Ram Slot Soldering
admin 8/1/2022
sfbayzfs
Active Member
Typically memory slots will be accessible from the bottom of a laptop, or under the keyboard. Given the low end nature of the CPU, I suspect everything is soldered on but the drive. All that said, probably not worth upgrading. Page 1 of 2 - Soldering irons - posted in Scratch building: Id be most grateful for advice please about soldering irons. The cheap device pictured below is just adequate, but very limited.

I have a lot of system building experience, and generally held the belief that bad RAM slots on motherboards are uncommon. The first one I encountered was a couple of years ago - I opened up a brand new ITX celeron board and I eventually discovered that one of the RAM slots was bad. The motherboard wouldn't boot with any RAM installed in one of the two RAM slots on the motherboard - remove RAM from that slot, and the system booted fine with RAM in the other slot only. (Of course I had been storing the board for long enough that it was out of warranty, but that's another story...) I suspected a bad solder joint or tin whisker somewhere on the bad RAM slot, but my soldering iron was misplaced a while ago, and a visual inspection of the underside of the board looked OK.
Ram Slot Soldering Iron
I have been testing more boards than I used to over the past year, and I have found a number of other boards which have bad RAM slots, so I was wondering how many bad RAM slots others here have run into on otherwise good motherboards.Ram Slot Solder
Also, has anyone ever successfully fixed a bad RAM slot, say with a solder reflow?

On dual processor Xeon boards I have further findings:


- If the blue (primary) RAM slot in a channel is bad, that whole channel is unusable
- If the first blue slot for a CPU is bad, that CPU socket is unusable
- If a non-blue slot is bad, usually only that slot is bad