Chartus wrote:
Whats the easiest way to replace the SMD capacitors on a 600. Some of them are in tight places. Is there any way to maybe snip them off without hurting the motherboard?
The safest way is hot air. Personally, I apply a smidge of fresh solder, heat one side at a time, and gently wiggle the cap a small amount one side at a time (with a small screwdriver) in one direction, until it comes off. A good quality iron (I use a Hakko 937) is a must. Although it looks impossible, replacing the audio caps isn't too difficult with the right sized tips, a steady hand and lots of patience.
If you're careful, you won't lift pads... unless the joints are already damaged from the electrolyte, in which case some additional repair may be unavoidable. TBH I haven't yet found the best method for dealing with heavily corroded joints/pads. Best thing is to get to them before you have to worry about that.
Some people replace with tantalum caps, I simply order the original type in a quality brand (Panasonic) since I'm a stickler for originality.
@alexh
IMHO - EVERY single one should be replaced. I've found that with the Commodore-era A1200/A600, they've all leaked a bit, even if there are no visible signs. Every one on my A1200 and A600 boards emitted that tell-tale "fishy" odor during removal. The caps on my Escom A1200 seemed to be OK, but I replaced them anyway after witnessing what nasty things can happen when they leak... two seriously fux'd A600 motherboards in my case :boohoo:
Probably not really necessary to replace the thru-hole caps, but I do anyway with a quality replacement (like Chemi-Con KZE series) while I'm at it with the others.
There's a link on
this page to the A600 schematics, which list all the needed caps. (I could post the Digi-Key part numbers for anyone in the US who wants to order them without the hassle of looking everything up.) The A1200 uses all the same caps, so order a bunch and do them all. :-)
-edit-
Just thought I'd add, there's some fantastic info on this subject
here. Really saved me from making a mess of things!