
Can this be salvaged? If so, how?
I'm terrible with a soldering iron thoughkint wrote:allright, then you've got the reason why the switch didn't work. the pad was likely shot before you desoldered.
And if you could desolder that switch you can put a jumper wire in as well.
Stick the switch through, then prepare some short wire in appropriate length, strip the isolation off the ends. Solder it directly on the switch wire sticking out of the (torn) hole. then the other end at the next pad of that trace - no big deal, really.
Except the switch wasn't working beforehand. So how likely is it that the switch of a plate mounted board was dead itself, and then he destroyed the solder pad when getting it out atop of that?Findecanor wrote:One reason why the pad was lifted from the PCB could be that you used a soldering iron that was too hot. This happened to me all the time when I used a 30W iron. Then I switched to a 15W iron, and I have also tried to be much more careful...
It's hard to tell whether it was like this before I desoldered or not.Findecanor wrote:One reason why the pad was lifted from the PCB could be that you used a soldering iron that was too hot. This happened to me all the time when I used a 30W iron. Then I switched to a 15W iron, and I have also tried to be much more careful.
AFAIK, shipping is expensive in the UK. If you would ship to and from another country, it would cost you as much as the price of the QFR in the first place.