If the goal is to recover data, it might be easier to get the eMMC mounted on an adapter board (instead of risking another BeagleBone) so it can be read from a PC or another card reader.
Or for the really adventureous - remove the eMMC and do a dead wiring to a disassembled uSD to SD adapter. Only caveat is this is probally riskier as far as data is concerned. On Sunday, October 25, 2015 07:36:20 Graham wrote: > I would think that your best bet (not the cheapest solution, but most > likely to yield results fast), is to buy another good BBB, then give that > new one and the bad one to someone that has BGA rework and re-balling > capability, and move the eMMC from the bad one to the new one. If the old > eMMC survived the "event", then it should come up immediately. > I don't know if you could ask CircuitCo to do that for you. > > Since you can buy a new BBB for the price of one-half-hour of repair shop > time, I doubt if it is worth recovering the rest of the abused BBB > hardware, for anything other than very simple repairs. > > --- Graham > > == > > On Sunday, October 25, 2015 at 4:33:07 AM UTC-5, Rick M wrote: > > Like a complete asshole, I let bare solder wire drag over my powered > > board. It's dead. > > > > Is there any hope of getting it repaired, so that I may get at the > > contents of the eMMC? It holds a lot of my work the past month trying to > > get all my sh*t working with any 4.x kernel. I hate to start, well, not > > from scratch, but not have the record of where I left things. -- Hunyue Yau http://www.hy-research.com/ -- For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "BeagleBoard" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
