r0bbie wrote:Hi,
I don't think your boards soldering looks great (sorry Firelord
To bad you have posted 3 pics of the component side and only one of the solder side, the most important one in this case.
You have a lot of "cold joints", that is, yes there is solder on the pin of the component and it touches the circuit-board, but it didn't got enough time to flow and make a good connection.
If you look at your first picture, and look at the third resistor from top, at the left from the Atmega, you see that the solder has flowed trough the board to the top, this is how all your solder joints should look.
So here's what to do, carefully remove your chips from the sockets ( they don't like heat).
Re-solder every pin in the following way;
Put the (clean) tip of your soldering iron on the pad at the same moment add a little more (multi-core) solder, leave the tip at least 3 seconds on the pad, clean the tip of the iron again and move to the next pad.
Repeat the above until all the pads are done.
Inspect the board carefully before placing chips and applying power, even better, post pictures after for evaluation.
Good luck
Rob
I see what you mean. On the bottom side every pin/hole area is completely covered by solder, but it was insufficient to flow to the top side and cover that with solder as well.
I didn't wanted to get overheated components, so I mostly just had brief contact during soldering.
Although my multimeter measurements didn't indicate any bad connections, I'll take your advise and resolder every pin the way you pointed out.
Are you saying I only should redo all those socket pins from the chips, or just any 'cold joint' I can find?