Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 11 14:01:25 EDT 2010 | clampron
Good Afternoon, The PVC tubes, unless marked otherwise, cannot see 125 degrees C. I have baked smaller level 3 parts at 40 degrees C for 9 days in the tube. I had tried several different temperatures but found out the the max temp for the tubes is d
Electronics Forum | Wed Apr 26 06:09:12 EDT 2017 | ajaytyagi
Hi, Pl let me know about opinion/experience whether thick film chip SMD resistor which is MSL-1 Required to bake before being usedon SMT line. I want to use SMD resistance spool which is around 2 yeasr old kept at 25 deg room temperature at around 4
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 16 15:10:56 EST 2002 | Randy Villeneuve
We do not bake any of our boards prior to wave solder. If we did we would have one heck of a large oven. I would assume you are concerned about moisture sensitive components. In most cases your top side parts should only get to 80 degrees centigarde
Electronics Forum | Sat Sep 10 17:12:18 EDT 2022 | yannick_herzog
Hello, we use an oven to dry our MSL components after the floor lifes expires. The oven works at 40°C / 0.1% RH. The plan is to upgrade the oven from 40°C to 60°C to shorten the duration of the process. I have found a number of articles mentioning
Electronics Forum | Tue May 26 12:19:53 EDT 1998 | Earl Moon
| We currently bake plastic SMT parts in accordance with the IPC guidelines for moisture sensitive parts. Because we have double-sided boards that are subjected to either an aqueous or semi-aqueous cleaning process, we do a 24 hour bake at 125 deg.
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 16 11:28:53 EDT 2000 | Boca
Solder 'follows' heat. 1. Preheating is a great idea, use a baking oven to get the whole assembly up to temperature, use the preheaters in your wave solder machine (without wave) to preheat the assemblies ... 2. Or use the biggest soldering iron
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 26 12:51:45 EDT 1999 | Bob
Steve, Moisture sensitivity needs to be taken seriously. Being in the commercial end of electronics now, I am using many plastic packages. Unfortunately, moisture sensitivity processing is not black and white and it does require procedures and dis
Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 25 09:27:03 EDT 2002 | fmonette
Michael, This concern is well covered in J-STD-033, section 8.6 Board Rework. "...If the component temperature exceeds 200C, the board may require a bakeout prior to rework..." In other words, you only need to worry about moisture related defects w
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 21 04:36:34 EDT 2006 | Rob
Yes, appropriate storage & component handling proceedures should be followed depending on the MSL (Moisture Sensitivity Level) class of the component. Some component suppliers are now marking the MSL class on the label, along with PBT (Peak Body
Electronics Forum | Tue Jan 30 01:06:51 EST 2018 | dgassier81
Hi, In our shop we've always baked out PCBs and moisture sensitive parts prior to electronic assembly using a gentle ramp rate of 2 degC/minutes going hot (93degC) and same ramp rate going cold (back to room temp). We're trying to outsource that pro