bought a computer repair kit today will i use all of it?

jaime_lion

New Member
So i have taken apart around 10ish computers i do it more as a hobby and not as a job professionaly. I help friends fix there computers and diagnose them. Well today i bought a computer repair kit at the local best buy. and it has tools in it i have not used on computers like pliers and wire stripers. do people use these in computer repair? from my knowledge screwdrivers and allen wrenchs are what you use. I you dont use pliers and wire stripers and i think they are ic pullers (they look like beefy tweezers) why do they include them in the kit?

Thanks for the help in answering my question.
 
Last edited:
Networking Engineers use wire strippers when working with networking cable. Pliers could be used to get a good grip on a stubborn part, etc. There's a wide variety of reasons as to why they're included.
 
So i have taken apart around 10ish computers i do it more as a hobby and not as a job professionaly. I help friends fix there computers and diagnose them. Well today i bought a computer repair kit at the local best buy. and it has tools in it i have not used on computers like pliers and wire stripers. do people use these in computer repair? from my knowledge screwdrivers and allen wrenchs are what you use. I you dont use pliers and wire stripers and i think they are ic pullers (they look like beefy tweezers) why do they include them in the kit?

Thanks for the help in answering my question.
They include them because people use them. There is a lot you can not do in a computer with just allen wrenches (which I have never needed to use in a computer) and screwdrivers.

Ideally, you should have a large computer repair kit to handle all scenarios. My personal kit has:
-Screw drivers
-Wire Strippers
-Pliers in several sizes
-Drill
-sandpaper (in various grits from 80-4000)
-Wire (from 20 gauge down to 8 gauge)
-Various connectors
-Network Tester
-Network cable (Cat5e, Cat6e, and normal phone line)
-Network crimper
-rivet gun
-tin snips
-PSU tester
-Volt meter
-Watt meter
-Ohm Meter
-Heat shrink
-Lighter (butane and zippo windproof)
-Heatgun
-HDD test programs on CD and Flahkey
-DOS boot floppy disk

And I have yet to come across an issue that my kit can't fix or find.
 
They include them because people use them. There is a lot you can not do in a computer with just allen wrenches (which I have never needed to use in a computer) and screwdrivers.

Ideally, you should have a large computer repair kit to handle all scenarios. My personal kit has:
-Screw drivers
-Wire Strippers
-Pliers in several sizes
-Drill
-sandpaper (in various grits from 80-4000)
-Wire (from 20 gauge down to 8 gauge)
-Various connectors
-Network Tester
-Network cable (Cat5e, Cat6e, and normal phone line)
-Network crimper
-rivet gun
-tin snips
-PSU tester
-Volt meter
-Watt meter
-Ohm Meter
-Heat shrink
-Lighter (butane and zippo windproof)
-Heatgun
-HDD test programs on CD and Flahkey
-DOS boot floppy disk

And I have yet to come across an issue that my kit can't fix or find.

what would you use sandpaper for?

from my understanding everything should be ether minimal insertion force or zero insertion force. so no real need to use pliers. from what i looked at inside my computer it really only takes a screwdriver.
 
I've never needed to use sandpaper but I could see someone using it to cleanup corroded/tarnished connectors. Even fine grit sandpaper is more abrasive than I prefer. I've always used a pencil eraser for cleaning contacts, works great and not too abrasive.

Depending on what type of repairs you do a repair kit could also include an anti-static wrist strap, soldering iron and solder, desoldering tool, chip puller and more in addition to what wolfeking posted.
 
I've never needed to use sandpaper but I could see someone using it to cleanup corroded/tarnished connectors. Even fine grit sandpaper is more abrasive than I prefer. I've always used a pencil eraser for cleaning contacts, works great and not too abrasive.

Depending on what type of repairs you do a repair kit could also include an anti-static wrist strap, soldering iron and solder, desoldering tool, chip puller and more in addition to what wolfeking posted.
Corroded connectors, and it helps remove paint or other coverings to get a bare metal contact also.

Plus, you can not lap heatsinks and processors without high grit sandpaper (2000+ grit levels).
 
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