
(Tone Boost side, but since I'm posting pics anyway...)

Moderator: Ghost Hip










I would advise against this. footswitches can fail pretty fast when you are heating them up. especially if the person doing it does not have both proper equipment and experience. I only reflow a non-functioning switch if it has visible signs of dry solder, cracked solder, oxidized waxy or green solder etc.. or if I'm just connecting a broken wire. %100 of the time when I find a bad footswitch that is not a super rare russian muff, I will swap it for new.KaosCill8r wrote:Maybe first just heat up the switch connections to rep low the solder. Might just be a dodgy joint. If that doesn't work then solder in a new switch.

I partly agree.eatyourguitar wrote:I have repaired numerous guitar pedals that came into my shop with this exact problem. everything that is true bypass will pass a signal with or without power even if the switch is broken. the fact that it passes a signal does not indicate any particular problem. the fact that it does not pass a signal after you toggle the footswitch just tells you that some where between the input jack tip footswitch lug and the output jack tip footswitch lug something is either grounded or disconnected or the pcb needs a repair. with the power disconnected, check the footswitch by using a multimeter set to OHMS (resistance). if you have a meter that beeps, it will help, if not, just check for resistance < 50 OHMS. check each lug to each other lug one by one. write down what connects to what. < 50 or a beep means it is connected. then toggle the footswitch. do the test again and write down the results. you will need to use your knowledge of switches and common sense to determine if the switch is bad.
if the switch is good, check power at the pads on the board where it comes in. do this with the power on.
if the board has power and the footswitch is good, your pedal needs a professional repair. if you still want to work on it check my old video on probing for problems.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKP8Y64IK90[/youtube]
I would advise against this. footswitches can fail pretty fast when you are heating them up. especially if the person doing it does not have both proper equipment and experience. I only reflow a non-functioning switch if it has visible signs of dry solder, cracked solder, oxidized waxy or green solder etc.. or if I'm just connecting a broken wire. %100 of the time when I find a bad footswitch that is not a super rare russian muff, I will swap it for new.KaosCill8r wrote:Maybe first just heat up the switch connections to rep low the solder. Might just be a dodgy joint. If that doesn't work then solder in a new switch.
