Your camera probably had a cold solder joint. Maybe it was an RoHS part soldered with standard soldering process. We have that problem all the time with vendors sending RoHS parts with the same part number as the SnPb part they replace. I would not be surprised to see a lot of those problems in the future.
I got lucky once also with an extremely compact hand held radio I got off eBay cheap (was broken). A couple of SM parts were damaged, much smaller than the SM parts we use where I work. However, I was able to get the spare voltage regulator from Icom, and I replaced a diode with an SOT-23 part I had. The SOT-23 was so much larger than the part I was replacing, it would not fit on the pads and I had to jumper it in... The jumper wire was bigger than the part I was replacing. Under the microscope, it looked like there was lots of room :-) No coffee for me that morning! Didier KO4BB Daun Yeagley wrote: > A couple of years ago my wife dropped her digital camera in a parking lot at a > wedding we were attending. The camera would turn on, but it complained that > there was no memory card. When we got back home, I opened it up to find that > a > surface mount dual transistor that controls power to the memory card had come > loose. I thought it strange that this was the problem, considering how rugged > SM usually is. After a lot of research, I was able to find out what the part > was and get a replacement. (NOT, of course from the camera manufacturer.. they > would only sell me the completed board at a cost exceeding the price I had > originally paid for the entire camera!). Works fine again now. > > Daun > _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list [email protected] https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
