What’s the best way to repair this?
Dat rat dare ^^^^^Scuff it, Flux it, and solder carefully
^^^^This guy does nice work ^^^^If its a very small gap it can be bridged with just solder. You can also use a small piece of wire to bridge it. Another alternative is copper pcb trace repair tape. I have done this type of repair hundreds of times. Most often on much smaller traces, some needing magnification to see.
^^^^This guy does nice work ^^^^
Some of the older boards had issues with the large connector pins getting loose. My 70 Duster had that issue so I had to replace the board. Yes, I could have resoldered the loose pins but for me buying a new board was better because it nearly guaranteed things would work. Too much work to find out my soldering job did not get the job done. Also, having the right soldering iron is key for fixing those traces. All I had was a soldering gun and it got too hot (I've seen guys wrap a larger piece of copper wire to the end of the gun to alleviate that). Back in the 70's I tried repairing a bad PCB trace with my soldering gun and the heat made the trace curl up off of the board. Ugh.A friend of my has experience with this type of work and he added the piece of stranded wire across the break. I’ll check it in the morning but I’m optimistic that this will put me back in business. A new board would be nice but I’m impatient to get back to installing my new meter match device to correct my fuel gauge. I just need to avoid creating any more direct shorts as I complete this project.
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