• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

Gigabyte GTX 480 damaged during cooler removal

No dont just use a pencil :rolleyes:. you have no way of knowing what those traces are for and what sort of voltage/current they are carrying. Do it properly joining either the tracks with wire or the points the tracks connect to. use a pencil ONLY if you know exactly what those tracks are for.
 
No dont just use a pencil :rolleyes:. you have no way of knowing what those traces are for and what sort of voltage/current they are carrying. Do it properly joining either the tracks with wire or the points the tracks connect to. use a pencil ONLY if you know exactly what those tracks are for.

Quoted for the truth, If you try to pass a current through something that is to small you can have a lot of resistance which will create heat which in turn leads to you know what.
 
I did the conductive paint thing when I was 14 in high school in my Technological Studies class, I also at that age tried to connect a standard TV to my Atari Mega ST computer at that age cause I was getting fed up with my monochrome one. I used a couple of rods and wires lol. Though that it would be pretty safe, but I ended up killing it, I'm 34 now so that was a long time ago lol. I was given the Atari for free and needed an excuse to buy an Amiga 500 lol so I did, the difference was that I took care of it because I bought it lol ( I upgraded to an Amiga 1200 which still works to this day)
 
Last edited:
circuit1.JPG


Wont something like that work? just trace the tracks to each solder point and link them up with wires?

If it's a clean break like that you won't need any wire. You just need to scratch the lacquer off either side of the cut and apply some solder.
 
Can you use an electrical paint pen thing?
The kind you get from Halfords and just draw the tracks back on?

Also, when I removed my cooler I had a stuck screw which got so warn there was no grip for the screw driver.
I drilled through mine to get it out :)
 
Thanks a lot guys for all the comments, i am unable to get a decent camera for the job, got a mates android phone and the pics were no better than mine. Anyway i sent in what i had to Gigabyte and they reckon its not repairable as more than 2 lines are damaged. The lines are tiny and really close together thats why i cant get a good pic. Looks like a 570 or 580 will be gettin ordered soon. Cheers lads
 
Having bridged many a gap on a TV?VCR PCB in my time, I'd say that the theory of repairing a break in a PCB is fine.

However, times have moved on, and tracks on modern videocard PCBs are often very small (unless they are power supply rails). I suspect that bridging broken tracks that carry signals between the GPU and RAM chips is going to be extremely tricky, if not impossible. Silver paint or pencil bridging is also going to be almost out of the question.

I believe that some PCBs are multi-layer. And damage to tracks beneath the top layer are almost certainly not going to be repairable, at least not be the end user.
 
Back
Top Bottom