UPDATE!!!
I found that I don't need the ice cube to recover the CH2 trace, I just have to press down the chip with all my thumb.
I try to press down the chip mainly in its four boundaries with no avail, also try to press down the pcb board with the pressure point near the chip also with no avail.
This mean that stressing the pcb board down didn't recover the trace
This also means that the problem is not a heat related one, my thumb is not a cold alu heat cooler.
Now, What could be wrong?
I hope the problem don't rely in underneath the chip or worst, in the inner layers of the pcb underneath the chip.
After this events, the scope work well for two sessions and then for the third CH2 trace was off...
UPDATE2!!!
If I press slightly in the center of the chip with the blunt point of a pencil, pins 30 and 31 change their voltage and the CH2 trace return to the display.
Any idea of what to do next?
I posted a message in response to the above, then I had to away from the computer, but my post didn't go through, apparently.
Good work. Perseverance pays off. This is headway you've made, and on your own initiative.
Your next step is to open up the housing and perform surgery on the chip inside. Just joking. I have never heard of anyone doing such a thing, but if I had, I'd refer you to him for a briefing on how to proceed.
You have found where to apply pressure to fix the problem. This pressure either (a) goes directly onto the chip inside (if it is rigidly encased), or (b) it is transferred to the outer area and to one or more pin connections inside the IC, or (c) the pressure is transferred to the chip indirectly.
Small chips probably can be rigidly encased in a plastic housing. However when a chip is large enough, I believe it sits in a cavern. From your description, it is not a rigid plastic housing. You can press down on it to fix the problem, yet not break it.
If you're lucky you can find the spot where the least pressure will fix CH2. Then you'll fasten a jig in place to maintain pressure continually.
The least pressure fix might be from underneath the IC. However it's risky because too much pressure is almost guaranteed to break the chip.
Or the least pressure fix might be by lifting the IC, or lifting from underneath the circuit board.
Or a spot where you press down on a pin. Have you pressed down on every pin? Have you examined with a strong magnifier at every pin, to look for a hairline *****? As an alternate you can re-melt the solder joint at each pin.
Or press inward on each pin. Or flex/twist each pin a little. This might restore broken contact with the gold wire inside.
OTOH you don't know when you'll make the problem worse. Therefore don't apply max pressure to anything right away. First go the rounds to every spot with little pressure. If that doesn't help then go around with medium pressure. Etc.
You don't know the thickness of plastic covering the chip. Avoid pressing with a steel tool on the top or bottom of the IC. It is liable to break through the casing and smash into the chip.
Eventually there could be the step of sawing (or using a small grinding wheel) to remove plastic starting at the outer edge, until you encounter the inner chamber where the chip is. You may never reach this point, of course, It's a final resort if nothing else works.