Author Topic: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?  (Read 9464 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 13:58:24 »
I've managed to break one of the switches in my Matias Quiet Pro. Contact leaf is all munged up.


http://imgur.com/sPD7T7R
(btw, how do I get the img tag to work?)(edit: NVM, I got it.)

I tried bending it back into shape but failed.
When I plug the keyboard in, it's like someone is holding that key (numpad 6) down. It repeats forever even if I dont' touch it. Then after I press some other key, the 6 stops repeating and the keyboard mostly behaves as normal, except that the numpad 6 doesn't work. So I assume it's ONLY the switch that is toasted and I just need to replace it

So I got a new switch to replace it with. I got a few spares actually, (including a couple of clicky switches incidentally, which I'm surprised how much I like - I think I need to get a keyboard with these!)

The problem is I don't have any soldering equipment, and haven't done any soldering for about 30 years, so I would need to buy all the kit, and find some junk circuit boards to practice on, the whole 9 yards. This would probably pay off eventually, as I'm moderately interested in building as custom keyboard or two in the (distant) future. But I currently don't even have a space in which to set up a soldering station, other than my desk at work, after hours. No space for it at home :(

I guess it mainly comes down to money.
How much should I expect to pay to get someone to replace 1 switch for me, (located in London, if it makes any difference), and how would I go about finding someone to do it?
And how much would a halfway decent soldering setup cost?

thanks for any advice you can give!
« Last Edit: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:01:44 by zombimuncha »

Offline ghostjuggernaut

  • * Curator
  • Posts: 3575
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #1 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:00:46 »
Edit: nvm Tapatalk isnt working for me.
« Last Edit: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:02:56 by ghostjuggernaut »

Offline nubbinator

  • Dabbler Supreme
  • * Maker
  • Posts: 8658
  • Location: Orange County, CA
  • Model M "connoisseur"
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #2 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:04:43 »
It depends on if you plan on soldering in the future.  Think of it this way, cost of shipping will be $30+, plus materials cost, plus labor.  That's $50-60.  I picked up a solid soldering iron for $70, plus solder for $10, plus a solder sucker for $15.  So you can get a decent setup for $100 or so or you can pay $60+ for the work.  I prefer the DIY option, but it's not for everyone.

You might be able to fix it without doing either though.  You should be able to pop the affected leaf off the contact and drop on another from a new switch.  You can also do a whole switch top swap.  If that works, you saved even more money.

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #3 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:27:34 »
It depends on if you plan on soldering in the future.  Think of it this way, cost of shipping will be $30+, plus materials cost, plus labor.  That's $50-60.  I picked up a solid soldering iron for $70, plus solder for $10, plus a solder sucker for $15.  So you can get a decent setup for $100 or so or you can pay $60+ for the work.  I prefer the DIY option, but it's not for everyone.
Thanks for the numbers!
I'm actually thinking maybe one of those local phone/laptop repair places (the ones that also sell a lot of cheap iphone cases, and USB cords) might be able to do it for fairly cheap, but no idea really if they would even be able to. But that would at least save on shipping. The MQP is pretty heavy!

You might be able to fix it without doing either though.  You should be able to pop the affected leaf off the contact and drop on another from a new switch.  You can also do a whole switch top swap.  If that works, you saved even more money.

AFAICT on Matias switches the contact leaf and the "legs" are the same 2 bits of metal, and are soldered directly to the PCB, so I don't see how I could swap the contact leaf without desoldering. I'll be happy to be proven wrong tho. Got a walkthru / guide / photos?

Offline exitfire401

  • * Global Moderator
  • Posts: 2969
  • Location: United States
  • The Force is Re/\l
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #4 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:32:48 »


AFAICT on Matias switches the contact leaf and the "legs" are the same 2 bits of metal, and are soldered directly to the PCB, so I don't see how I could swap the contact leaf without desoldering. I'll be happy to be proven wrong tho. Got a walkthru / guide / photos?

This is correct. On normal alps switches, the click leaf is another piece altogether. Personally, I would suggest just purchasing soldering equipment. Decent equipment can be had for $70-$90 and it's an immensely helpful skill. Prior to taking an iron to your board though, I'd suggest getting a techkeys card and using that for soldering practice.
Boards: Kingsaver Complicated Blue Alps |Sprit 60% Transparent MX Clears in Gateron housings with 62g gold Sprit springs lubed and RGB color shifting LEDs | Ducky Shine Zone MX Black with Blue LEDs | Realforce 10AE Variable Silenced

B/S/T thread: https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=55351.0

Past projects: KBT Race 2 L.E.
Past Boards: Ducky Shine 2 | KBT Pure | LZ Aluminum Skin| HHKB | Realforce 23u |

Offline Huxley2500

  • Posts: 112
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #5 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:36:46 »
Buy one.  Essential life skill.

Offline chyros

  • a.k.a. Thomas
  • * Esteemed Elder
  • Posts: 3499
  • Location: The Netherlands
  • Hello and welcome.
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #6 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:37:35 »
Option three. Borrow one from a friend. Problem solved ;) .
Check my keyboard video reviews:


Offline zeroni13

  • Posts: 97
  • Location: Oslo, Norway
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #7 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 14:44:38 »
I would swap it for free if you would ship it over here, but soldering isn't that hard and if it is your first time you solder I would recommend looking up some guides on the internet or something.
Phantom with Silver Vortex Case   Keychron Q6 Pro ISO Knob
                               

Offline Tactile

  • Posts: 1439
  • Location: Portland, OR
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #8 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 15:07:51 »
I'm not a brit, so I'll just use the American terms...

I'd suggest going to a local community college or even a local high school & asking the electronics class to solder it for you. I'm sure they'd have an interest in the keyboard & would probably be delighted to help you out.
REΛLFORCE

Offline FrostyToast

  • Litshoard
  • * Exquisite Elder
  • Posts: 2368
  • Location: Canada
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #9 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 15:10:11 »
Are you not planning on putting together boards in the future?
If you aren't then there isn't much stopping you from going to a friend's house to use their gear.
Quote from: elton5354
I don't need anymore keyboards

Offline Defect

  • Posts: 670
  • I collect keyboards and keyboard accessories
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #10 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 15:13:07 »
My vote is for soldering yourself (practice first!)

You can always sell used soldering iron, and shipping would be cheaper than mailing a keyboard back and forth

BTW
I would be willing to fix it for you if you cover the cost of switches + shipping (both ways).

Good luck.

Not pictured: KeyCool 84 [MX Red] | Focus 2001 [Complicated White Alps]
Endgame Board | Defect's Watermelon Board Build Doc

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #11 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 15:30:38 »
AFAIK I don't know anybody here in the UK who owns a soldering iron. I have a friend in Australia who probably has one but that's not much use to me here.

Is anyone on here in London (or short train ride from) and could let me use theirs?

Offline KHAANNN

  • Posts: 1660
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #12 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 15:48:08 »
AFAIK I don't know anybody here in the UK who owns a soldering iron. I have a friend in Australia who probably has one but that's not much use to me here.

Is anyone on here in London (or short train ride from) and could let me use theirs?

Soldering is very very very very very simple, consider learning it yourself, buy the cheapest soldering set you can find, you might even be able to find a $30 set with a variable temperature soldering stand, desoldering pump, solder, soldering tools, I have one, I also bought more decent versions lately, yet It's good to have the old set too as a fallback set

It's like you are looking to dig a small hole in your garden to put a sapling in, and considering whether you should find a local gardener, or import a gardener
Just buy a $5 shovel and do it yourself

You could even use a lighter to melt the solder, remove the switch, put a new one, and re-heat the soldering point, if you have mcgywer genes or sth

It's really a very simple thing to do, hard to mess up

Test it on an unused toy or something, you will see how simple it is

I write this as a motivational post, hope you get motivated
Endgame | 1.25 Cmd for GMK Sets Please | Or Just 1.25 Blanks Like The Good Old Days

Offline DrHubblePhD

  • I am star stuff
  • Posts: 828
  • Location: Observable Universe, Virgo Supercluster, Local Group, Milky Way Galaxy, Solar System, Planet Earth
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #13 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 15:52:34 »
Its never to early do invest in a soldering iron! That said if you are really prohibited by cost there are plenty of people who would be willing to swap out a single switch for you without charge.

Offline tjcaustin

  • King Klaxon
  • * Maker
  • Posts: 3557
  • Location: Dallas-ish
  • King of All Klaxon Sciences and Cable Makery
    • Buy stuff
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #14 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 16:01:51 »
AFAIK I don't know anybody here in the UK who owns a soldering iron. I have a friend in Australia who probably has one but that's not much use to me here.

Is anyone on here in London (or short train ride from) and could let me use theirs?

Talk to margo or pexon?

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #15 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 17:33:10 »
Oh, it just occurred to me that I could ask the IT guys at work. I'm sure we don't have soldering kit at work, but they might have their personal one that they could bring in. Call that Plan A.

Plan B will be to inquire at some of the high street laptop repair type places.

Plan C = buy soldering iron etc.

Thanks for all the help, guys!

Offline random_rockets

  • Posts: 14
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #16 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 19:45:44 »
It depends on if you plan on soldering in the future.  Think of it this way, cost of shipping will be $30+, plus materials cost, plus labor.  That's $50-60.  I picked up a solid soldering iron for $70, plus solder for $10, plus a solder sucker for $15.  So you can get a decent setup for $100 or so or you can pay $60+ for the work.  I prefer the DIY option, but it's not for everyone.

You might be able to fix it without doing either though.  You should be able to pop the affected leaf off the contact and drop on another from a new switch.  You can also do a whole switch top swap.  If that works, you saved even more money.

For PCB desoldering for a novice is wick or pump better?

Offline KHAANNN

  • Posts: 1660
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #17 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 19:57:58 »
It depends on if you plan on soldering in the future.  Think of it this way, cost of shipping will be $30+, plus materials cost, plus labor.  That's $50-60.  I picked up a solid soldering iron for $70, plus solder for $10, plus a solder sucker for $15.  So you can get a decent setup for $100 or so or you can pay $60+ for the work.  I prefer the DIY option, but it's not for everyone.

You might be able to fix it without doing either though.  You should be able to pop the affected leaf off the contact and drop on another from a new switch.  You can also do a whole switch top swap.  If that works, you saved even more money.

For PCB desoldering for a novice is wick or pump better?

pump for everyone
Endgame | 1.25 Cmd for GMK Sets Please | Or Just 1.25 Blanks Like The Good Old Days

Offline jacobolus

  • Posts: 3670
  • Location: San Francisco, CA
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #18 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 20:07:34 »
For PCB desoldering for a novice is wick or pump better?
Get a Soldapullt. Many of the other solder suckers are terrible.

Offline fknraiden

  • Posts: 496
  • Location: Portland, OR
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #19 on: Wed, 18 March 2015, 20:08:00 »
it'd probably be best to get your own equipment and DIY, but if you end up sending it to someone i'd do it for free, it just would be a decent amount of shipping to US.

IBM SSK 87'     ReAlForce 55g Silent 10AE

Offline rowdy

  • HHKB Hapster
  • * Erudite Elder
  • Posts: 21175
  • Location: melbourne.vic.au
  • Missed another sale.
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #20 on: Thu, 19 March 2015, 04:52:42 »
AFAIK I don't know anybody here in the UK who owns a soldering iron. I have a friend in Australia who probably has one but that's not much use to me here.

Is anyone on here in London (or short train ride from) and could let me use theirs?

Talk to margo or pexon?

+1

Not worth learning to solder on your one and only valuable keyboard.

margo baggins

Pexon PCs
"Because keyboards are accessories to PC makers, they focus on minimizing the manufacturing costs. But that’s incorrect. It’s in HHKB’s slogan, but when America’s cowboys were in the middle of a trip and their horse died, they would leave the horse there. But even if they were in the middle of a desert, they would take their saddle with them. The horse was a consumable good, but the saddle was an interface that their bodies had gotten used to. In the same vein, PCs are consumable goods, while keyboards are important interfaces." - Eiiti Wada

NEC APC-H4100E | Ducky DK9008 Shine MX blue LED red | Ducky DK9008 Shine MX blue LED green | Link 900243-08 | CM QFR MX black | KeyCool 87 white MX reds | HHKB 2 Pro | Model M 02-Mar-1993 | Model M 29-Nov-1995 | CM Trigger (broken) | CM QFS MX green | Ducky DK9087 Shine 3 TKL Yellow Edition MX black | Lexmark SSK 21-Apr-1994 | IBM SSK 13-Oct-1987 | CODE TKL MX clear | Model M 122 01-Jun-1988

Ị̸͚̯̲́ͤ̃͑̇̑ͯ̊̂͟ͅs̞͚̩͉̝̪̲͗͊ͪ̽̚̚ ̭̦͖͕̑́͌ͬͩ͟t̷̻͔̙̑͟h̹̠̼͋ͤ͋i̤̜̣̦̱̫͈͔̞ͭ͑ͥ̌̔s̬͔͎̍̈ͥͫ̐̾ͣ̔̇͘ͅ ̩̘̼͆̐̕e̞̰͓̲̺̎͐̏ͬ̓̅̾͠͝ͅv̶̰͕̱̞̥̍ͣ̄̕e͕͙͖̬̜͓͎̤̊ͭ͐͝ṇ̰͎̱̤̟̭ͫ͌̌͢͠ͅ ̳̥̦ͮ̐ͤ̎̊ͣ͡͡n̤̜̙̺̪̒͜e̶̻̦̿ͮ̂̀c̝̘̝͖̠̖͐ͨͪ̈̐͌ͩ̀e̷̥͇̋ͦs̢̡̤ͤͤͯ͜s͈̠̉̑͘a̱͕̗͖̳̥̺ͬͦͧ͆̌̑͡r̶̟̖̈͘ỷ̮̦̩͙͔ͫ̾ͬ̔ͬͮ̌?̵̘͇͔͙ͥͪ͞ͅ

Offline Bucake

  • Posts: 945
  • Location: The Netherlands
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #21 on: Thu, 19 March 2015, 05:40:23 »
any suggestions for soldering equipment for up to $300?
right now there are no plans to solder anything but keyboards..
i prefer good quality and useful options, over a cheap price :)
IBM Model F XT // Realforce 87U 55g Type-S // HHKBP2 45g Type-S // KBT Pure Pro Cherry MX Red

Offline Fire Brand

  • Keeper of Rainbows
  • * Esteemed Elder
  • Posts: 2439
  • Location: West Yorkshire, United Kingdom
  • BISCUITS!
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #22 on: Thu, 19 March 2015, 05:56:48 »
Just my thoughts I personally do my own soldering I would say do it your self but like others said margin or pexon might be something good option as for irons honestly I use a Weller BP860 battery powered iron which is pretty awesome and cost around £25 just finished replacing a poker switches with it might be worth looking at :)
My Youtube Channel ~
More
Keyboards owned
More
Poker II - MX Black, Poker II ISO - MX Blue :c QFR ISO - MX Black, HHKB Pro 2 Black, VA68M - Gat Blacks w/68g Gold springs
My classified thread :3
More

Offline jamster

  • Posts: 1091
  • Location: Asia
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #23 on: Thu, 19 March 2015, 06:05:54 »
any suggestions for soldering equipment for up to $300?
right now there are no plans to solder anything but keyboards..
i prefer good quality and useful options, over a cheap price :)

This thread is great:

https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=42824.0


Offline Bucake

  • Posts: 945
  • Location: The Netherlands
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #24 on: Thu, 19 March 2015, 06:37:14 »
thanks alot jamster, that Edsyn 951SX looks great
IBM Model F XT // Realforce 87U 55g Type-S // HHKBP2 45g Type-S // KBT Pure Pro Cherry MX Red

Offline antCB

  • Posts: 29
  • Location: Braga, Portugal
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #25 on: Thu, 19 March 2015, 10:52:52 »
i also busted a switch on my keyboard last year (cherry mx), and went ahead and DYI'd with it, no point in paying someone for something so easy to do (with cherry mx it is fairly easy tbh). and, even if i'm not the greatest one handling the soldering iron, I did a pretty good job with it :D
Steelseries 6GV2 ISO-PT with Gateron Blues.

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #26 on: Sun, 29 March 2015, 11:55:16 »
Since it's just for the one switch (for now), is there any reason not to get something super cheap n (presumably) nasty, like this:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/CostMad-Soldering-Starter-Station-Desoldering/dp/B004MZYQZ4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427648079&sr=8-1&keywords=soldering

Offline KHAANNN

  • Posts: 1660
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #27 on: Sun, 29 March 2015, 12:15:20 »
You still haven't fixed your board? omg :)

That one looks good actually, 4.2/5 is pretty good, it should serve you well
Endgame | 1.25 Cmd for GMK Sets Please | Or Just 1.25 Blanks Like The Good Old Days

Offline tjcaustin

  • King Klaxon
  • * Maker
  • Posts: 3557
  • Location: Dallas-ish
  • King of All Klaxon Sciences and Cable Makery
    • Buy stuff
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #28 on: Sun, 29 March 2015, 13:14:09 »
Since it's just for the one switch (for now), is there any reason not to get something super cheap n (presumably) nasty, like this:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/CostMad-Soldering-Starter-Station-Desoldering/dp/B004MZYQZ4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427648079&sr=8-1&keywords=soldering

If you're only ever going to do the one job?  Or a smaller than hobbiest amount of odds/ends?  I dunno if I'd spend the money on tools, you know.

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #29 on: Sun, 29 March 2015, 13:22:59 »
You still haven't fixed your board? omg :)

That one looks good actually, 4.2/5 is pretty good, it should serve you well

I waited a while for a response from the contracted contingent of the IT dept, who aren't in the office every week. In the meantime I've been enjoying the MX Clears and compact layout of my FC660m.


Since it's just for the one switch (for now), is there any reason not to get something super cheap n (presumably) nasty, like this:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/CostMad-Soldering-Starter-Station-Desoldering/dp/B004MZYQZ4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427648079&sr=8-1&keywords=soldering

If you're only ever going to do the one job?  Or a smaller than hobbiest amount of odds/ends?  I dunno if I'd spend the money on tools, you know.

Well.... I might be up for building my own board at some point in the distant future. Don't really know yet. For now, this seems like the only sensible option for fixing the QuietPro. Cheaper than shipping it anywhere. Probably easier than shipping too  :thumb:
« Last Edit: Sun, 29 March 2015, 13:27:48 by zombimuncha »

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #30 on: Sun, 29 March 2015, 13:26:05 »
oops! double post. Sorry. Mods please feel free to delete.
« Last Edit: Sun, 29 March 2015, 13:28:36 by zombimuncha »

Offline livingspeedbump

  • * Exquisite Elder
  • Posts: 1552
  • Location: Seattle
  • Gentlemen, a bobsled is a simple thing.
    • KeyChatter
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #31 on: Mon, 30 March 2015, 17:50:34 »
Honestly, some basic electronics equipment like soldering gear is good to have around. Even without any electronics knowledge you'd be surprised how much you can do and fix on your own with it. On the side, its a very addicting hobby, and with all these keyboard kits around you could easily save some money by building your next keyboard instead of buying a completed one.
<- My Collection (so far)

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #32 on: Tue, 31 March 2015, 15:31:30 »
Honestly, some basic electronics equipment like soldering gear is good to have around. Even without any electronics knowledge you'd be surprised how much you can do and fix on your own with it. On the side, its a very addicting hobby, and with all these keyboard kits around you could easily save some money by building your next keyboard instead of buying a completed one.

the question now is "how basic is too basic?"
If I get that £10 set will I end up cursing the gods or burning my house down if I ever get around to building my own lightsaber keyboard? From what I've read, it seems like the fancy variable temp irons are mainly useful for more complicated tasks than a simple handwired, or thru-pcb keyboard.
Are there quirks or gotchas common to cheap-ass soldering irons that I might find annoying?

Offline heedpantsnow

  • * Esteemed Elder
  • Posts: 3692
  • Location: Orlando, FL
  • Old enough to know better
pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #33 on: Tue, 31 March 2015, 20:10:33 »
Honestly, some basic electronics equipment like soldering gear is good to have around. Even without any electronics knowledge you'd be surprised how much you can do and fix on your own with it. On the side, its a very addicting hobby, and with all these keyboard kits around you could easily save some money by building your next keyboard instead of buying a completed one.

the question now is "how basic is too basic?"
If I get that £10 set will I end up cursing the gods or burning my house down if I ever get around to building my own lightsaber keyboard? From what I've read, it seems like the fancy variable temp irons are mainly useful for more complicated tasks than a simple handwired, or thru-pcb keyboard.
Are there quirks or gotchas common to cheap-ass soldering irons that I might find annoying?

I've been using a cheap soldering iron for years. The noname ones with the little dial. I've always felt soldering was really hard and error-prone, and tried to do it as little as possible.

Recently I bought a Hakko. 888d I think. Now soldering is easy and relaxing. Not stressful like before.

I know it sounds like hype but that's my experience. The hakko's tips are better quality and transfer heat better and more precisely. The temp has much better control, so no more lifted pads or waiting for forever for solder to melt. And you can do one joint one right after another. Not so with the cheaper ones.

So I know before when people said stuff like this I thought "what a solder geek" and "mine works just fine" but now I know the difference and I won't go back. $90 is not that much for a quality tool.
I'm back.

Espresso machine overhaul: https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=78261.0

Carbon Fiber keyboard base: https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=54825

Offline bcredbottle

  • Posts: 695
  • Location: Seattle, Washington
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #34 on: Wed, 22 April 2015, 16:35:39 »
.
« Last Edit: Wed, 06 October 2021, 13:55:40 by bcredbottle »

Offline Skechup

  • Posts: 32
  • Location: London, United Kingdom
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #35 on: Wed, 22 April 2015, 17:45:26 »
I recommend that you should just get a soldering iron.

A tip for you would be to keep cleaning the tip of the soldering iron with a rough cloth or something to clean the oxide layer which forms on the soldering iron. If you don't clean the soldering iron tip, the transfer will become less efficient and really messes up the soldering iron. I also recommend that you get a good solder and considering that this is an electrical sort of job, I recommend that you get flux-core solder which reduces metal oxides forming (meaning more electrical conductivity). You can get a good flux-core solder for around £2 (http://www.banggood.com/HX-T100-0_5mm-6337-Tin-Lead-Rosin-Core-Solder-Soldering-Wire-Reel-p-949337.html)

Offline smknjoe

  • Posts: 862
  • Location: Tejas
  • I like tactile, clicky, switches.
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #36 on: Wed, 22 April 2015, 18:07:12 »
Oh, it just occurred to me that I could ask the IT guys at work. I'm sure we don't have soldering kit at work, but they might have their personal one that they could bring in. Call that Plan A.

Plan B will be to inquire at some of the high street laptop repair type places.

Plan C = buy soldering iron etc.

Thanks for all the help, guys!

Did you ever get this fixed? If not, any laptop repair shop that can replace a broken "charging plug/jack" on a laptop should be able to take care of it for you. It should be around $65-$85 for a one hour minimum charge if you were in a major US city. Good luck!

Cool avatar. What is it exactly?
SSKs for everyone!

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #37 on: Thu, 23 April 2015, 06:40:50 »
Oh, it just occurred to me that I could ask the IT guys at work. I'm sure we don't have soldering kit at work, but they might have their personal one that they could bring in. Call that Plan A.

Plan B will be to inquire at some of the high street laptop repair type places.

Plan C = buy soldering iron etc.

Thanks for all the help, guys!

Did you ever get this fixed? If not, any laptop repair shop that can replace a broken "charging plug/jack" on a laptop should be able to take care of it for you. It should be around $65-$85 for a one hour minimum charge if you were in a major US city. Good luck!


Not yet. A colleague said he'd let me borrow his soldering gear, but he didn't bring it in to the office yet. I'm in no hurry, but I might pick up this instead of waiting. I asked a couple of laptop repair places but they weren't interested.

Offline Skechup

  • Posts: 32
  • Location: London, United Kingdom
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #38 on: Thu, 23 April 2015, 14:13:37 »
Mmm, that soldering iron seems solid.

Just remember to be SUPER careful when repairing. Never trust a cheap soldering iron  :p

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #39 on: Mon, 01 June 2015, 15:16:55 »
HOLY **** I FIXED IT!!!!!!

I almost failed. I realized halfway thru that if I wanted to take the whole switch out I would need to first desolder all of the switches, and I had really only psyched myself up for desoldering one of them. So I left the switch base in there and desoldered the contact leaves, which were the root of the problem anyway, and soldered in the contact leaves from a fresh switch. That took some finagling to get them aligned correctly so I desoldered them again and assembled them into the top half of the switch to guide them into place, clicked the top o the switch back on, then resoldered them in again. And it only bleeding well went and worked, dinnit

Here's a photo of the munted contact leaves
?


Offline jacobolus

  • Posts: 3670
  • Location: San Francisco, CA
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #40 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 14:39:31 »
Great to hear!

I realized halfway thru that if I wanted to take the whole switch out I would need to first desolder all of the switches,
That’s not true. You can desolder just the one switch and then yank it out. If you do it carelessly, you might end up breaking a couple of the little plastic clips that hold the switch in, but that’s no big deal if it’s a dead switch anyway.

Offline bcredbottle

  • Posts: 695
  • Location: Seattle, Washington
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #41 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 15:47:45 »
Memories. I made the same mistake with my first mech (a MEP) and I didn't know how to solder so I paid some guy $80 to solder two switches, and he ****ed up four other switches in the process. It's funny how daunting any electronic work seemed at that time.

Offline njbair

  • Posts: 2825
  • Location: Cleveland, Ohio
  • I love the Powerglove. It's so bad.
    • nickbair.net
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #42 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 16:42:32 »
Wow, you're a better man than I. I've tried and failed several times to repair the leaf in Matias switches. Ended up replacing the entire switch.

I'm curious, though, why would you have had to desolder more than just the one switch?

Alpine Winter GB | My Personal TMK Firmware Repo
IBM Rubber Band "Floss" Mod | Click Modding Alps 101 | Flame-Polishing Cherry MX Stems
Review: hasu's USB to USB converter
My boards:
More
AEKII 60% | Alps64 HHKB | Ducky Shine 3, MX Blues | IBM Model M #1391401, Nov. 1990 | IBM SSK #1391472, Nov. 1987, screw modded, rubber-band modded | Noppoo EC108-Pro, 45g | Infinity 60% v2 Hacker, Matias Quiet Pros | Infinity 60% v2 Standard, MX Browns | Cherry G80-1800LPCEU-2, MX Blacks | Cherry G80-1813 (Dolch), MX Blues | Unicomp M-122, ANSI-modded | Unicomp M-122 (Unsaver mod in progress) | 2x Unitek K-258, White Alps | Apple boards (IIGS, AEKII) | Varmilo VA87MR, Gateron Blacks | Filco Zero TKL, Fukka White Alps | Planck, Gateron Browns | Monarch, click-modded Cream Alps

Offline bcredbottle

  • Posts: 695
  • Location: Seattle, Washington
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #43 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 17:05:01 »
Wow, you're a better man than I. I've tried and failed several times to repair the leaf in Matias switches. Ended up replacing the entire switch.

I'm curious, though, why would you have had to desolder more than just the one switch?

I told him I don't use the cut/copy/paste keys so he took the leafs from there.

This was at an electronics store near my house. I do my own soldering now.

Offline zombimuncha

  • Thread Starter
  • Posts: 331
  • Location: UK
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #44 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 18:02:15 »
Wow, you're a better man than I. I've tried and failed several times to repair the leaf in Matias switches. Ended up replacing the entire switch.

I'm curious, though, why would you have had to desolder more than just the one switch?

At first I tried to repair the leaf by bending it with tweezers. Failed miserably.
As far as I can tell, there are little plastic tabs on the base housing of the switch that keep it trapped in between the plate and the PCB. It looked like I would need to desolder all the switches and remove the PCB so that I could pull the broken switch out from the bottom side of the plate.

Great to hear!

I realized halfway thru that if I wanted to take the whole switch out I would need to first desolder all of the switches,
That’s not true. You can desolder just the one switch and then yank it out. If you do it carelessly, you might end up breaking a couple of the little plastic clips that hold the switch in, but that’s no big deal if it’s a dead switch anyway.

Do you mean the little triangular bits, that look like they're designed to let you push the switch down into the plate and then prevent you from pulling it back up out of the plate? Is it really possible to pull a switch up out of the plate without breaking those tabs? If so, that's cool! Is there some kind of trick to it? Got video?

I guess you're right about it not mattering if you break a switch that's already broken - I didn't think of that! :-[
The remaining tiny bits of loose plastic from the tabs should just fall right out if you turn the whole thing upside down and shake it a bit. TIL.

Offline njbair

  • Posts: 2825
  • Location: Cleveland, Ohio
  • I love the Powerglove. It's so bad.
    • nickbair.net
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #45 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 20:31:10 »
Wow, you're a better man than I. I've tried and failed several times to repair the leaf in Matias switches. Ended up replacing the entire switch.

I'm curious, though, why would you have had to desolder more than just the one switch?

At first I tried to repair the leaf by bending it with tweezers. Failed miserably.
As far as I can tell, there are little plastic tabs on the base housing of the switch that keep it trapped in between the plate and the PCB. It looked like I would need to desolder all the switches and remove the PCB so that I could pull the broken switch out from the bottom side of the plate.

Great to hear!

I realized halfway thru that if I wanted to take the whole switch out I would need to first desolder all of the switches,
That’s not true. You can desolder just the one switch and then yank it out. If you do it carelessly, you might end up breaking a couple of the little plastic clips that hold the switch in, but that’s no big deal if it’s a dead switch anyway.

Do you mean the little triangular bits, that look like they're designed to let you push the switch down into the plate and then prevent you from pulling it back up out of the plate? Is it really possible to pull a switch up out of the plate without breaking those tabs? If so, that's cool! Is there some kind of trick to it? Got video?

I guess you're right about it not mattering if you break a switch that's already broken - I didn't think of that! :-[
The remaining tiny bits of loose plastic from the tabs should just fall right out if you turn the whole thing upside down and shake it a bit. TIL.

Ah, so you thought the switches clipped into the plate from the bottom...I can see how you would think that if you haven't assembled your own board.

Really, though, I'm extremely impressed that you managed to do microsurgery on the switch internals. Matias switches are very nice but not very serviceable.

Alpine Winter GB | My Personal TMK Firmware Repo
IBM Rubber Band "Floss" Mod | Click Modding Alps 101 | Flame-Polishing Cherry MX Stems
Review: hasu's USB to USB converter
My boards:
More
AEKII 60% | Alps64 HHKB | Ducky Shine 3, MX Blues | IBM Model M #1391401, Nov. 1990 | IBM SSK #1391472, Nov. 1987, screw modded, rubber-band modded | Noppoo EC108-Pro, 45g | Infinity 60% v2 Hacker, Matias Quiet Pros | Infinity 60% v2 Standard, MX Browns | Cherry G80-1800LPCEU-2, MX Blacks | Cherry G80-1813 (Dolch), MX Blues | Unicomp M-122, ANSI-modded | Unicomp M-122 (Unsaver mod in progress) | 2x Unitek K-258, White Alps | Apple boards (IIGS, AEKII) | Varmilo VA87MR, Gateron Blacks | Filco Zero TKL, Fukka White Alps | Planck, Gateron Browns | Monarch, click-modded Cream Alps

Offline sheinow

  • Posts: 3
  • Location: Whitmore Lake, MI
Re: pay someone to replace one switch, or buy soldering gear?
« Reply #46 on: Sat, 08 August 2015, 22:00:34 »
If there is a makerspace in your area, take it there most will let you use their tools for free if you have a small project and pay for consumables.