It is not for nothing that they say that the processor is the heart of a computer, it, like nothing else, requires great attention and careful handling. The processor's needles, called “legs,” are incredibly thin, which means that breaking their structure is as easy as shelling pears. One sloppy move and you have to go to the store for a new one. But you can try to restore those very "legs", ie. align them, and if you do everything carefully, the processor will work for a long time.
Instructions
Step 1
The easiest and most successful way to restore bent "legs" is to use a thin medical needle. The process itself is simple, you need to carefully put the needle on the bent "leg" of your processor and slowly return it to its legal vertical position. Attention should be paid to the needle, it should not have, in any case, any oblique cuts, bevels, etc. The end of the needle should be equal, and the hole diameter as small as possible, otherwise the “leg” can be bent even more or even broken.
Step 2
If the damage is not severe, one or more small screwdrivers can be used. But this method requires increased attention, because the probability of breaking the processor's "leg" increases. If the "leg" is bent closer to the bottom, then it will be enough just to fix it with a screwdriver and the problem is solved. But if it is bent somewhere in the middle, then you should resort to outside help so that you can hold the processor itself, and you can calmly and accurately align the antennae, wielding two screwdrivers (one holding the bend, and the other bending the "leg" to a vertical position).
Step 3
Another not tricky way is alignment with medical tweezers. In this way, it is possible to restore, perhaps, a not very bent "leg". You need to grab the processor "leg" from the side with its flat part and slowly, squeezing the tweezers, bend the antennae.