The chip quik arrived yesterday, and I got a chance today to try removing the eeprom.
I initially had a bit of trouble getting the chip quik to wet all the pins. The surface of the board is covered with a sticky coating which I guess protects against oil and water to a degree. After good work over with isopropyl alcohol and a tooth brush I was able to get the chip quik to wet and chip free from the board. Not quite as smooth sailing as the tutorial videos but fairly close. Considering I was envisaging cutting the leg and then desoldering them individually this much quicker and cleaner.
I'm pleased that I didn't damage the board and the eeprom has come off without any visible damage. None of the legs are bent or broken so I should be able to reuse.
The pic below shows the pads after desoldering the eeprom.
The pads look almost as good as the empty pads to the left which have never been soldered. I'm giving the chip quik a big thumbs up
The Willem programmer is due to turn up on Monday so with a bit of luck I'll be able to have the ECU up and running by mid week. I haven't been able to locate a original file for the NNN500030 as yet, but I have found one for a NNN000120. As Colin (BBS Guy) has detailed the OBD map upload overwrites the entire eeprom contents so all that is actually required is that the firmware boots the ECU to the point where a new map can be uploaded.




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