Motherboard Repair — What Logic Board Repair Actually Means (Singapore Guide)

Motherboard repair means fixing faults directly on a phone’s main circuit board — IC chips, power management, baseband, audio circuits. It’s required when basic parts replacement can’t solve the problem. Here’s what it involves, which symptoms need it, and when it’s worth it in Singapore.

When motherboard repair is needed

Most phone repairs — cracked screens, dead batteries, broken ports — involve replacing a specific part. Motherboard repair is different. It’s required when the fault is on the main circuit board itself, not in any removable component. Common causes include water damage, a severe drop, electrical surge, a failed IC chip, or manufacturing defects that surface over time.

Symptom Likely board-level cause
Phone won’t turn on, no charging response PMIC (power management IC) fault or charging IC fault
iTunes error -1, 9, 4013, 4014 during restore Baseband IC or NAND storage fault
No service / searching / SIM not detected Baseband chip or antenna circuit fault
Face ID not working after screen replacement Face ID module paired to motherboard — not a screen issue
Touch ID / fingerprint not responding Secure Enclave or Touch ID controller issue
Phone works but no audio at all Audio IC fault
Overheating with no load Short circuit on board from water or drop damage

What board-level repair actually involves

Board-level repair requires a microscope, hot air rework station, soldering equipment, and extensive component knowledge. The technician identifies the failed component — which may be smaller than a grain of rice — removes it, and replaces it with a working equivalent. This is fundamentally different from phone repair at the parts-replacement level and is closer to electronics engineering.

Not every phone repair shop offers board-level repair. Shops that do need trained technicians and proper equipment. A shop that advertises “motherboard repair” without qualified staff may simply replace the entire logic board — a valid but much more expensive approach — rather than fix the individual fault.

Is motherboard repair always worth it?

It depends on the fault, the phone model, and the cost of the repair versus replacement. A good repair shop will diagnose the fault first and give you an honest assessment before proceeding. Key questions to ask:

  • What specifically is wrong? — A technician who can name the specific chip or component fault is more credible than one who says “motherboard problem” vaguely
  • What is the success rate for this fault? — Some board repairs are very reliable; others (severe water damage, NAND failure) carry real uncertainty
  • What warranty comes with the repair? — At Certified Phone Repair, board-level repairs carry a 60-day warranty
  • What happens if it fails? — You should understand the cost and outcome if the repair doesn’t succeed

iPhone-specific: why Face ID can’t be transferred

On iPhone X and later, Face ID is cryptographically paired to the original motherboard. If the Face ID module is damaged, it must be repaired or the board must be repaired — a new module cannot simply be installed and work. This is a security feature, not a shop limitation. Any shop claiming to fully restore Face ID by swapping a module on iPhone 12 or later is not being truthful.

Related terms

Phone not turning on or has a board-level fault?
Certified Phone Repair at Westgate and AMK Hub — free assessment, upfront quote before any work begins.

📱 WhatsApp +65 9678 0203

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