best of british mate..... sounds like a nice little job....
i have a similar task to undertake tomorrow on a laptop that has been dropped.....
The #1 remote wasn't working on my 'new' P38a Range Rover when I bought it last week but it had an ominous rattle internally.
I hadn't stripped one of these before & no-one at work had either so I thought I'd have a go. I eventually managed to separate the case halves & found the problem.
At the opposite end to the LED on the circuit board is a small white electrical component (block like) about 7mm x 2mm. This was floating around in the case. I have no idea what it's purpose is but, with the help of new batteries & held in place under slight finger pressure, the LED lit up when the lock/unlock buttons are pressed. A bit of hassle holding the block in place & the batteries while turning the door lock saw the remote synchronised & working.
I thought I could glue the block back in place by positioning it correctly & glueing the sides down but that didn't work as it doesn't put enough pressure down to make contact.
I don't know what was originally used to connect this block to the circuit board but there's no way I can solder 6 of 1mm x 1mm areas at once so I've researched conductive adhesive.
The smallest I can find is going to cost me around $30 so I'm wondering if there is something else I could use.
I'm thinking of trying the rear demister repair paint & seeing if that will hold it in place while maintaining conductivity.
Scott
best of british mate..... sounds like a nice little job....
i have a similar task to undertake tomorrow on a laptop that has been dropped.....
2007 Discovery 3 SE7 TDV6 2.7
2012 SZ Territory TX 2.7 TDCi
"Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it." -- a warning from Adolf Hitler
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"The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts." Marcus Aurelius
Hi Scouse,
When they solder surface mounted circuit boards in the factory, they glue the components on and add some pre-fluxed solder paste to the joints. Then the while assembly goes into an oven to "solder" the joints.
You can get soldering irons (I have one) with really fine tips... Less than a millmetre, for reworking the joints. They can be soldered with lots of patience.
Good luck going down the conductive glue avenue! The component probably came off when the remote was dropped
Cheers,
Mick.
Double sided metal foil roll, we use it for holding probes/sensors and the like to trasmit heat and signals.
Might do the job.
I have a large roll of the single sided stuf here that could be used - happy to send you som
Thanks Mick, there's no way I can solder this as the block sits flush on the board so your description of the glue & pre-fluxed solder paste mut be the method they used.
Thanks for the offer Ladas. I doubt that I'm going to be able to get 1mm x 1mm bits of foil to stay in the right spot while I glue it together though. I'm all thumbs when it comes to teeny teeny stuff.
I'll go for a walk to Jaycar at lunch tomorrow & see what they have. If I can get some low melting point solder, Mick's suggestion might be the way to go.
I wonder how long it takes to cook a remote ?![]()
Scott
Don't know if this is any help, but if you want to hunt up a new chip try Wagner electronic in Ashfield. They have an online catalog, stock several times the stuff of Jaycar and do mail order.
Next suggestion is hot glue. I couldn't think of a glue that would shrink as it set to pull the component in place, but hot glue works a treat to stop it from happening again.
Had to rebuilt the set top box remote after kids drop-kicked it. Found it at Wagner, soldered, hot glue that sucker in, will never move again.
Or, Jaycar do stock replacement remotes. Probably not the right kind. Then you only need to hold it together for the new one to learn the code.
Cheers
Simon.
Scouse can u take a pict of what fell off and where it goes on the board and send me the pic?
I may be able to solder it back for u as this is what I do for a living.
repairing stuff and I have just done a chip component solder on a digital phone camera app one eighth the size of a pin head.
Send me pic first so i can identify what it is
Brad
Range Rovers Have Charactors inside them
LROCWA Ex member 23 years
1971 Series 2A
2004 Discovery2a V8 Auto
2003 Discovery2a TD5 Manual
1982 4door man (sadly now gone)
1989 Vogue auto
2011 TDV8 Vogue
What would life be without a Rangie?
Brad, there may be an opening here for you.
I've been asked a few times by the local LR specialist to repair stuff like this but I don't have the tools.
I tried to find the pics I tookof the P38A key fob PC for the rangerovers.net website but can't. I must have archived them They aren't on the site anymore, either (I have the site backed up to my laptop so I can make amendments).
Ron
Ron B.
VK2OTC
2003 L322 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Auto
2007 Yamaha XJR1300
Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA
RIP Bucko - Riding on Forever
Here's a couple of photos. I'm not sure if you can identify it from these though. It's the underside that's visible in the shots. The upper side has an M inside a square followed by 4.00F printed on it.Originally Posted by Bradtot
I've been to Jaycar & they reckon it can be soldered back in place. There's no way I'm going to be able to do it with my gas Weller so I've bought a small 240v unit with a tiny tip.
I'll give it a go tonight.
These are a rolling code remote, the learning type are only for the basic type remotes unfortunately.
Scott
scotty,
if ya cant fix it give it to me and i'll fix it for ya!
free
cheers phil
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