I got a toshiba 5105 series laptop in for repair last week. I was told it suddenly started showing lines down the display, so I gave it a once over.
Sure enough, it was doing what the client stated.
After a google search for
Toshiba 5105 graphics issues, it became clear that this was a known issue with thousands of these laptops.
A little more reading revealed that toshiba's bga soldering wasn't holding up, with some laptops only lasting a few months and others going bad only after years of use. This particular laptop lasted over five years, so no chance of an in warranty fix.
After removing the keyboard and pressing directly on the laptops video card to verify that the graphics cleared up when contact was made between the video chip and the pc board it's attached to, I then set about
disassembling the laptop to *attempt* repair.
Disassembly was easy, much easier than most laptops. Once the video card was extracted, I decided on a course of action.
With the Apple laptops that had similar issues, people were putting alcohol in a small metal cap and
burning it to reflow the solder, but that's just a little too primitive for my tastes.
Instead, I found
another video that showed an uuber geek removing and resoldering a bga chip.
I didn't go as far as he did and remove, desolder, reball and replace, but I did find his use of aluminum foil for a heat shield to be interesting and useful.
Using a foil heat shield, I set my heatgun on low and heated up the Graphics and memory chips on the card to the point when the solder melted and then let them cool for about a half hour.
Then I reassembled the laptop and turned it on.
Success!

Something new for my bag of tricks!!
