this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2025
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If you have lifted the pad off, the only way to fix it is to use a bodge wire. You should be able to run a wire between the broken pad and the previous functional one in the network. If you look up bodge wire you'll see this is a pretty standard practice, especially when prototyping PCBs.
Solder to the the far point first, lay down the wire, glue it in place, then solder the other end of the wire to the component.
Or one can scrape off the enamel coat from the trace, solder the bodge wire to the trace, and then tack it to the component.
Be sure to get the parts thoroughly wet with solder to cover any exposed copper. It will prevent corrosion.
Hmmm, you mean a special wire for soldering right? I was initially thinking in soldering some scraps from a copper cable I had laying around but quickly realized it was not going to work
You normally just use very tiny wire. Anything is technically fine but certain types make it easier. Generally something solid core, 30-40AWG. Some people have a specific preference for Kynar or Teflon but there's no hard and fast rules.
I see, the tiny wire I had was the problem then, it has multiple filaments that kept going off
I'll try this one today!