Hi Stéphane,
Stéphane Delaunay via coreboot wrote:
On Tuesday, September 1, 2020 1:37 PM, Peter Stuge peter@stuge.se wrote:
I haven't used it myself because soldering is easy for me, but apparently at least one person had success with the GPIO33 method.
I wasn't able to locate those traces from the top. To get a full view of the board, you'd have to remove the CPU heatsink and take it out of the frame, so I don't really understand how you would do this while powering on the system, it would probably overheat immediately.
Yeah, best leave the heatsink attached. If you do remove it then you should clean off all thermal paste and apply fresh paste before reattaching it.
But as I understand the intent of the R566 pads, they should be within fairly easy reach on the board, somewhere nearby the J27 PCIe Mini Card connector.
Unfortunately, I don't have a heat gun at hand to desolder the chip either, so I'm considering just doing a dirty ISP and seeing where I can get.
If the flash chip is SO-8 or SO-16, if you have another flash chip and if you only need to reprogram once (ie. you have a known-good coreboot image) then you could remove the flash chip by cutting its pins flush with the black chip package using a sharp nose side cutter, remove the black package with the chip, then desolder the pins one at a time, use solder wick to clean up the pads, and finally solder the second flash chip in - *after* programming it with a beaglebone, rpi or some other programmer.
Kind regards
//Peter