Electronics Forum | Tue May 19 08:20:10 EDT 2009 | Mity C
Good Morning, We are underfilling some of our BGA's. This is a specified customer requirement. The material we are using is Emerson & Cuming E-1216 (also specified by the customer) The material was selected because of a close CTE match with the PCB.
Electronics Forum | Wed Apr 28 22:35:32 EDT 2004 | davef
We can clean the blank out of LARGE BGA. [Cleaning small BGA is a whoooole nuther issue.] But before we get into that, what's the problem and its breadth? Why are you getting poor wetting? What's the story on the components, board, process materia
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 27 08:14:59 EDT 2004 | iqbal
Is anybody doing BGA soldering water clean solder. If yes how you are ensure cleaness. We have boards with Four BGA and 2000 chip and ICs.We are processing with no clean solder but we are getting bad wetting so now we are planning to switch to water
Electronics Forum | Thu May 07 08:31:13 EDT 1998 | Alan Pestell
We are about to use BGAs on our equipment. We clean all products prior to confomally coating them - to keep moisture off the IC legs. Will this be a problem with BGAs. Will we need to get the coating underneath the BGA or will the pitch on the balls
Electronics Forum | Thu May 07 15:56:43 EDT 1998 | Terry Burnette
80ppm). The CTE of your board and solder joints will typically be 18-22ppm. We have seen cases were the coating fills the gap between the component and the board, then during temperature cycling the coating expands to the point of breaking the solder
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 29 21:31:46 EST 2010 | aqueous
I would recommend the following paper entitled "Cleaning for Reliability Post QFN Rework" by Mike Bixenman (Kyzen) and myself (Aqueous Technologies). While it discussed cleaning under QFN's in a batch environment, it is also applicable to cleaning u
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 30 20:24:35 EST 2006 | davef
As we understand it, you: * Get some nice BGA from your supplier * Find BGA to be packaged properly * Bake the BGA for 24 hours at [what temperature?] to reduce the potntial for damaging moisture sensitive components during following processes * Remo
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 31 21:49:38 EST 2006 | davef
First, we assume the white residue is only on the connector and not on other components. That would imply that either: * White stuff was on the connector when it came in-house from your supplier. [Confirm this theory by baking some connectors from
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 30 21:00:31 EST 2006 | hanocete
thanks for your inputs,but what i meant was that a connector component beside the BGA for repair has some flux residue on its leads after baking, the BGA was Ok. we are wondering why this happened...pls enlightened us.
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 31 01:32:47 EST 2006 | hanocete
thanks for your reply, actually we bake the PCB assembly prior the rework because the package was exposed for quite some time already. The baking time was 24hrs @ 125 deg.C. We notice that there were flux residues on the connectors after the baking.