Industry News | 2019-11-05 22:08:21.0
Via in pad is the design practice of placing a via in the copper landing pad of a component. Compared to standard PCB via routing, via in pad allows a design to use smaller component pitch sizes and further reduce the PCBs overall size. With component manufactures pushing smaller parts every year and the demand from consumers for smaller devices, the usage of via in pad practices by hardware engineers have become more commonplace. In this article, we will discuss the differences between via in pad and traditional vias, when should you use via in pad, and how to design for it.
Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 18 12:30:19 EST 2007 | slthomas
Change pastes, although insufficient heating may leave excessive residues. Is this on one board or all products? No Clean or water soluble? Do you profile accurately or "guesstimate" your settings?
Electronics Forum | Wed Apr 28 14:52:03 EDT 2010 | davef
When we hear the words 'flexible circuit' and 'delamination' in the same sentence, we think: * Excessive reflow temperature. * Entrapped moisture. Boardhouse: I hope this is a step towards redemption.
Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 23 14:41:41 EDT 2004 | Steve Stach
Dear JSK, It sounds like the root causes of your problem are two fold. First, excessive heat will polymerize the abietic acid found in rosin forming neo-abietic diamers and polymers which are much less soluble than the parent monomer. There are
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 17 03:07:17 EST 2005 | Chua
Hi, We are running lead free at wave solder now and the spray flux system is down. If we are going to able the flux manually, what problem will we be facing with the excess flux able. Appreciate for the advise.
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 17 22:14:42 EST 2005 | Chua
Hi Davef, Thanks for your advise...... We are running no-clean process. If there is white residues after few days.....is it cause by those excess flux. Thanks
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 17 10:14:30 EST 2005 | davef
If you're washing the boards properly, you should see any problems, maybe a little extra floaming, but that won't be too bad. If you're running no clean, you need to aplly flux according to your supplier's recommendations. If you decide not to foll
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 17 22:47:29 EST 2005 | davef
That would be our first guess, also. Get the stuff analyzed to be sure. Another clue is if the white stuff disappears when you hit it with hot air from a rework station. The hot air is activate the flux. Good troubleshooting tool, but you're subj
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 01 07:46:41 EST 2006 | davef
Bridging Causes: * Insufficient flux * Excessive pre-heat * High conveyor speed * Solder contamination
Electronics Forum | Tue May 22 08:39:23 EDT 2012 | davef
Bridging Causes: Insufficient flux, excessive pre-heat, high conveyor speed, solder contamination [AIM Solder]