majestyk wrote on 2022-10-18, 11:04:
In summer I ordered two (mobile) Intel Core 2 Duo T7800 CPUs. When they arrived months later I had to find out one of them has a "zero Ohm" short between the Vcore and Ground-pins.
Ouch, hope the finding out didn't cause any damage. How close to zero is it?
I wonder if anybbody managed to repair such a CPU or has any idea?
Never tried, but I'd also go with removing the capacitors just in case, they can fail short. I've got a gas soldering iron where the exhaust port works as a reasonably localised hot air source for removing small SMD components. Given the CPU's probably dead already then I'd probably see about removing all the caps in one go, to save having to keep reheating the CPU for each cap. Pick them off with tweezers and place them on a bit of sticky tape in the same order so you know where they came from, in case the values are different. Once they're all off, check if the CPU still has the short. If not, then check each capacitor. It the short's still on the CPU then it's even more likely that it's dead. At which point, just for fun, could maybe see if the short can be burnt out using a bench supply on a low voltage and turning the current limit up. There was someone on here who got a FLIR camera they could use to figure out if anything was heating up.
If all else fails, you've got a supply of pins for repairing other CPUs.