this post was submitted on 01 Nov 2023
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How would you reflow the solder?
With an iron? Or a heat gun? What would be the best approach for something like this with lots of tiny surface mounts?
Not who you asked but 100% use a narrow heat gun, no question; it saves so much time alongside not accidentally bringing connectors
Would an oven work?
They can work, though I'm always reluctant to suggest using them, unless you have one that you can spare without worry of ruining the oven (offgassing from components/PCB/flux), the other problem is ovens can be a lot more variable in temperature than you'd think, and in this scenario where it may even be the chips showing their age, subjecting them to very high temperatures isn't recommended.
Honestly when I bought a small £20 heatgun (smaller than the type you'd use to strip paint), I was kicking myself for not having bought one sooner, they make surface mounted components an absolute breeze Vs using a soldering iron.
The one exception for using ovens is if you're having to do an intricate board with hundreds of components, then I'd suggest buying a small/medium toaster over, and an oven thermometer for more accurate readings.
If you have a hot air rework station, that's one way. Because then it is temp and flow controlled and you can choose a suitable nozzle and direct heat to small spots.
I've reflowed a raspberry pi 0w with a camping stove and a thermometer. As long as there aren't any components on the other side of the pcb, it might work.
Edit: here's an old photo. Thing still works, many months later