Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

Moderators: grovkillen, Stuntteam, TD-er

Post Reply
Message
Author
digitally-dad
New user
Posts: 2
Joined: 02 Sep 2024, 12:21

Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

#1 Post by digitally-dad » 02 Sep 2024, 12:40

Hi,

I've managed to damage the 3v and rx trace on this board, I've cleaned up the areas and ordered some conductive foil to repair, I have a couple of questions hopefully someone can help me with.

Is the foil suitable for this repair?
I have circled in red the 2 points I believe need to be joined, does that look correct? I couldn't find any schematic for this board, I'm not entirely sure it would have helped me with this repair if I had..

I've also pulled the trace on the RX(blue circle), I've already successfully flashed the device with Esphome, so I don't care if I can't connect to the Rx point in the future, but is there any repir needed at that point, currently the board is dead when connected to AC, I'm hoping that fixing the 3.3v trace will fix that.

Any support appreciated 🤓
Attachments
IMG_20240902_111518~2.jpg
IMG_20240902_111518~2.jpg (730.44 KiB) Viewed 1532 times

TD-er
Core team member
Posts: 9153
Joined: 01 Sep 2017, 22:13
Location: the Netherlands
Contact:

Re: Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

#2 Post by TD-er » 02 Sep 2024, 12:56

First question is how the trace got damaged like this.

Is it due to prolonged soldering and thus delaminating the traces from the PCB?

Before attempting to fix it, maybe you can see if other parts of the board may have been damaged?

I don't know how the PCB of this board looks like, but if I'm not mistaken these are quite small modules to fit in a wall behind a switch or power outlet.

So if your repairs are close to solder pads which may carry mains voltages then I would advice against it.
Your fixes may add some extra 'height' from the PCB which may then give room for sparks to occur.
Traces and pads connected to 230V AC should at least have a distance of 3 mm from each other, preferably more.
If your traces are covered with solder mask (the green paint on the board), they can be closer together, but since you need to replace those traces with something I doubt you will meet these requirements.

digitally-dad
New user
Posts: 2
Joined: 02 Sep 2024, 12:21

Re: Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

#3 Post by digitally-dad » 02 Sep 2024, 13:15

They weren't damaged by current, I had solderd wires for flashing Esphome, they got yanked during testing, 1 of the joints broke(tx) but the other 2 pulled the trace off on me :cry: so no other damage will be present.

Yeah they are relatively small modules, and can go behind a switch, this one won't be though, it was going to be used to fire a boiler, with integration into home assistant.

I have a replacement board ordered, but wanted to try repair this in the meantime, I don't want to use anything that is a risk though, I was planning to cover the repair also.

Thanks for the information TD-er 👌

User avatar
Ath
Normal user
Posts: 3865
Joined: 10 Jun 2018, 12:06
Location: NL

Re: Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

#4 Post by Ath » 02 Sep 2024, 21:44

I made a photo of my Sonoff dual R3 board of ca. the same area, maybe you can use that in the reconstruction/renovation ;)
PXL_20240902_192526887_reg001.jpg
PXL_20240902_192526887_reg001.jpg (865.58 KiB) Viewed 1427 times
/Ton (PayPal.me)

User avatar
chromo23
Normal user
Posts: 838
Joined: 10 Sep 2020, 16:02
Location: germany

Re: Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

#5 Post by chromo23 » 03 Sep 2024, 10:11

digitally-dad wrote: 02 Sep 2024, 12:40 Any support appreciated 🤓
Hey,

the repair is actually quite simple but i strongly recommend to use wires to brige instead of foil.
Bridge the red circled areas.
The blue circled area doesn´t need repair since you can solder a wire directly to the solder joint of the board

TD-er
Core team member
Posts: 9153
Joined: 01 Sep 2017, 22:13
Location: the Netherlands
Contact:

Re: Sonoff Dual R3 Esp32 damaged trace

#6 Post by TD-er » 03 Sep 2024, 10:24

The GND is also exposed there, so make sure you do not create a short.

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests