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Ok, here goes.
You need: - Thin wire. People here will advocate 30AWG, and certainly there are points where this would make it easier, but honestly anything 26 and smaller works for me. ![]() - A soldering iron with a VERY fine tip. The one I use is a Radio Shack "soldering station" special, with a replacement nib that's ultra-fine. It's switchable from 10W all the way to 40W. You don't want one that's TOO hot or TOO cool, I usually leave mine set at 20W and that does the trick. - Desoldering braid. TRUST me you need this. ![]() - Flux. This isn't strictly speaking a necessity, but it might help for the tough-to-make-it-stick points. - Exacto knife. Sony coats their newer boards (v4 and up) with a plastic coating. I beat my head against one install for about 2 hours when the GT3 kit first came out... then lo and behold someone who solders for a living (a friend of mine) has a look at it and says "oh yeah polymer coat!" D'oh! - Wire strippers. Although, I suppose the Exacto knife would do for this in a pinch. - Glue gun. TRUST me here. You want a glue gun. Once a tricky point is attached, you hit it with a blob of glue, and BAM! No worrying about whether it'll come off when you nudge the unit. - Electrical tape. 'Nuff said. - Quality screwdrivers. - Razor Blades (to make soldering to legs of chips easier). - Double-sided foam sticky tape... - Continuity Tester/Multimeter. Well, that's what I use. I think that's everything... *shrug* if I think of something else I'll post again. ![]() Oh, yes - PATIENCE and a steady hand. Some days I just can't do modding, if my hand isn't steady I just wait until later. No point trying when you're shaky.... Gurm |
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