Board-level repair lives and dies on what you can actually see. A dead phone that won't power on, a board with a jumper lagana job half-finished, or a CPU that needs reballing — none of that work goes well under a cheap handheld loupe. The G2000 10.1" Digital Microscope puts a full HD screen between your eyes and the board, so you spot the hairline crack or lifted pad before you commit to a repair.The magnification range runs from 1x up to 2000x, with object distance from 10mm out to infinity, so the same unit handles a close macro shot of a BGA chip and a wider check of a full motherboard layout. You're not swapping lenses mid-job or squinting through a fixed 40x eyepiece — the focus adjusts to whatever you're working on, from IC-level inspection to general board diagnostics. A separate 10-300mm focus range covers longer-distance viewing when you need to check a full PCB or a larger component without losing clarity.Imaging comes from a 12-megapixel sensor, recording video at 1080HD or 720P and capturing photos in JPG at resolutions from 12M down to 1M depending on what you need saved. For a technician documenting a hardware fault before and after an IC change, or building a portfolio of repair work for a service center, that photo/video record matters — you get proof of the fault and proof of the fix, not just your word for it. Lighting is where a lot of digital microscopes fall apart on solder joints, because a single fixed light throws a shadow right where you need to see. The G2000 ships with an adjustable 8-LED ring light with stepless brightness control, rated for 100,000 hours of continuous use, plus a separate dual-hose external LED light for angled illumination. Together they let you kill shadow on reflective solder and shiny copper pads — the exact spot where cracked joints and cold solder hide from flat lighting. Focus control runs through a fast manual focus system, which matters more than it sounds like on a repair bench. Auto-focus microscopes hunt and drift the moment your hand nudges the board or you're mid-reflow near the lens — manual focus holds steady exactly where you set it. Pair that with the included wired remote control, and you can trigger a photo or video capture without touching the microscope body at all, which keeps the image sharp instead of shaking mid-shot — useful when you're documenting a jumper placement or a fine-pitch solder joint under high zoom. On the connectivity side, the G2000 uses TYPE-C (USB 2.0) for transmission and connects to a PC running WinXP through Win11, or macOS 10.5 and above. That means you can mirror the microscope feed on a second monitor at your repair bench — handy for training a junior technician, for walking a customer through what's actually wrong with their board, or for zooming in further on a PC screen than the 10.1" panel alone allows. Storage runs off a MicroSD card up to 128GB, so a full day's worth of board photos and repair videos stays on the unit even when it's not tethered to a computer. Power comes from a built-in 3.7V 5000mAh (18.5Wh) rechargeable battery, charged over the same TYPE-C port, which keeps the unit usable away from a fixed bench position. For a Pakistani repair shop, this tool earns its place across a wide range of jobs. Checking a board after "dead after flash" symptoms, confirming a jumper hasn't shorted against a neighboring pad, inspecting BGA balls before a CPU reball, verifying an eMMC or UFS chip's markings before programming, or just showing a customer the burnt trace that caused their charging issue — all of it goes faster and more accurately with a stable, well-lit, high-magnification view instead of a phone camera zoomed in or a basic 40x loupe. The G2000 also covers more than mobile board work. Mineralogy, jewelry and antique appraisal, engraving inspection, and general biology or classroom use are all supported by the same 1-2000x range, so a technical training institute or a repair shop that also handles side inspection work gets one tool instead of several. It ships with sixteen language options on the on-screen interface — English, Spanish, Russian, Korean, Japanese, Thai, Hebrew, Portuguese, German, French, Italian, Turkish, Czech, Polish, Traditional Chinese, and Simplified Chinese — useful if your shop trains technicians who aren't all working in English. In the box: the microscope unit, a lifting stand for stable positioning over the board, the dual-hose LED light, a wired remote control, a TYPE-C charging cable, a data cable for PC connection, and an instruction manual. Nothing extra to source before you can put it to work at the bench. This isn't a toy-grade USB microscope built for occasional coin collecting. It's built around the actual workflow of board inspection — steady manual focus, shadow-free lighting on solder joints, remote-triggered capture so your hands stay free, and a screen big enough to actually work from instead of holding a phone up to a lens. For a technician doing IC change, jumper work, CPU reballing, or general PCB diagnostics as a daily task, that combination is what separates a usable inspection tool from one that sits in a drawer after the first week.