Shawn
Lifer
- Apr 20, 2003
- 32,236
- 53
- 91
Have them send it back.
This is how I've been able to use a cpu with a broken pin in the past:
Take a twist tie, perferably one with the outside plastic so you can just cut the plastic off leaving the very thin piece of metal. Cut the metal piece so it will sit slightly above where it should make contact when seated in the socket. Make sure it's long enough to be able to take it back out with tweezers or something. Carefully bend back the other pin and insert the cpu. It SHOULD work, and is safer than trying to solder something that small, and it's reversable. I don't know how well this will work with a new P4 but it did work for me with an old AMD 5x86 which is still running. However it also used a different type socket. YMMV, but if you have no other options try that.
This is how I've been able to use a cpu with a broken pin in the past:
Take a twist tie, perferably one with the outside plastic so you can just cut the plastic off leaving the very thin piece of metal. Cut the metal piece so it will sit slightly above where it should make contact when seated in the socket. Make sure it's long enough to be able to take it back out with tweezers or something. Carefully bend back the other pin and insert the cpu. It SHOULD work, and is safer than trying to solder something that small, and it's reversable. I don't know how well this will work with a new P4 but it did work for me with an old AMD 5x86 which is still running. However it also used a different type socket. YMMV, but if you have no other options try that.
