What do you do if the structural through-holes already have solder in them, that wick doesn’t seem to get? I’ve been trying to put a new USB C port onto my switch for quite a while now. (Now that I think about it, I can probably just shorten the prongs on the port and add solder after for structural strength).
A good solder sucker is your friend.
I have the SS-02, and I like it - I had one of the cheap blue ones first, but the pliable rubber tip really makes a difference. If you’re soldering smd by hand, it’s more than worth the $20
A desoldering pump (manual model, $10 or so for a decent one) is very suitable for removing solder from through-holes, if that is the main issue.
The answer to almost every question in soldering is 'more flux'. Solder wick has flux in the center of the braid, but it's hard to get it into tight places like structural through-holes. Adding your own liquid/paste flux will make the wick much more effective.
Melt the solder and thwack the board on something hard? So the board stops but the molten solder doesn't.
Sometimes though you just have to pile on solder and flux because the via is small enough that surface tension and heat dissipation means its never coming out
Doesn't a pump make quick work of this?
Frequently not. It's always handy to know about extra techniques in soldering.
You can also scale this up in a solder oven and remove almost every single component. Used this for reversing a PCB a few times.
I often add solder to make it easier for the wick to get everything. If the original assy was Lead-Free, using low temp solder (I can has lead? As a treat?) may make a difference here as well. Flux pen on the solder wick also seems to help especially if your wick is kinda crusty.