How to clean an SD Card slot?

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As per @AaronMiller 's comment on the original post:

It's not feasible to repair the wrecked SD card slot; in order to do so, you'd need to disassemble the Chromebook, desolder the destroyed part, disassemble that, and bend the pins back into shape, and if you can do that, you can much more easily order a PC-board-mount SD slot of the same form factor and just replace the broken part entirely. Much more practically, why not use a USB SD card reader? It's not as streamlined as an integrated one, but it'll work, and will be easy to replace in the event that whatever happens to the integrated slot happens to the USB reader too.

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Sam Quinn
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Sam Quinn

I am an amature programmer who specializes in scripting lingos such as javascript, posting most of my creations on GitHub.

Updated on September 18, 2022

Comments

  • Sam Quinn
    Sam Quinn over 1 year

    As I was taking out the dummy SD card on my new Chromebook, a small piece broke off of it and is now stuck inside the slot. I have tried removing using various cleaning methods including:

    Putting water/alcohol on the dummy and moving it in and out of the reader
    Folding paper into the shape of an SD card and trying to pull it out
    Using tweasers to pull it out

    Edit: I looked inside using a flashlight, but there did not seem to be a small piece of plastic. What I saw were mangled contacts. Is it possible to repair SD card readers, and if so, how?

    • Thalys
      Thalys almost 11 years
      Thats bad, its a whole load of TINY pins, and usually as one unit.
    • gronostaj
      gronostaj almost 11 years
      I've rolled back the question to its original form because it was like 90% unreadable because of the strikeout. Please include any details, but don't vandalize questions. BTW, there's no actual question in your post and it seems to be opinion-based.
    • Aaron Miller
      Aaron Miller almost 11 years
      It's not feasible to repair the wrecked SD card slot; in order to do so, you'd need to disassemble the Chromebook, desolder the destroyed part, disassemble that, and bend the pins back into shape, and if you can do that, you can much more easily order a PC-board-mount SD slot of the same form factor and just replace the broken part entirely. Much more practically, why not use a USB SD card reader? It's not as streamlined as an integrated one, but it'll work, and will be easy to replace in the event that whatever happens to the integrated slot happens to the USB reader too.
    • Aaron Miller
      Aaron Miller almost 11 years
      Also, on a more general note, it is extremely inadvisable to poke anything saturated in any solvent into any orifice of any electronic device for any reason.
    • Sam Quinn
      Sam Quinn almost 11 years
      @AaronMiller Thank you, I'll try the USB version. Also, the Chromebook was off during the cleaning, and the SD card reader well enclosed, and I gave it plenty of time to dry. No Chromebooks were harmed in this cleaning.
    • Aaron Miller
      Aaron Miller almost 11 years
      @SamQuinn The Chromebook wouldn't have to be powered on for a solvent such as rubbing alcohol to do damage, and PC-board-mounted SD slots aren't well enough enclosed to be liquid-tight. Odds are it won't hurt anything, sure, but you're better off not taking the chance, especially not with a device that's brand-new and certainly hasn't had time for any sort of corrosion to accumulate on the SD contacts.
    • Anonymous Penguin
      Anonymous Penguin almost 11 years
      I might be late, but you might be able to call Google and see if it's under warranty. You may have to pay a bit, but if you want it fixed....
    • Sam Quinn
      Sam Quinn almost 11 years
      @AnnonomusPerson Thanks for the suggestion, but I've had it forever (like since it came out), so its not under warranty.
    • Anonymous Penguin
      Anonymous Penguin almost 11 years
      @SamQuinn Yes, maybe not under warranty, but they may give you a place you can send it to get it replaced for a small fee. I'm not saying it's the best option, but it might be a good idea. For the tweezers: have you tried to push it before pulling it out? Sometimes it is a click in/out thing and it may be still latched. That might make sense: it stuck out a bit and you yanked it out without pushing.
    • Sam Quinn
      Sam Quinn almost 11 years
      @AnnonomusPerson Quoting self: "I looked inside using a flashlight, but there did not seem to be a small piece of plastic. What I saw were mangled contacts."
    • Anonymous Penguin
      Anonymous Penguin almost 11 years
      @SamQuinn Sorry, forgot that part.