I decided to look a bit deeper...
After opening up the unit, couldn’t see anything obvious, I attempted to remove the main board from the unit by removing 6 small screws. Except the last one that was hidden by the Baro sensor board. I looked a bit closer, and the only way to remove the screw was to remove the Baro sensor board that was soldered to the main board at 3 solder points.
I fired up the soldering iron and grabbed my solder remover, which was doing the job well in removing the solder and the board.... to well. Iron was to hot and lifted some of the tracks for the connections
Anyway, id attack that repair later.
So, after removing the main board and cleaned up the dirt/corrosion from the main board to the rubberised LCD connector, time to attack the Baro sensor reinstall.
I tried to solder back the board with what was left of the tracks... Not really a working fix. So, it was time to be searching for some wire thin enough to jumper the connections back to some solid copper tracks on both the Baro board and the main board.
Yay! all working again.
Don't know what I would have done if I couldn’t get it going again... New station hardware probably. I’m surprised I’ve been able to keep this hardware going for 10 years or so, but for how much longer.....