This is work of Art, super skilled and precise. I wished i had these skills and knowledge. Would be big business to be able to perform here at my place.
So why do you destroy the original NAND chip instead of using hot air to remove it from the board? I really wish there's someone in my country able to do this. I've consulted with a few and they can only do up to iPad Mini 5. I have an iPad Mini 6 that I hardly touch because of its pitiful 64GB storage, instead using a cheap Samsung A7 Lite which has expandable storage.
Using a method that destroys NAND memory is safer than using a hot air blower. For example, when you remove chips with a hot air blower, there's a risk that other components like capacitors or MLCCs might come loose. However, with the destruction method, that risk is eliminated. Additionally, the destruction method is better for protecting personal information.
Amazing video ! Do you think we can use some flux to remove the chip instead on the CNC ? Also, care to share what the paste + UV process was for ? Thanks again !
not possible I think. Since the M series Ipads have 16 GB RAM for anything above 512 GB so the system may not work. 8 GB RAM - 64-512 GB ROM and 16 GB RAM - 1TB-2TB
Hello! If you don't mind, please introduce you using tool list info (like CNC grind machine, fixtures, parts). All your tutorials are not tools list up. I like to enjoy my retired hobby to watch how to change current tech trend, and also what tool are using to reapire tutorial. Thank you.
"This mother board is really beautiful" *throws it on a fucking CNC mill* Thanks dude, now any time some apple bootlicker says samsung users are just poor, im gonna show them this