That’s a good business practice anyway. You want your high price system up and 
running as fast as possible, so not having to do more than cursory diagnostics 
is a good thing I think deck realize that with the VAX and it’s remote the 
diagnostic capability as for the board breaks, IBM used to do that for all the 
boards they replaced. They even had a special board breaking tool.
My CE from IBM said that it costs IBM more to diagnose a faulty board than it 
does to make a new one so that’s why they do it.  Breaking the board also 
ensures that the engineers won’t get caught up in a side project trying to 
figure out what went wrong.

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jul 3, 2025, at 11:10, cz via cctalk <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
>> 
>> Same here. The FE came prepared with a replacement board. Never repaired the 
>> board.
>> In and out!
> 
> Which makes sense. My guess is in the 80's 90's they would send the board 
> back to a rework facility and repair it there. BGA/PGA is not too difficult 
> to do if you have a good rework station, and the rest of the chips on the 
> board were probably worth enough to make the rework totally feasable.
> 
> By the mid 2000's, yeah they probably would just trash the board.
> 
> C

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