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Hi, hoping someone can help with a weird problem (Minho??). I have a 128 Gb iPhone 6 which doesn't boot or charge, and...
Meer informatieGot an iPhone 6 water-damaged & completely dead. After microscope inspection I found a cap (C0612) beside the NAND which...
Meer informatieHi all, I'm hoping for some assistance from somebody out there. Working on an iPhone 6; phone was working perfectly in all...
Meer informatieHi all, working on iPhone 6 which arrived dead. Tried it on iTunes when I first got it, wouldn't connect in normal mode...
Meer informatieHi all, hoping for some inspiration from someone! Got an iPhone 6 which was working fine in every respect except it had...
Meer informatieHi, working on iPhone 6 that won't boot. When first opened looked really clean, but then started to notice various...
Meer informatieHi all, hoping for some suggestions. Bought a non-working iPhone 6, got it home put it on known-good battery & dock...
Meer informatieHi all, after a couple of bad experiences recently with poor quality, re-balled A3 chips from China being passed off as...
Meer informatieHi all, working on an iPhone 6 which wouldn't charge or connect to iTunes but boots fine from a known-good battery (or...
Meer informatieHi all, working on iPhone 6 presently. It'll boot up fine when mains charger plugged in and will charge the battery fine,...
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None of these 'solutions' will work in the longer term. What is happening in most cases is that 2 pads under the baseband IC have become disconnected and need to be re-connected using micro-jumpers. This happens because the phone chassis is lightweight and flexes while in use and in your pocket etc, and puts stress on a joint under these 2 pins and eventually breaks them. Dropping the phone and sticking things against it might possibly help for a while (by pushing the pins against the underlying traces) but it'll always come back. The baseband IC is linked to the phone so you can't just replace it with a new one; you need to find a reputable micro-soldering technician who will remove the baseband IC, attach the 2 jumpers, reball the IC and re-fit it to the board. This is a difficult and fiddly job which is definitely not a DIY fix, but it will provide a proper, permanent solution rather than all this dropping your phone stuff.
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