What Is Microsoldering? | PhoneDoctor Singapore

GlossaryBoard & Chip Terms

What Is Microsoldering?

Precision repair on a phone’s logic board — performed under a microscope on components as small as 0.3mm.

Definition: Microsoldering is a specialist repair technique that uses a stereo microscope, precision hot-air rework station, and fine-tipped soldering iron to remove, replace, or repair individual chips and solder joints on a phone’s logic board. It enables chip-level repair rather than full board replacement.

Why microsoldering matters

Without microsoldering, a faulty Power IC or Touch IC means replacing the entire logic board — a $300–$600 repair or a write-off. With microsoldering, the faulty chip alone is replaced — typically $120–$250 and preserving all data. This is the difference between a fixable phone and a “technically total loss.” PhoneDoctor’s senior technicians perform microsoldering for board-level faults, water damage component replacement, and data recovery from dead phones.

What microsoldering requires

Stereo microscope: Most phone board components are invisible to the naked eye at working magnification. A 10–45x microscope is essential.

Hot air rework station: BGA chips are removed with precisely controlled hot air — wrong temperature or airflow destroys surrounding components.

Fine-tipped iron: For drag soldering and pad repair on exposed component pads.

Board schematics: Circuit diagrams showing voltage rails, ground paths, and component locations — essential for diagnosis and targeted repair.

Related terms

→ BGA — the chip packaging microsoldering operates on

→ Reballing — a specific microsoldering process for BGA chips

→ Logic Board — the board microsoldering is performed on

→ Power IC — a common microsoldering target

Need chip-level board repair?

PhoneDoctor performs microsoldering for Power IC, Touch IC, and board-level water damage. Free diagnostics, no fix no fee.

Board & Chip Terms · All Glossary Terms