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crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 oldturkey03

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@papz I agree with @tech_ni on all of what was said. I wonder if you have soldered on a board before. this may look easy (and it could be) but requires some decent soldering skills. If you have not done any board soldering, I'd recommend that you get materials listed by daniel and practice on an old scrap board first. Anyhow, the "power socket ways" is a great resource but it'll complicate things for you. I your case, you want to first off, clean "the mess". Use your soldering iron to fix the #2 pin connector, clean your board with isopropyl alcohol and let's review what you have. I see number 2 with a full solder pad and number 3 with a partial solder pad. There will not be enough "meat" to hold the connector. My concern is that you are going to tear it off the moment you connect the wire. Consider two possible solutions. One is to attach the wires directly to the board and then the connector to the end of those (like a pig tail situation) The other possible solution would be to apply some adhesive to the connector to keep it bonded to the board (After soldering it to the board of course). Keep your jumpers short. Pin 1 can come right of the capacitor next to it. 2,3, and 4 can be soldered to just at the end of the traces. Remember keep the enameled wire size down. You do NOT need thick wires for this.

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