crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

crwdns2933805:0crwdne2933805:0

crwdns2933797:0Lukas OKZ techniciancrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0

crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Lukas OKZ technician

crwdns2933769:0crwdne2933769:0
crwdns2933771:0crwdne2933771:0
crwdns2933801:0crwdne2933801:0

crwdns2933807:0crwdne2933807:0

-[* black] Make four small (1 inch or smaller) balls of aluminum foil to support the PCB in the oven.
-[* black] Line your baking sheet or dish with aluminium foil.
-[* black] Place the 4 balls onto the baking sheet/dish
-[* black] Place the graphics card onto the balls of foil, suspending the card so that no pressure is applied to any of the PCB components.
-[* icon_caution] Ensure the side of the PCB with the heaviest components (usually the GPU) is on top so they don't drop off the board when the solder re-flows.
-[* icon_note] If possible, push the corners of the PCB into the foil balls to keep everything in place.
+[* black] Make some pieces of aluminum foil to cover capacitors
+[* icon_note] start pre-aheating the oven - fan - 180C
+[* black] Place the graphics card onto oven tray/ crate, making sure nothing seems unsafe. make sure capacitors are covered with aluminium foil
+[* icon_note] provide generous dosage of "liquid FLUX" under chips
+[* icon_note] turn oven to 210C (205C temperature at which solder melts)