Just out of curiosity would a heat shrink gun (paint remover) work?
Leaded solder and unleaded solder have different temperatures they melt at. It also depends on whether Commodore used a cheap or normal mixture of solder.
I think whoever wants to do this kind of work should take lessons and ask questions from people in the industry and they can be found on microcontroller boards. There are fewer experts than there are hobbyists.
People should learn about temperatures, leaded solder and non-leaded solder, reflow ovens, heat reflow guns. surface mount soldering and also watch some videos on it.
You might actually need a heat sink and you can also damage components with regular soldering.
Common solder formulations based on tin and lead are listed below. The fraction represent percentage of tin first, then lead, totaling 100%:
63/37: melts at 183 °C (361 °F) (eutectic: the only mixture that melts at a point, instead of over a range)
60/40: melts between 183–190 °C (361–374 °F)
50/50: melts between 183–215 °C (361–419 °F)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldering