Introduction
Tools
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Using a plastic opening tool, pry up the two arms of the case cover near the middle of the device to free them from the sides.
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Remove the single 0.327" silver screw on the back of the device that was exposed when you removed the rear case cover.
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Flip the device over and work a plastic opening tool around the base of the front case cover until it loosens.
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CAUTION: Do not fully remove the case cover until the next step has been completed or you may damage the ribbon cable. To be safe, only lift the cover high enough to fit a spudger in the gap.
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Using a plastic opening tool, gently pry up on the top of where the ribbon cable attaches to the motherboard to release the cable.
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Flip the device over. In one corner, there is a large black component extending past the side of the device. This is the headphone jack.
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Using a soldering iron, desolder the four points at which the headphone jack connects to the motherboard.
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Resolder the new headphone jack to the motherboard, being careful that it is fully attached and in place.
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Dimensions for headphone jack: 0.230" by 0.541" 1/8" diameter
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The red box displays the newly installed headphone jack.
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To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
One comment
Sometimes the problem isn't that you need to solder a new jack on but that the jack has become detached from the board or worse the board has started to flake apart (the pad has detached from the board).
So get out your volt meter before you remove the old jack and test to make sure it's the jack that is the problem. My experience is that it is rarely the jack (I've fixed several of these).
There are a couple places on the board where you can solder wires onto if the pads become detached. Just be sure to glue the jack down since the pads aren't anchoring it now (so you don't put added strain on the remaining pads).