No worries - it's still sitting there with the case off, and it's clear which components they've replaced.It would be nice to see the repairs theyve made
Here's the view from the underside of the boardIt would be nice to see the repairs theyve made
Indeed. I'm not complaining - it was busticated and now it's not, and it didn't cost me a pennyI would imagine the soldering you are seeing is standard and it is only the very edge of the traces where the components connect that have been touched so not really the fault of the repairer.
Seems to be the normal way (in at least Chinese stuff) of making traces capable of carrying the higher power required, ie load them with solder. Looks crap but probably does the job.
What I did find quite interesting was that the logic board on the top of the machine is marked "US-MTS-210". I guess they use the same logic board with different power boards.Yes it is a MTS, will have a look when I get a chance, may be tomorrow if I get the last of the components made for the job I am doing at the moment.
What I did find quite interesting was that the logic board on the top of the machine is marked "US-MTS-210". I guess they use the same logic board with different power boards.