normally all cores detected
1:13 all 128 gigs of RAM detected
1:17 the reason for this is that every CPU pin
1:21 has a slightly different function some of them are wired directly through
1:26 traces on the motherboard which you can actually see there's tons of traces
1:29 around a CPU socket to a contact point on a memory slot some of
1:34 them serve redundant purposes like to
1:37 act as a ground pin while others
1:42 may have no functionality whatsoever like they might be reserved for a future
1:47 CPU that might go into that socket with some
1:51 feature that might not ever get implemented so that
1:55 is why the symptoms of a bent CPU pin
1:58 can be as obvious as the system
2:01 not lighting up at all or as subtle as
2:05 slightly less stability when you're heavily overclocked
2:09 so one way or another
2:13 we need to fix this pin so no big deal Linus send it into the
2:18 manufacturer for repairs right wrong
2:22 first of all physical damage to the product is not
2:26 covered by any motherboard manufacturer that i'm aware of and they all consider
2:31 socket damage to be physical damage and number two
2:34 is an out of warranty repair to a CPU socket can cost as much as
2:40 350 dollars that's what i got quoted
2:44 when i wanted to repair a socket on an x99 ews motherboard even though it was a
2:49 400 board i'm not going to run out and spend 350 dollars so that i can have a b
2:54 stock board when it cost me 50 more dollars to just go buy a brand new one
2:58 so then with that in mind what do you
3:01 need to repair your own bent socket pins
3:05 really with a steady hand and a sewing needle you can probably do a pretty good
3:10 job but i've used everything from a pocket knife
3:14 to a sim removal tool to a thumb tack in
3:19 order to bend back pins and i've done it with all of those with success i even
3:24 used the pointy tweezers from an ifixit kit once
3:28 for today we're going to be using these picks that i actually just found here in
3:33 the workshop organization's beautiful right you're gonna save us so much time
3:36 in the future yeah it was super exciting and we're gonna be using these helping
3:41 hands with a magnifying glass something that i also recently bought just in case
3:46 someone bent a socket pin and they did so one of the trickiest parts of any
3:50 socket repair operation is figuring out where the bent pins are the best way to
3:55 do that is to get down low level with the socket
4:00 so that you can see whether it's straight across this way straight across
4:04 that way or at a diagonal you can see the gaps between the rows of pins that's
4:10 going to make it easier for your eye to pick out any imperfections for our case
4:14 we know exactly where it is so we're going to get up above it now we need to
4:18 assess the damage so we're just going to prod at it a little bit and this one
4:22 seems pretty obvious so you can see there's an even row of pins here and
4:27 even row pins here and then here there's a missing one now if this pin was broken
4:32 off we'd be in much rougher shape right now but you can actually see that it's
4:37 not it's just bent down so we just got to find
4:41 where it bent down to looks like uh
4:44 looks like it's down right there wow that is
4:47 that is dug in pretty deep there now there is always a risk
4:52 when you're working on something like this
4:55 that you will accidentally bend some other pins in the process
4:59 as long as you're careful it shouldn't happen
5:02 this pick might not actually be fine enough for me here i'm gonna go back to
5:06 my trusty knife i actually use the knife more often than
5:11 you'd probably think for this sort of thing so you want something that you can use
5:15 to get under the pin to pull it up there so you can
5:20 see i've pulled it up off the bottom now but
5:24 it's not quite aligned with the other pins so the chances of it
5:29 making perfect contact with the pads on the bottom of the CPU is pretty low now
5:33 that we've pried it up from the side the easiest way to attack it now is to go at
5:39 it from underneath head on that way you
5:42 can over bend it up a little bit so you want to come under it this way now
5:47 and over bend it up a bit because it's metal so
5:51 you can't just bend it to exactly where you want it
5:54 and then expect it to stay there okay cool that was exactly the desired result
6:00 there is we bent it up a little higher than we wanted and it settled right back
6:04 in exactly where it's supposed to be so now we can check the alignment of the
6:10 pins and we see a nice little bright dot
6:13 exactly where we expected perfectly aligned
6:16 let's go test it and we're back the system works
6:26 very good Linus you fixed a working motherboard ah
6:31 i have another trick for you up my sleeve this
6:35 is a sacrificial board from a project we never did because someone
6:41 a different member of our writing staff didn't realize that this motherboard
6:48 wasn't going to fit into any standard cases
6:52 so what we're going to do is we're going to simulate what would be a pretty common way to
6:58 damage a CPU socket oops that one was
7:01 actually accidental dropping the CPU as you go to install
7:07 oh okay yeah we definitely hit one let's try again
7:11 okay i'm having a pretty hard time uh mangling the socket here
7:16 now that that is a bent socket
7:21 let's try and fix it shall we something people might notice about this
7:25 second round of repair here is that i'm not even necessarily going
7:29 to try and get it exactly perfect because what you're going to realize
7:34 is that the contact pads on the bottom of the CPU are actually reasonably big i
7:39 mean they're not huge you still need to get pretty darn close
7:43 but if you are pretty close
7:46 and you remember too that when you put the CPU in it pushes down
7:51 into the lga the land grid array then as long as
7:56 you're good enough that once it gets pushed down a bit it'll be in pretty much the
8:01 right spot then you should be good enough
8:05 whoops this guy over here is probably still a
8:08 little bit too far out of alignment
8:14 now you want to make sure that you don't bend them down and up and down and up
8:19 too much because if you do that they lose their
8:22 strength and can eventually break off you can recover from that i have done it
8:27 by straightening out the shape of the pin
8:31 as long as there's enough left to get to the contact point
8:34 but it's not a sure thing and i did end up with a board that
8:38 i snapped off the top of the pad and uh
8:41 was not able to resurrect another key thing to watch out for when you're
8:45 looking for bent pins is that there are places where pins are missing
8:50 intentionally so it's always good to double check against a socket diagram
8:54 like see this corner right here there's no pin there that's fine
8:57 or another perfect socket that you have on hand
9:00 okay moment of truth time
9:03 okay there we go that beep is a good sign
9:08 and CPU detected two gigs of memory
9:13 yeah that's right repaired motherboard
9:19 so that's pretty much it guys how to bring your motherboard back from the
9:23 dead assuming that there aren't other issues on it like blown capacitors or
9:28 fizzled out resistors and
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10:18 tech tips and entering Linus tech tips in the how you heard about us section
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