I used a basic old heat gun.
I removed the plastic rim that sits around the CPU, and preheated the toaster oven to 200deg F. yea, a little low, but significantly reduces the chance of a board warp/crack during heat.
Make you an aluminum foil heatshield to set over top of the CPU card, and ONLY EXPOSE the CPU. cut out another sheet for the bottom to expose the chipset.
Insert board in to oven and let the board preheat for roughly 10 minutes.
Remove board.
CPU side up, place your newly cut aluminum foil heatshield over top of the board, and align so only the CPU is exposed. this will protect all the vital plastic components and stuff from devastating heat.
Then take a wagner heatgun on low, held it over the IC about 3 inches away, and blasted it on low for about a minute.
Switch it over to high, and move to 4 to 5 inches away. Blast the IC for at least 5 to 15 seconds. This should do it. reseat any cracked balls.
Let it cool down for a little bit, flip it over, apply heatsheild and align to only expose chipset. Repeat the same procedure as above.
This worked for me... your mileage may vary. any time you get flaky motherboards that are newer style, this may indeed fix your issues. Newer junky PC laptops like acer, gateway, etc... all have some sort of motherboard problem, and this reflow on the CPU socket, and chipsets fixes them about 90% of the time.
Remember the ibook epidemic? yea....
Your mileage may very, as i don't have exacting equipment to measure temperatures. YET..... But we have a dedicated toaster oven that I call the reflow oven. this is what I used. I picked it up at a yardsale for $5 bucks, so what the heck.. its big enough to hold most digital boards, and small enough to use on a benchtop.
Once i get some good thermocouples i will eventually automate this. using whats called the "reflow curve" and program a microcontroller to run the oven, and the heatgun, and just make a pipe into the oven where the heatgun connects. and just line the board up with the pipe of what im gonna reflow. then the microcontroller turns the oven on, and warms it up to a proper temperature, and then blasts the heatgun to the proper temperature, and cools everything back off at the proper rate.
But yea, maybe someday when im not so busy.... OH... I use the heatgun to remove all my old SMD caps from mac logic boards. You just have to watch the plastic parts and where you direct the heat.