Can we fix bad chips ... in the oven?

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Adrian's Digital Basement

Adrian's Digital Basement

3 жыл бұрын

I was given some information about a very unusual way to possibly fix bad chips. Let's try some experiments and see if this actually works to revive some bad Commodore/MOS chips.
--- Video Links
Controleo3 with Reflow Oven Build Kit
whizoo.com
Toaster Oven:
“BLACK+DECKER 4-Slice Toaster Oven, TO1303SB”
PAL 128 bad VIC-IIe:
• Waiting 35 years for a...
Link to Daniel's GAL PLA project
• Can you replace your C...
www.freepascal.org/~daniel/c6...
Electromigration Blog Post and information:
kirchhof.tech/Electromigration.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro...
Time for another Macintosh repair video. This Mac Color Classic has a big problem -- too big perhaps?
--- Tools
Deoxit D5:
amzn.to/2VvOKy1
store.caig.com/s.nl/it.A/id.16...
Jonard Tools EX-2 Chip Extractor:
amzn.to/2VazxDS
www.jonard.com/Products/EX-2-...
Wiha Chip Lifter:
amzn.to/3a9ftWw
www.wihatools.com/precision-c...
O-Ring Pick Set: (I use these to lift chips off boards)
amzn.to/3a9x54J
Elenco Electronics LP-560 Logic Probe:
amzn.to/2VrT5lW
Hakko FR301 Desoldering Iron:
amzn.to/2ye6xC0
Rigol DS1054Z Four Channel Oscilloscope:
www.rigolna.com/products/digi...
Head Worn Magnifying Goggles / Dual Lens Flip-In Head Magnifier:
amzn.to/3adRbuy
TL866II Plus Chip Tester and EPROM programmer: (The MiniPro)
amzn.to/2wG4tlP
www.aliexpress.com/item/33000...
TS100 Soldering Iron:
amzn.to/2K36dJ5
www.ebay.com/itm/TS100-65W-MI...
EEVBlog 121GW Multimeter:
www.eevblog.com/product/121gw/
DSLogic Basic Logic Analyzer:
amzn.to/2RDSDQw
www.ebay.com/itm/USB-Logic-DS...
Magnetic Screw Holder:
amzn.to/3b8LOhG
www.harborfreight.com/4-inch-...
Universal ZIP sockets: (clones, used on my ZIF-64 test machine)
www.ebay.com/itm/14-16-18-20-...
RetroTink 2X Upconverter: (to hook up something like a C64 to HDMI)
www.retrotink.com/
Plato (Clone) Side Cutters: (order five)
www.ebay.com/itm/1-2-5-10PCS-...
Heat Sinks:
www.aliexpress.com/item/32537...
Little squeezy bottles: (available elsewhere too)
amzn.to/3b8LOOI
--- Links
My GitHub repository:
github.com/misterblack1?tab=r...
Commodore Computer Club / Vancouver, WA - Portland, OR - PDX Commodore Users Group
www.commodorecomputerclub.com/
--- Instructional videos
My video on damage-free chip removal:
• How to remove chips wi...
--- Music
Intro music and other tracks by:
Nathan Divino
@itsnathandivino
Outro Music:
Abyss by | e s c p | escp-music.bandcamp.com
Music promoted by www.free-stock-music.com
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Пікірлер: 689
@Shifter-1040ST
@Shifter-1040ST 3 жыл бұрын
The Enrichment Center is required to remind you that chips will be baked and then there will be cake.
@billob4285
@billob4285 3 жыл бұрын
The cake is a lie The cake is a lie The cake is a lie The cake is a lie
@herbiehusker1889
@herbiehusker1889 3 жыл бұрын
I bake chips in the oven all the time, they are just usually the potato kind.
@louistournas120
@louistournas120 3 жыл бұрын
You should listen to that Weird Al Yankovic song. It's all about the Pentiums, baby. I think he says I have a 1 GHz CPU. What kind of chip do you have under the hood, a Doritos?
@AlexanderBukh
@AlexanderBukh 3 жыл бұрын
Any flashy effects from those?
@tocaamerillo431
@tocaamerillo431 3 жыл бұрын
I'd say that while baking them for longer might've been a good idea, increasing the temperature most likely wasn't. From the point of view of electronics, the difference between 150*C and 200*C is that the latter is above the melting point of solder. Now, I'm not sure if these old-school ICs contain any solder internally, however even if not, it's not impossible there are components in there that are affected negatively by such a high temperature. If amongst the not yet baked chips you still have some that are even remotely worthwhile, I would try baking them longer, but not going above 150*C.
@shadowtheimpure
@shadowtheimpure 3 жыл бұрын
The dead parts bin for you is like a hunter's prize trophy room. Each chip has a story to tell.
@the_kombinator
@the_kombinator Жыл бұрын
I shove my RAM and Cache DIPS into my drywall in my basement above my workbench. There's even a 386 CPU in there. One day, if I get enough, I want to arrange them in a 12x12 tile and install it somewhere on my floor.
@frankowalker4662
@frankowalker4662 3 жыл бұрын
I'd keep the rainbow text chip for Xmas and birthdays. :)
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 3 жыл бұрын
You could modify the BASIC rom to do that, or make a 4066 module that screws it up. Or replace video ram with a microcontroller..
@thiesenf
@thiesenf 2 жыл бұрын
I bet that chip went over to the LGBTQ side...
@joshm264
@joshm264 3 жыл бұрын
Mmm, baked chips. You even have the DIP as well! I'll see myself out now
@user-wu4cw5ed5w
@user-wu4cw5ed5w 3 жыл бұрын
pun intended here, I guess
@abzhuofficial
@abzhuofficial 3 жыл бұрын
Ba-dum tssssssss
@abzhuofficial
@abzhuofficial 3 жыл бұрын
SID will happily eat those chips with DIP
@danmackintosh6325
@danmackintosh6325 3 жыл бұрын
This comment deserves more than 38 likes surely?
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
I knew that was coming sooner or later! How about chip off the old block as well. We chip you chip we all chip for something. I'll chip in on that one. When the chips are down. When all the chips are on the table or in the oven in this case. Ziff socket da a chip a da. Not so obscure Disney reference there. I know there could be haters on that one but just I think what you want it's a matter of personal opinion of course just like any comment should be taken there's always going to be those people or that person I don't think I've seen you at least one channel and seen one of those people at least a few times! And then there's that person that tries to find something bad every single comment even when there is one word or even a? Or something like that don't be that guy the world is bad enough now as it is if you know what I'm saying need I say more that answer is no
@richards7909
@richards7909 3 жыл бұрын
Can we all admire the adaption of that oven? That is pretty cool!
@TechBench
@TechBench 3 жыл бұрын
In the early 90s acquired (for little or no money - I was a poor student) a whole bunch of 20MB Seagate ST125 IDE drives. They were notorious for what was called "sticktion" where the heads stuck to the platters. The drives usually got tossed - I got hold of them and baked them in the oven. That usually solved the "sticktion" problem and I had a collection of these drives that kept working for many years - some still work in my vintage collection!
@Renville80
@Renville80 3 жыл бұрын
There are some ICs that are classified as moisture sensitive, and which have time limits from the time they come out of the sealed packaging to the time they are soldered to the board, and if that window is exceeded, then they must be baked for 24 hours at 125C / 250F and returned to sealed packaging.
@martindejong3974
@martindejong3974 3 жыл бұрын
The very first (2708) EPROM's could only be programmed, and erased a couple of times, after which erasing (with UV light) didn't work (sufficiently). The solution was to bake them in an oven, after which erasing them worked again (for a couple of times).
@Broken_Yugo
@Broken_Yugo 3 жыл бұрын
Supposedly Intel considered doing the erase process with x rays and then a high temp bake to reverse that damage, but it was decided the quartz window and a germicidal lamp was easier to deal with.
@IDoNotLikeHandlesOnYT
@IDoNotLikeHandlesOnYT 2 жыл бұрын
I recently read about flash memory that incorporates built-in heating elements to anneal the memory cells, making them work again after they've worn out. I think they got something like a 10× increase in lifespan from that. It's not the same failure mode (crystal defects in the insulator vs. electromigration), but the same fix works on it.
@nyanpasu64
@nyanpasu64 2 жыл бұрын
@@IDoNotLikeHandlesOnYT I read about thermally erased flash memory as a concept, but to my knowledge it's never been commercialized. Planned obsolescence much?
@thegeforce6625
@thegeforce6625 Жыл бұрын
@@nyanpasu64 maybe they couldn’t get it to work?
@pastedtomato
@pastedtomato 3 жыл бұрын
Angry Louis Rossmann hisses on the background
@peterg.8245
@peterg.8245 3 жыл бұрын
So you’re saying his PPBus is hot?
@laharl2k
@laharl2k 2 жыл бұрын
Well these arent flipchips (which was louise's main argument against baking cards) so it should be ok.
@askannav2094
@askannav2094 3 жыл бұрын
I love the Christmas Effect PLA.. its like a secret built in feature !!!
@fragglet
@fragglet 3 жыл бұрын
There's a really interesting video here on KZbin by Bil Herd (one of the engineers who worked at Commodore on the C64) called "Component Aging and Heat" where he talks about the effects of heat on chip reliability, but he also goes into a lot of detail about how chips can be damaged by improper ESD procedures. The damage doesn't necessarily mean that the chip will be immediately broken but it may make it more fragile in a way that shortens its lifetime. So it's entirely possible that those Korean chips were manufactured in exactly the same way but weren't handled properly during manufacturing. Check the video out if you haven't seen it, you'll probably find it interesting.
@herrbonk3635
@herrbonk3635 2 жыл бұрын
You really think the Koreans knows all the complex steps of how to manufacture these ICs, but at the same time don't know how to handle them properly? Speaking about Bill Herd, MOS/Commodore had an unusually primitive process and problems with contamination and low precision, that's the primary reason why many ICs in Commodore computers frequently fail.
@kaitlyn__L
@kaitlyn__L Жыл бұрын
@@herrbonk3635 I’m assuming that’s how he knew how they could be made more fragile/brittle by mishandling! And no, of course as a matter of course they knew that they were doing, but it’s always possible a small batch had an accident, but then tested good and was sold. Failing after 30-40 years is nowhere near “defective” for sales purposes, given the projected lifetimes of the machines.
@DCLXV2
@DCLXV2 Жыл бұрын
@@herrbonk3635 There's a large cost associated with proper handling of ESD sensitive devices, it could be some upper management people that though that skimping on handling the chips properly was a good idea, as long as the chips handles the QA test, they can break later...
@szoszaty
@szoszaty 3 жыл бұрын
Hello, I'm working in an electronic manufacturer. I can confirm that a lot of time heat shock can "cure" bad components. Part of my job is to investigate test failed products, and it almost involves cross-check, which means we dismount a suspected component, replaced a new one, and the suspected component mounted into a known good board. So a few times, both sample (the failed and the good one) is working fine after the cross-check. We don't know the reason why. Also we don't know how long it will remains good, maybe after a few days of use, it would fail again. The hot air station is set at around 350-400C because of the PCB heat dissipation. So you might try to go higher temperature, but just for 5 minutes or so.
@davefarquhar8230
@davefarquhar8230 3 жыл бұрын
This was a really neat experiment. As I'm sure you know, successful chip companies revise their manufacturing process periodically. Intel famously calls this their tick-tock cycle, where they alternate between process improvements and new chip designs. Commodore did not do that. MOS Technology had a process that was pretty advanced for the late 70s (at least it had one manufacturing advantage that Intel and Motorola lacked), but they only modernized their process once. 6500-series chips could potentially behave differently from 8500-series chips because the 8500-series chips were made on a newer manufacturing process. So it wouldn't surprise me if chips made by other random companies in 1983-84 responded a bit differently from Commodore chips. I love Commodore, but chemistry wasn't their strong suit and ultimately I think it was their undoing. Atari bought chips from pretty much any company who had capacity to make the chips they needed, so I would expect dead chips that came from Atari machines to potentially behave differently from chips from Commodores. Also, regarding your PLAs. While Commodore did packaging lots of places, the wafers only ever came from one of two places. They had a fab in California that they closed around 1985, and they had their notorious fab in Pennsylvania that was active from the 1970s until their bankruptcy, and that briefly came back from the dead after Commodore went under. The biggest problem with the PLA was the chemistry Commodore used to make them, so I wouldn't expect the factory where the packaging occurred to make much difference. Maybe a factory that did sloppy work would make the chips fail sooner, but since the wafers themselves were fatally flawed, eventually any PLA can fail just from entropy.
@adriansdigitalbasement
@adriansdigitalbasement 3 жыл бұрын
Good points and I didn't realize the wafers were from two places only. Good to know! It's odd how most MOS chips made at the same time as the PLA are fine but the PLA is so unbelievably unreliable now.
@davefarquhar8230
@davefarquhar8230 3 жыл бұрын
@@adriansdigitalbasement in researching this myself (I found this fascinating), I found guidance from your least favorite vintage chipmaker, Micron Technology, on baking chips to fix them. I thought you'd find that amusing. Interestingly, they repeat JEDEC standards, which suggests baking chips at 125 degrees C for 8 hours in most cases, or in some rare cases, 24 hours. The reason for this is to bake off accumulated moisture. Time to extract those hated MT memory chips from the dead parts bin?
@DerekWitt
@DerekWitt 3 жыл бұрын
Today on Adrian’s Digital Kitchen: It’s freshly baked chocolate SID and PLA chips!
@thiesenf
@thiesenf 2 жыл бұрын
Soon on Adrian's Digital 420 Kitchen - Edible chips with some secret sauce...
@MurderMostFowl
@MurderMostFowl 3 жыл бұрын
You got a free extra voice on your SID chip 😂
@desiv1170
@desiv1170 3 жыл бұрын
Computer guys: You need to keep heat from your chips to keep them from damaging them!!! Too late, the chips are already dead... Computer guys: Well, you better heat them up to save them then!!! :-) Great vid... Really interesting results.
@rbrtck
@rbrtck 3 жыл бұрын
I guess it's sort of like putting yellowed plastic cases in the sun for bleaching.
@CollinBaillie
@CollinBaillie 3 жыл бұрын
It does sound weird, when you leave out the "biased" / "non biased" (electrical current / charge applied or not applied) info tid bit. Funny how 'details' can be important to one's perspective or understanding.
@FantasticF113
@FantasticF113 3 жыл бұрын
A great video, thanks Adrian in taking the time & effort to share it with us. Stay safe, peace & love to all!
@paulodagraca3469
@paulodagraca3469 3 жыл бұрын
This goes back to 1988 for me. My own testing never got above 15% fix, and that was with 74xx chips. Mostly 7406 out of Commodore 1541 diskdrive would work. We used to put the chips upside down! While heating. Reason, is that chips would often die 'hot' with gravity pulling down. By heating the chips upside down it would reflow back. Again it is not 100%, but we seem to have had some result. Love the video.
@CDP-1802
@CDP-1802 3 жыл бұрын
BEST EASY BAKE OVEN EVER!
@performa9523
@performa9523 3 жыл бұрын
It was very interesting that you got any positive result at all- I figured nothing at all would happen, so to have something "kinda" work is a real surprise. Great video as always sir, rock on!
@MOS6582
@MOS6582 3 жыл бұрын
Great data to have Adrian, cheers. I can see the baking rumour taking off and spreading and this video should provide a good reference to temper the rumour mill.
@Vvardenfell_Outlander
@Vvardenfell_Outlander 2 жыл бұрын
I just wanted to say that I've been binging your content lately and loving every minute of it. Especially the Macintosh stuff. Excellent channel. Keep up the awesome work, Adrian.
@dutchgabber_official
@dutchgabber_official 3 жыл бұрын
i have actually repeared some motherboards of laptops with the oven indeed 170/180C for half an hour and they are running now for couple years faultless :D
@andrewhughes7195
@andrewhughes7195 3 жыл бұрын
Hello Adrian. Thanks for the interesting experiment -- as a retired chip designer (ex PMC-Sierra) I'm a little skeptical about the baking, especially for electromigration. Low temperature solder on the bond wires might get fixed up but my guess at a mechanism for change would be hot carrier injection. Transistors will fail over time because every now and again an electron (or charge carrier) will be especially energetic and slam into the gate material getting trapped and displacing the crystal structure. Heating up the device and then slowly cooling it down would emulate an annealing cycle which *could* free these charge carriers and perhaps allow the crystal structure to reform.
@warrax111
@warrax111 2 жыл бұрын
Can "cleaner" current (so from better power supply) slow this process?
@andrewhughes7195
@andrewhughes7195 2 жыл бұрын
@@warrax111 Sorry for taking so long to get back to you! I don't think hot carrier injection (the process) is really affected by variations in the potential across the gate. The process is more that some charge carriers are "hot" in that they have more thermal energy and that there is a distribution of energy across all the charge carriers. Think Maxell-Boltzmann style curves (although I think this is more of a Fermi-Dirac distribution -- details are a bit irrelevant) where some electrons (or ions) are just moving quickly. The odds of this occurring are reduced at lower temperatures, of course.
@brianclimbs1509
@brianclimbs1509 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewhughes7195 So they should be fine if you just operate the chips at liquid helium temperatures?
@andrewhughes7195
@andrewhughes7195 Жыл бұрын
@@brianclimbs1509 elevated temperatures are known to shorten device lifetimes. HCI is one of those mechanisms that is temperature dependent. There have been attempts to operate CMOS devices at cryogenic temperatures (liquid nitrogen) but this was for performance not reliability. Liquid Helium would seem … extreme. I suspect that some other effects would come in to play that would prevent to devices from functioning at all. Also, I don’t really think anything can repair damage that is already done.
@gorber81
@gorber81 3 жыл бұрын
Cuts on the knuckles reveals who's spent time ripping apart computers
@ctrlaltrees
@ctrlaltrees 3 жыл бұрын
Great video as always. I've never seen one of those toaster ovens modified for reflowing, clever stuff! That looks like a whole video subject in and of itself.
@SlowerIsFaster139
@SlowerIsFaster139 3 жыл бұрын
That was very interesting if nothing else. Thanks for sharing this venture
@JanBeta
@JanBeta 3 жыл бұрын
Didn't know about this method for fixing chips, interesting! What I can recommend for destroying them is putting them in a microwave. ;)
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
Better yet if all else fails get a bigger hammer or a hammermill either one. Either or a piece of drill Rod or even just a metal rod about 1/8 inch or so in diameter lamp in a drill press preferably more like a high-speed router motor or Dremel or perhaps a PC board drill machine of some description lower into the center of the ship housing keep going until said metal rod comes out of other side there you go non-working chip very effective for destroying a ship in a piece of equipment that you have to go gree to destroy before salvaging and also take multiple cuts at random angles across circuit boards and anything left in a piece more than a few inches It's Hammer Time. Pretty much yes that would do it yeah I had a few of those Savages more than a few over the days that I used to more than a few over over the old years I used to do stuff like that. Yes had to sign an agreement that whatever it was had to be destroyed in a way that it could never be resold put back together excetera or at least anything that could be reused in that equipment to repair 04 whatever or be reused in its original application yep sometimes had a little fun with it to of course. One-time put about 50 some odd bowls possibly closer to do you need to a hundred or more I crossed the B 4.5 volts or upwards of a voltage at quite a few amps yep nice big let out the Magic Smoke. What else is fun take any component that's read 12 volts as long as it does not provide a direct short when it goes 220 / 208 instead of anywhere from lesson 5 to Route 44 voles or maybe more DC nice Pop Fizz bang possibly even a topless chip yep that happened once that was kind of cool didn't expect it again it was something that had to be destroyed first made non operational permanently did this of course after Salvage what was allowed to be that is. Also I do remember sometimes if you run enough voltage sometimes even as little as 9 or 12 volts to some LEDs of course without pumping resistors sometimes either you get a nice physical a pop or crack little crack in the ID and of course Magic Smoke and other times half the LED would be blown off or the end of the old lady would be actually blown off completely. I don't exactly remember how I discovered this thing happening once but I discovered if a magnetic Reed switch a magnet was placed just right spot I think I was trying to do a latching magnetic switch with the opposite polarity to release it if I'm not mistaken when I ran across this? But under the right conditions in the circuit although this won't go for long obviously because of disintegrated and white of her contacts of course what if it's up just right and the right conditions happen godanriver how or what or how or whatever the contacts would start oscillating what are off rapidly and yes quite a bit of blue light as well but basically would act like just a regular relay as a buzzer except there was no coil involved it was just because of magnetism and all it's possible that the contacts got hot enough that they temporarily lose their magnetism for Split Second but I don't know exactly what was causing it but it would act like a relay or a buzzard and oh yeah a lot a lot of radio frequency interference add just up until the contacts were no good was one of those for the weird things that I discovered by accident it's possible I had problems with the circuitry and some of that contri don't know if I was able to reproduce this or not didn't have me Maniac switches I want the waste trying it though so yeah it was kind of expensive at that time. I only had a handful of them probably.
@squirlmy
@squirlmy 3 жыл бұрын
might destroy the microwave! seriously, pins will get hot, possibly spark and melt through plastic in the interior. Or so I was told...
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 3 жыл бұрын
Good way to destroy SD cards when you hear heavy knocks at your door... lol
@Watcher680116
@Watcher680116 3 жыл бұрын
Be careful... If there is not enough wave absorbing material in the microwave too much of the rays may go back into the emitter and destroy it. Melting through the bottom - I think that's no danger as usually the turntable is made of glass and the objects are far away from the walls which are usually made of steel too (often painted white). Always at least put a glass of water with a spoon in it into the microwave when running it. The spoon is to prevent delayed cooking. When there is no object in the water it may "explode" as the boiling bubbles may not form at 100°C and the boiling may actually start at a much higher temperature.
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah you were talking about superheated water in the microwave that Yoda II that gets Disturbed basically explodes instead of just boiling. Yes can confirm this is a thing I know someone that it happened to fortunately no injury they happened to jar to microwave and that's what caused the water to go instead of when they tried to take it out why that happened to someone instead of what could've under the right circumstances. Also this is covered in MythBusters as well we actually had a thing about microwave ovens in science class as well as well as I did some Demos in class you know experiments for extra credit although I didn't need it! I did get a lot of extra credit in a lot of classes sometimes just talk to the teacher but something interesting and they said you know that could be an extra credit project even where you would normally not do projects or things like that in school classes. Also found out in shop class when I was doing personal projects which I had access to the facilities and or repairs for anyting even if Donna shop or late in Hindi I was getting extra credit kind of surprised but still cool.
@cmuller1441
@cmuller1441 3 жыл бұрын
Baking chips is usually done if you want to solder them professionally ("reflowing"). Chips are protected against moisture but if you get the chips our of the packaging too soon you should do that to gently remove moisture otherwise it could create some pockets of steam inside and damage the chip. But the procedure is much less violent but longer: you gently increase the temperature to 105C for hours then finish for 24h at 125C...
@HeffeJeffe78
@HeffeJeffe78 3 жыл бұрын
No joke... many years ago a client of mine had bought a cheap Dell laptop from ... Walmart. Well, it lasted about 3 months and stopped booting. After a bit of Googling I found out that someone had noticed that bad soldering was leading to the heat from the machine warping the board and opening the connections. Someone had mentioned they had luck wrapping the laptop in a blanket and putting it in an oven for an hour at 150º. We did't have much to lose as it was already not booting, so I gave it a shot, and it worked... for a few weeks anyhow.
@bodgemaster7946
@bodgemaster7946 3 жыл бұрын
@Mr Guru As you said in another comment chain: Solder doesn’t melt at 150°C. @Jeffery Hahn Baking chips is a temporary fix so I’m not surprised that it broke again after a few weeks.
@CPUGalaxy
@CPUGalaxy 3 жыл бұрын
very interesting video. I watched it without scrolling through to keep the thrill up for me. Somehow i was hoping to get a surprise at the end that this works somehow. But deep inside myself I expected no improvement. very entertaining video. Thank you! Cheers, Peter
@four20team
@four20team 3 жыл бұрын
I did something similar to a Texas Instruments chip a few year back( it was for a Yamaha receiver) it actually brought it back to life for about 3 months before it started acting up again. Tried baking it again to no avail. Definitely worth a shot if you got nothing to lose. Thanks for the video Adrian!!
@Gormadt
@Gormadt 3 жыл бұрын
That toaster oven mod is awesome
@yuchong1704
@yuchong1704 3 жыл бұрын
Good video. I like the successes and failures. It’s all worth the learning experience.
@umutk5614
@umutk5614 3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting topic Adrian and thanks for the video with experiments.
@aurthorthing7403
@aurthorthing7403 3 жыл бұрын
Silver sharpy markers will stay visible after baking them.
@JuicyJakeRepairs
@JuicyJakeRepairs 3 жыл бұрын
great video! Not the results we could of hoped for!
@shieladixon
@shieladixon 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Adrian, very entertaining. I'm sorry that you did all of that work for no material gain but at least it has saved the rest of us from wasting time trying this 'one weird trick' with Commodore chips.
@RussellRiker
@RussellRiker 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Pretty sure this is what we call science. Keep them coming!
@runvnc208
@runvnc208 3 жыл бұрын
Best holiday bake video ever!
@klaus-udokloppstedt6257
@klaus-udokloppstedt6257 Ай бұрын
I once did the opposite to rescue some precious files from a dead harddrive - placed it in a freezer, then had ~4 minutes to boot from it and save the files. had to do it a couple of times to save all the important stuff. but it worked.
@notsuoh16Bit
@notsuoh16Bit 3 жыл бұрын
love your VHS like intro man, cool as ice.
@GREGGRCO
@GREGGRCO Жыл бұрын
In my youth, our instructors had bad parts they'd throw into boards for us to learn on. I kept a bag-o-parts until the 2000's until surface mounts took over.
@pyromiko
@pyromiko 3 жыл бұрын
i love this channel, sincerely, this is much better than the eight guy.... also you seems to be a better person. You are in way other level Greets from Argentina
@waynelawrence5220
@waynelawrence5220 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting test
@twocvbloke
@twocvbloke 3 жыл бұрын
Well, I've had chips cooked in the oven before, but I don't think I'll try this recipe, they look a tad too crunchy... :P
@6581punk
@6581punk 3 жыл бұрын
They call crisps chips in the US. So it's more likely they would dip them in salsa :)
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
@@6581punk by the way that brings up something interesting and not having to do with computer chips actually. but actual quote on quote what people would call chips. The sea is most chips here in the United States are actually called chips as far as I'm aware at least they can be cold chips. But where it gets interesting is Pringles. Because of how they are made dehydrated potatoes excetera excetera excetera and so forth. Evidently they do not meet the definition of a chip according to the regulations in some way or another. Because late they are produced and what they're made from evidently they cannot be legally called chips. So that's why Pringles are actually referred to as potato crisps. Of course I'm glossing over a lot of things and just summarizing but that's from what I understand the reason why and that's why they're not called chips on the packaging. My guess is if they did it would be called false advertising but it's weird how things are with the step thing. At least sometimes. It's kind of like an old some adult beverages cannot be legally called one thing unless you're made a certain way if you know what I'm saying. I don't know enough about that and to actually even say anything about it have any accuracy since I'm not a connoisseur of that stuff and never even had one drop personal choice you know. Also along the lines of computer chips years and years and years ago even well before anyone had internet at least at home or even access to it anywhere I'd say maybe if you're military up which is where it came from. Then. Worse not internet as we know it or probably even before Phil knew what was what sign There was some stuff out there about the potential to repair computer chips Autumn molecular level using some process that could actually go in and somehow be able to normally make or break connections Etc it was so long ago I don't even remember but I just remember hearing about this possibly an article somewhere who knows this was so long ago I barely even can remember it at all. Just remember here is seeing it somewhere or hearing it actually probably both. I'm pretty sure it was some sort of laser process but is that may be inaccurate but evidently that was a thing at one time I'm pretty sure was just potential I don't know if it actually have been done but who knows it was so long ago when even know and never leak or anything about it after that so who knows
@lukasperuzovic1429
@lukasperuzovic1429 3 жыл бұрын
@@6581punk I feel bad for the poor British man who ordered a Burger and Chips in a US bar and they have him a large bowl of corn chips with his burger.
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 3 жыл бұрын
The roof of your mouth thanks you. You thought Doritos were bad that way?
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 3 жыл бұрын
not for Bender
@klenchr3621
@klenchr3621 3 жыл бұрын
Very cool video. Tha ks for doing this
@Vermilicious
@Vermilicious 3 жыл бұрын
That's interesting. I was also thinking maybe it wasn't hot enough, but I guess that wasn't the case. No real effect. Maybe it would be an interesting follow-up to try freezing them instead, for no apparent reason other than to experiment. Oh, the flashing rainbow effect was rather cool, btw. Keep it :)
@David_Ladd
@David_Ladd 3 жыл бұрын
Adrian, Great video as always sir. It would be interesting with your chips to see what happens if you were to try the 150°C for 24 hours to see how that would work out.
@UpLateGeek
@UpLateGeek 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting concept, I would've thought temperatures that high would only be a detriment to the chips. However I just checked a couple of datasheets and they list the maximum storage temperature of 150°C, so I guess they can handle it for at least some time.
@Walczyk
@Walczyk 3 жыл бұрын
that baker is the coolest thing ive EVER SEEN
@danmackintosh6325
@danmackintosh6325 3 жыл бұрын
Actually, I'd expect it to be rather warmer? lol
@PrayingToTheAlien
@PrayingToTheAlien 3 жыл бұрын
Great video Adrian. I’ve seen this work on motherboards before but not chips.
@askannav2094
@askannav2094 3 жыл бұрын
This is a very reliable fix for the PS3 red ring of death.. As a motherboard reflux, I had place a motherboard in a preheated oven, then brought temp up to about 400° then allow it to cool in the oven overnight.. it was successful but repair didn't last
@BertGrink
@BertGrink 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah i can imagine that it might work on whole circuit boareds where some of the solder joints are a bit iffy; solitary chips on the other hand, not so much.
@jimraynor5694
@jimraynor5694 3 жыл бұрын
Bring an ASUS Motherboard and a Grafikcard XFX back to life again. For 1 Hour at 110 C ! 2 of 6 tries in the early 2000 !!!
@ShamblerDK
@ShamblerDK 2 жыл бұрын
I've revived several graphics cards by baking them in the oven at roughly 220C for 12 minutes. I turn off the oven and let them cool for 30 minutes afterwards. Of the 9 I've tried, 5 was working afterwards. One of them survived for an additional 8 years or so.
@alexriesenbeck
@alexriesenbeck 2 ай бұрын
“There they are; little chips in there!” Hahaha, Your videos are the best. I’ve learned a lot. Thanks Adrian
@bitset3741
@bitset3741 3 жыл бұрын
I had what I totally thought was the Christmas tree PLA on my '84 64, but it turned out to be the color ram failing in a weird way. In the meantime I had swapped out the PLA with a PLAtinum PLA replacement. So I replaced the color ram and actually have an extra good in case my Silver Label '82 C64 has a problem. I really hope it never does though, since it has all original '82 dated chips.
@PGW90RU14
@PGW90RU14 4 ай бұрын
Very interesting experiment! But to be honest, high temperature just deteriorates the semi-conductor structure, I think. As far as I know, (pre)baking is needed only for re-flow process because moisture in package possibly explodes if you do re-flow solder with sudden, massive temperature change.
@GilbertoFerreira
@GilbertoFerreira 7 ай бұрын
Back in the '90 sometime me and my friends used to freeze some hard drives and then they back to life and allow us to make a quick backup from whatever is inside. Perhaps freeze the chips should have some effect either. Or perhaps you could make another video about this cold method to revive HDD. Thanks for this excellent video.
@WalterGreenIII
@WalterGreenIII 3 жыл бұрын
That rainbow effect was actually very cool!
@luisderivas6005
@luisderivas6005 3 жыл бұрын
FYI for tape media: Baking is SOP for remediating magnetic tape media. I used to do so all the time when turning 40-50 year old 9-track tapes. The binder between the film and the ferrous layer would become sticky. Red label Memorex were the worst offenders as the film and the magnetic media would often delaminate entirely when passing over the read heads. www.heeltoe.com/retro/tapes/
@bitoxic
@bitoxic 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting video!!! Funny thing afterwards, I got youtube suggestions to watch baking christmas cookies! 😁
@Dorff_Meister
@Dorff_Meister Жыл бұрын
That re-purposed oven is super sweet.
@stest2935
@stest2935 2 жыл бұрын
So cool to have a mini baking oven to bake chips and what you doing it. Was actually looking to get one at one of the thrift store the other day for $25 so I can try to bake Sony PS2 and XBox 360 Motherboards to see if that would fix the solder joints.
@Hiraghm
@Hiraghm 3 жыл бұрын
You should have made this a collab with Retro Recipes... 😂
@SparksNZeros
@SparksNZeros 3 жыл бұрын
my views certainly always been that if you're writing a chip off as dead anyway, chucking them in the oven and seeing wth happens is no problem, what have you got to lose? they get more dead xD
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah exactly my thoughts as well. Just like trying to revive dead hard drives at least two point recover data or a CD that's scratched Beyond usability xcetera because chances are there's no hope in recovery it professionally if you don't have the budget but you might give it a try sometime there's all kinds of methods summer crazy and others not so much have you ever heard about trying to freeze both CDs and hard drives but never tried any of it but if it's dead anyways or it's a CD that's scratched do you know where why not
@SparksNZeros
@SparksNZeros 3 жыл бұрын
@@aaronbrandenburg2441 well with discs i have a polishing machine, i just polish it repeatedly until it either works or theirs nothing left to be sure.
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 3 жыл бұрын
@@SparksNZeros CDs you need to fill the scratches and then polish, which are like grooves if viewed under a microscope. There is a putty intended for eyeglasses that works great with fixing scratched CD's, it's been 20 years but there should be a similar product available still. If the reflective (label) side is scratched though, it's game over.
@HeyBirt
@HeyBirt 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting experiment! I love this type of thing. I think you had the right idea to speculate about what failure modes baking at a high temperature might have an effect on. The failure modes that might occur after this much time include internal corrosion due to moisture wicking in through the plastic case, corrosion due to chemical reactions between the chemicals used in adjoining layers, over voltage, etc. I don't think baking will have any affect on these types of failures. I did have a PLA once that would start working properly once it warmed up. I guessed that a bonding wire was loose and the increased temp caused enough thermal expansion to make a good enough connection. I think maybe that baking could temporarily 'fix' such a problem but that after after a few heating/cooling cycles it would break again.
@TheXJ12
@TheXJ12 3 жыл бұрын
The recipe I used to restore the graphics card on my Acer 7720G was somehow similar : wrap it with aluminum foil and put it in the oven for 3 minutes on each side at 160°C. And it worked ! But only for 15 days or so. But doing it again and again each time worked great too... until you're tired of it...
@stefanweilhartner4415
@stefanweilhartner4415 3 жыл бұрын
according to bill herd, they used too much boron for the faulty PLAs, if i remember correct. alot of them are not 100% dead as you found out. They are more 'analog' now I guess. Some are slow with slow rising or falling edges at the output. with a scope and different baking methods you could find out what would be the best method by comparing the signals :-)
@rodrigobrasiliense5406
@rodrigobrasiliense5406 2 жыл бұрын
The cool thing about storing damaged chips is that you can make art with it, like a high tech wall frame, for example.
@DavorBalgavi
@DavorBalgavi 3 жыл бұрын
It definitely works, I've been using this resuscitation method for at least 5 years in the past on half-dead and dead graphics cards, and I'm currently writing from a computer that has an r9 270 in it that I revived
@MrChrisRP
@MrChrisRP 3 жыл бұрын
I too have commented about a video card, but this is a different concept. When baking video cards, it is to attempt to repair cold solder joints. In any case, glad for you. That is cool. My attempt was unsuccessful, as I doubt a cold solder joint was the issue in the first place.
@neddreadmaynard
@neddreadmaynard 3 жыл бұрын
A Cooking show for robots! A KZbin first surely!! Merry Christmas from the UK!
@MoosesValley
@MoosesValley 3 жыл бұрын
12:00 I like what you are cooking !! 👍
@drruncmd
@drruncmd 3 жыл бұрын
I think due to the silicon fabrication process, there is a percentage in grades and quality that varies between the chips. Also like nowadays with gpu silicon 'binning'. Where the best quality silicon is specifically selected and used for the more higher end graphics cards. Great video as always!!!
@SuperMoleRetro
@SuperMoleRetro 3 жыл бұрын
Disappointing. It would have been amazing to see the SID chips come back to life since they are getting so rare.
@gb7767
@gb7767 3 жыл бұрын
Check out Jan Beta's latest vid, he tries out a modern replacement with encouraging results ... kzbin.info/www/bejne/kKXTg5eMidp7h9k www.retrocomp.cz/produkt?id=2
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
@@gb7767 perhaps some wave put a link two. Video in here somewhere please I'm sure other people would appreciate that because as you know newest does not stay new for a walk and I course daily by the time somebody sees his comments or yours Toby long long time ago if you know I'm saying so wink would be appreciated I'm sure I'm not the only one that would appreciate it
@gb7767
@gb7767 3 жыл бұрын
@@aaronbrandenburg2441 done, the ARMSID is a available at www.retrocomp.cz
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
@officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 3 жыл бұрын
Maybe if the tray was electrically insulated and the atmosphere was flooded with nitrogen, more testing required. Paint on a thin layer of "waterglass" (aka Sodium Silicate) and you have a heatproof electrical isolation.
@iocat
@iocat 3 жыл бұрын
Always been wondering what was going to happen with the dead parts bin!
@aaronbrandenburg2441
@aaronbrandenburg2441 3 жыл бұрын
I second that and third it and so on I was wondering if he had more than one Dead part Ben even to tell you the truth. Any adult Lego fans out there might know about that one person on KZbin brick tzar and the Boneyard AKA broken Lego or damaged Lego parts he handles same kind of thing. But no not in the oven that would be a very very bad idea but I was referring to the dead Parts Ben. Yes I know I spelled that wrong but Google before you say anything about it. But but he did say it is videos brakes aren't any of said he never throws away a bad or damaged broken Xterra Lego Park although sometimes they can be useful for some things occasionally or if you're not purest modifications which I'm not 100% of purest but I tried to be closed when it can be done with what I have in terms of parts and what exists in the Lego Universe but there are some things you're out price range or other things that would not be practical but maybe in the future would be possible either with you parts or perhaps getting a hold of Parts they don't make anymore AKA perhaps Bricklink might be of use and no I do not have an account yet waiting for approval.
@matthewlister3755
@matthewlister3755 3 жыл бұрын
I actually heard about this from an eBay seller I bought a bunch of SID 6581's from. He's working on a process using heat to clean the filters of the SID. Apparently it works, which is huge because a lot of SIDs are working save for an issue or two with the filters. It would be nice to see the life of the SID 6581 extended. I have a stockpile now just because I don't ever want to see a day when I can't make chiptunes with them. That being said I know that day is coming eventually :(
@joveaaron-real
@joveaaron-real 3 жыл бұрын
I needed this video so much, I skipped the intro!!
@catriona_drummond
@catriona_drummond 3 жыл бұрын
Damn, I was really looking forward to the RIFA caps being put in the oven. What a letdown. :D
@benbaselet2026
@benbaselet2026 3 жыл бұрын
All they need is a good camp fire cooking...
@djdjukic
@djdjukic 3 жыл бұрын
Hotboxing with Rifa
@BertGrink
@BertGrink 3 жыл бұрын
You like to live dangerously, don't you Catriona?
@catriona_drummond
@catriona_drummond 3 жыл бұрын
@@BertGrink Totally :)
@BertGrink
@BertGrink 3 жыл бұрын
@@catriona_drummond Kewl! 😁
@StuBonham
@StuBonham 3 жыл бұрын
You need some fish with those oven chips! Cool episode!
@TheMovieCreator
@TheMovieCreator 3 жыл бұрын
You should look up "Purple Crerping Crud". Commodore used a bad cemical composition on one of the layers on the silicon die, gradually and slowly etching away the metal layer. They found the fault it in late 1984 if I am not mistaken, but by then thousand of machines with potentially ill-fated chips had already been shipped.
@patricknicolucci5073
@patricknicolucci5073 3 жыл бұрын
I sold IC's for many years, we did something called drypak in much lower temps. New chips baked to dry out all moisture slowly over time, so when the PCB's get wave soldered no moisture means no steam which would escape the ic's; which would crack the lids and destroy very expensive rad tolerant IC's (electro migration repair is a different issue and can also work)
@jimstand
@jimstand 3 жыл бұрын
Back in the Late 70's and early 80's You could restore Eprom chips (2708). These were ultraviolet eraseable Programmable Roms. 450 degrees fro 30 minutes. Most were restored. www.classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctalk/2017-December/036588.html This is not my post.
@danielmantione
@danielmantione 3 жыл бұрын
They are usign Fahrenheit in that link, 450 deg C is likely deadly for a chip.
@jimstand
@jimstand 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, it is 450 F.
@paulj1939
@paulj1939 3 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see if there is any visual change to the dead chips vs the working ones under a microscope. And if heating them also visually changed them. Fascinating video though :)
@SWAGCOWVIDEO
@SWAGCOWVIDEO 3 жыл бұрын
I used my oven for a motherboard having issues before - didn't work. I don't think I had it high enough - but I didn't get to try that again because I was banned from using the oven in my house after that lol. But then I tried it again using a heatgun - this time on a dead laptop GPU and it worked! May have melted some of the plastic on the bottom of the case though. I like the idea of having a coarse last resort for such precision electronics.
@jav9i
@jav9i 3 жыл бұрын
4:02 that chip work better than intended
@LevitatingCups
@LevitatingCups 3 жыл бұрын
I fixed ages ago one bad radeon card that had stopped working, with the baking method, just be sure you remove all of the plastics before you do that, well it worked for 'bout 4 more months, but it was better than nothing. One of those "2 days after warranty" situations.
@darkstatehk
@darkstatehk 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if it's possible to decap those dead chips and see where the damage is that causes them to fail?
@laharl2k
@laharl2k 2 жыл бұрын
I doubt it. If i understand correctly its an alloying process, so instead of semiconductor-semiconductor, you get an alloy at the junction and that disrupts the function of the part until its unusable. Thats why silicon diodes fail in a short circuit because you have a P and a N touching but when they alloy you get a neutral piece of silicon so it just conducts because it cant generate the depletion layer to stop the flow. Electromigration causes atoms to shift, so overtime they mix with whatever was at the other side causing problems like leakage in diodes or making transistors work outside their specifications
@TheRainblossoms
@TheRainblossoms 2 жыл бұрын
@@laharl2k Damn. That's a bummer man. But it's interesting to know
@parad0xheart
@parad0xheart 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheRainblossoms On the other hand, if there is no visual difference between a dead chip and a good one, then that means dead chips are ideal samples for reverse engineering projects to delid and map without sacrificing good ones.
@Sypaka
@Sypaka 2 жыл бұрын
@@laharl2k So basically an internal short.
@laharl2k
@laharl2k 2 жыл бұрын
@@parad0xheart sure, but you are still talking about 10nm process chips....like its quite hard to reverse engineer that without super high precision equipment. And you shouldnt see much of a difference but everything just being a few atoms thick, not sure if that would hold true at that scale. Maybe it so prominent vs normal transistors that the issue becomes aparent at "plain sight"
@rutabagasteu
@rutabagasteu 5 ай бұрын
Interesting. I hadn't heard of this before.
@stevesmusic1862
@stevesmusic1862 3 жыл бұрын
Nice video! You should make up a C64 will the faulty parts, the rainbow screen and off sound chip would be a great combo!!
@Stoney3K
@Stoney3K 3 жыл бұрын
The 'disappearing' of 8K of memory kind of points to the PLA pulling one of the bus lines either high or low.
@gallgreg
@gallgreg 3 жыл бұрын
Never thought I would see Adrian do a Christmas baking special!! 😋YUMMMY!!!😋
@lukasperuzovic1429
@lukasperuzovic1429 3 жыл бұрын
All we missing is some DIP
@gallgreg
@gallgreg 3 жыл бұрын
@@lukasperuzovic1429 🤣🤣🤣 Good one! Very punny!!
@XDR1977
@XDR1977 3 жыл бұрын
Ive never baked chips,but sometimes ive freezed them with cooling spray to fix them. Worked most times with broken tsop chips
@victorg7036
@victorg7036 3 жыл бұрын
I had to put my hp printer mother board in the oven before. Hp cheaped out on the solder the year the printer was made. The solder joints would crack and the chips would not be correctly connected to the board, which would cause the printer for crash and freeze at boot. It works great now.
@lukasperuzovic1429
@lukasperuzovic1429 3 жыл бұрын
Any video with a 8bit dance party is a good video, DK forever.
@guderian557
@guderian557 Жыл бұрын
I haven't used this method on individual ICs, but I have used it very successfully on semi modern graphics cards several times. In one of the cases it was an nvidia card, that had bad soldering (my theory) which caused artifacts when it was displaying 3d graphics. Baking it fixed the issues temporarily, but they came back after a bumber of months again unfortunately. Repeatedly baked it a couple of more times before I upgraded.
@tobiasworner5106
@tobiasworner5106 3 жыл бұрын
The funny thing is: a big commodore supplier from Germany told me that he offered the customers to test the computers... because often the computers back then broke within the first few days. If the computers survived this time it was very common that they survive longer.
@barakandl
@barakandl 3 жыл бұрын
This is true. Infant mortality. I make circuit boards for vintage coin op equipment A few chips are obsolete and recycled pulls are the only option. It seems if there is going to be a problem with a used chip it will either be dead first boot or fail within the first few hours of running. If they live through a 24 hour burn in test the board usually goes on to run indefinitely.
@darkbreed
@darkbreed 3 жыл бұрын
I would use a higher temperature, I also know this phenomenon, I learned this problem of electromigration during my training in microelectronics more than 20 years ago. You can trigger the "repair effect" by quickly increasing and decreasing the temperature several times (between 150 and 180 degrees Celsius) over a period of 30 minutes and slowly letting the chips cool down.
@neddy1287
@neddy1287 Жыл бұрын
Seen a few videos mentioned resistor mod to fix the issue as you would need to check with dmm in resistance mode I think as you have to compare a working chip to the faulty chip. Usual suspect is when the reading is low from one pin to another point out the fault
@starbase247
@starbase247 Жыл бұрын
That intro tune should expanded, has a really good drive to it, not to mention cool graphics!
I bought more C64 SID chips from AliExpress! (And some other chips too)
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