I've got an iBook G4 that seems to be developing the issue where the video chip's connection to the motherboard has gone intermittent. My iBook isn't among the serial numbers in the Apple logic board replacement program (assuming that's even still going on; it doesn't look like it is), and it's not under warranty anyway. It was doing more or less all right for the last few weeks -if the connection went bad I could disconnect power and leave the machine off for a few minutes, and it would be fine on reboot- but now I can't get it to work at all anymore.
I've been reading the various insane do-it-yourself repair methods in the archives: stuff with heat guns and propane torches and stuff like that. When it comes to last-resort insane repairs of expensive consumer electronics, my weapon of choice is a toaster oven, but I haven't seen anyone try that yet, and it comes with risks that the other methods don't seem to have: among them, you can't just stick part of the motherboard into a toaster oven (the heat-gun and blowtorch guys masked off part of their motherboards with aluminum foil).
So before I depart on this exercise in mad science, I thought I'd ask if anyone else here has tried a toaster oven. The alternative seems to be replacing the logic board, and that's not an option in my situation, so the way I see it I don't have much to lose. But I thought I'd check to see if anyone else had tried reflowing the video card this way, jut in case there were any caveats. You know, besides the fact that you're PUTTING YOUR MAC'S MOTHERBOARD IN A FRIGGIN TOASTER OVEN.