What he said, except the part about it never working again.before you replace *all* the caps, see if any leaks exist (easily found by smell or if the solder around the caps isn't shiny, but very dull, or even yellow or green), and if they do you'd better clean them up with PCB cleaner or 99% pure alcohol, because they will corrode the board and traces and eventually no matter how much cap replacement you do, it will never work again!
This thread has been focused on soldering, so the following wasn't really topical, but it probably needs to be said, in case someone reads this thread without reading some of the other cap replacement threads.
A cap replacement job has three basic steps:
1) Remove the old caps
2) Clean the board. This includes use of solvent and/or detergent to remove all the residue which may have been left by leaking capacitors.
3) Replace the caps with new ones. Tantalum replacements will not leak later.
If you don't clean the board, the electrolyte which has leaked onto the board will continue to corrode any metal parts it touches.
An example of the damage leaking caps can do was my old IIci board. One day around 1995 it just wouldn't power up any more. It turns out that the caps leaked onto the board, But the caps weren't content with no longer doing their job. The leaked fluid corroded away the solder connection to some component pins and more importantly actually ate the solder and copper out of one of the vias (hole) in teh circuit board.
That copper/solder filled hole was meant to connect a trace from the front of the board with the back of the board and now that connection was gone.
So, using my DMM (as mentioned by an earlier poster) I traced the connections forward and back from the damaged point. Once I found accessible points forwards and backwards of the damage, I ran a wire between the two points and soldered it at either end. Voila, board repaired. BTW wire wrap is very good for this kind of thing and available in small spools from Radio Shack.
The damage done by capacitor electrolyte can be very difficult to detect visually. A good 5X or 10X magnifier can be handy. Corroded contacts may look fine until you poke at them with a (e..g) dental probe and find that the metal is no longer solid.
This corrosive effect is why it is soooo important to replace those old caps at the first opportunity. They can destroy your board.
All that said, I haven't replaced all the ones on my old boards yet. There's just never enough time for all the projects. Any day, I'm going to order those two reels of tantalum caps and start replacing...


