I want to connect two traces on a double sided board using the lead of a through hole part(a USB connector). Sorry I don't know what you call this. What you normally use vias for. Is there a way I can get solder on the pad under the part to make the connection? I tried to get the solder to wick up through the board from the bottom side but it wouldn't happen. Is that even possible? Any good way to do this besides through plating or making a link elsewhere?
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A****min
May 29.2019, 09:06:23
If you can access the pad, even if you have to use the finest tip you can, then that's of course no problem, just top-side solder it, for through hole resistors, diodes, transistors etc... no problem. Electrolytic capacitors you can always just have hovering above the board a couple mm so you can get the iron under. If it's a PCB header you are doing, that's easily enough resolved just by lifting the plastic base up a bit and solder underneath before pushing it back down, bit of a fiddle but works fine, for board-to-board interconnects you could consider using round-pin (aka machine pin) headers which you can solder top-side no problem.
If you can't access the pad at all though then it's tricky.
If the hole is really tight on the pin, MAYBE, you could put a mound of solderpaste over the pad, insert the part, and heat the pin to melt the now hidden solderpaste and hope it works. Never tried it, just an idea.
Taking some thin repair enamelled wire (0.1mm or whatever), you could wrap it around the top of the pin right under the component body and thinly solder in place, insert the part so the wire is between the part and board, and then affix the other end of said wire to somewhere on the top side trace in question which is more accessible.