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Hello everyone I appreciate any help anyone can provide. This component was lost on this board I am fixing for a friend and I have no clue what replacement to order or where to get it or what size and value I need. Thanks again!
It looks like you fixed the crystal and the smashed component is probably just a bypass cap so its value would not be critical. The chip is probably ok, unless that one pin on the end is broken? I've repaired broken pins by grinding away the plastic enough to expose the internal copper enough to solder to.
Appears to be a small capacitor. Sometimes a computer could live without one, but the traces seem to be going to a chip which may have importance. I probably wouldn't bridge that, unless you're overclocking and you need to connect 2 PLL pads together, LOL.
Appears to be a small capacitor. Sometimes a computer could live without one, but the traces seem to be going to a chip which may have importance. I probably wouldn't bridge that, unless you're overclocking and you need to connect 2 PLL pads together, LOL.
Well, that's easy to figure out. Just a moment...
EDIT: There does not appear to be a schematic for your board. Try checking the other 2 caps' values with a multimeter.
Well, that's easy to figure out. Just a moment...
EDIT: There does not appear to be a schematic for your board. Try checking the other 2 caps' values with a multimeter.
Appears to be a small capacitor. Sometimes a computer could live without one, but the traces seem to be going to a chip which may have importance. I probably wouldn't bridge that, unless you're overclocking and you need to connect 2 PLL pads together, LOL.
It would likely short the power rails if it's a bypass cap. In general capacitors are DC blockers, so approximate an open circuit at DC rather than a short, so bridging where one was is almost always a bad plan
It would likely short the power rails if it's a bypass cap. In general capacitors are DC blockers, so approximate an open circuit at DC rather than a short, so bridging where one was is almost always a bad plan
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