Electronics Forum | Mon Jun 28 09:15:21 EDT 2004 | jdumont
Morning all, we have been seeing some problems with the edges of some of our BGA's curling away from the PCB after reflow. Is this possibly a moisture problem? If so what would be a good time/temp to bake them at to rectify the problem? Thanks in
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 28 06:28:04 EDT 2008 | cobar
Hi Debra.Baking must be above the evaporation temp of water.This leads to an oxidation problem on the components and affects solderability.Please follow the link and check out Totech on that page.http://www.shanelo.co.za/products.htm
Electronics Forum | Mon May 24 19:24:35 EDT 2010 | jry74
We bake all of our boards at 220 degrees F for two hours. This bakes out all the moisture. Blow off the parts prior to placing in the oven.
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 01 11:48:10 EDT 2010 | mb_mfg
Sid, Try baking the boards before running, to insure no moisture. Baking out the moisture will help prevent warping. Should you need further assistance, we supply fixtures to force the board to stay flat to reduce to thermo shock during wave solde
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 01 14:51:55 EST 2014 | jpal
We had the same problem too. Water would remain under the caps even after a bake out. We saw this numerous times when the caps were removed after the wash and bake. The only fix was to hand solder the large electrolytics.
Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 02 05:11:29 EST 2018 | deanm
I developed our company's procedure for moisture sensitive devices based on J-STD-033 and I don't recall anything requiring a certain ramp rate. Furthermore baking at 85C will greatly extend the time to reset the clock and it is harder to maintain
Electronics Forum | Fri May 31 10:35:46 EDT 2002 | dason_c
I think that the IPC spec only apply to the MSD. I had a paper from Lucent and forwarded by Francois Monette, please aware that the first 2 hours, the moisture doesn't bake out from the assembly/component and result show that it is increase the weigh
Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 30 17:26:02 EDT 1999 | John Thorup
| | Surface Mount Components like QFP's in Tray usually comes sealed in an anti-static plastic pack. In case the QFP's were removed from the said anti-static bag for more than 2 weeks, do these components needed to be baked for they might produce so
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 01 16:13:45 EDT 2012 | kahrpr
You also need to get with the PCB manufacturer. Their is a lot that can go wrong with that many layers. If the manufacture is trapping that much moisture. you may have a hard time baking it out. Dave and Graham are right about the time and energy. It
Electronics Forum | Fri Nov 19 11:07:17 EST 1999 | Bob Smith
Hi John, I don't know of any posters etc. but specs. are available free on-line at www.jedec.com for classification, time out of packaging before baking is required, bake times & temperatures. My understanding is that it only causes a problem if th