@TelKitty personally no, and I wouldn't do it unless you want to make the oven you use it in dead forever for food
also the temperature range you have to keep it at to avoid killing the chips on the device is very narrow, too high and the silicon dies (greater than 150C) too low and the components won't thermal shock back into connection (note it doesn't actually reflow the parts it just thermal shocks them back into contact)
Drone controller stopped working. I saw some rust, maybe the circuit is not fully connected because of the rust. I have very limited options. I can either try to reflow the circuit myself, or send it for repair somewhere else. I could also get a new controller or trying to config another unused controller, although not sure the difficulty level of trying to config a no DJI controller to control a DJI drone.
@TelKitty have you tried cleaning it first? it's possible the rust is actually causing a short. Then I'd check the circuit using a multimeter
but I wouldn't bake it unless you're 100% sure you know what you're doing. Best case it works, but most likely case you've contaminated an oven forever and it still doesn't work
circuits don't generally 'rust' they get corrosion potentially but it's not 'rust' it's actually salts causing shorts etc or changing voltages. Hence the 'did you clean it first'
Technically you can use distilled water too as long as you give the board time to discharge capacitors first and let it dry completely before repowering
which depending on your humidity can take time
don't generally use tap water as it has dissolved salts that can cause corrosion themselves as well as additives like chlorine and fluoride
It accumulates? Like my apps have tens of thousands of downloads. But since my apps have been there for nearly 10 years, I only need a couple of downloads every day to achieve tens of thousands of downloads.