HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,203
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
I had a motherboard swap to do this weekend, a warranty job due to a failed HDMI port. The case had USB3 ports on the front panel with the standard keyed connector to the motherboard header. Unlike USB2, the USB3 headers have a plastic surround with a key slot so you don't put it in backwards. There are a couple of very low profile "barbs" on the cable that hold it in place once connected. We've been building units with this setup for probably a year now. I guess we've been lucky, because so far, we've never had to take one back apart again.
I must have struggled with this thing for 20 minutes! You don't want to apply any twisting force which would torque the pins on the motherboard. You don't want to pull too hard, for fear of pulling the plastic port right off the board. Because of the way the cable is made and the "slot" is made on the motherboard, you can't (or I couldn't) get any sort of tool in there to help release the thing. What a PITA, I can't believe I didn't damage the thing. I was complaining to one of my techs, and he said he had similar problems when he did a upgraded his home computer. He actually pulled one of the pins out along with the connector when it finally gave way. He wasn't reusing that motherboard anyway, but man, this seems like a design built to fail.
Am I missing something here? A special tool maybe?
I must have struggled with this thing for 20 minutes! You don't want to apply any twisting force which would torque the pins on the motherboard. You don't want to pull too hard, for fear of pulling the plastic port right off the board. Because of the way the cable is made and the "slot" is made on the motherboard, you can't (or I couldn't) get any sort of tool in there to help release the thing. What a PITA, I can't believe I didn't damage the thing. I was complaining to one of my techs, and he said he had similar problems when he did a upgraded his home computer. He actually pulled one of the pins out along with the connector when it finally gave way. He wasn't reusing that motherboard anyway, but man, this seems like a design built to fail.
Am I missing something here? A special tool maybe?