Electronics Forum: leadless chip carrier (Page 1 of 11)

Dealing with leadless chip carriers

Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 16 20:51:37 EST 2000 | Jim

We have to place some LCC208's. The terminations are flush with the underside of the package, on an 0.5mm pitch. The pads on the board are flat tin. We'd like to get the part up in the air a little to provide some clearance for cleaning. Is there a w

Dealing with leadless chip carriers

Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 16 20:51:37 EST 2000 | Jim

We have to place some LCC208's. The terminations are flush with the underside of the package, on an 0.5mm pitch. The pads on the board are flat tin. We'd like to get the part up in the air a little to provide some clearance for cleaning. Is there a w

Re: resistor networks- leadless vs. gull wing

Electronics Forum | Sun Sep 26 14:09:24 EDT 1999 | jgodfrey

| | I am in the process of picking a new resistor network for one of our new board. Since we are new to SMT i would like to get some opinions on networks. Currently we use one molded gullwing type network on our boards with no problems. Other than sp

Re: resistor networks- leadless vs. gull wing

Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 24 23:33:30 EDT 1999 | Earl Moon

| I am in the process of picking a new resistor network for one of our new board. Since we are new to SMT i would like to get some opinions on networks. Currently we use one molded gullwing type network on our boards with no problems. Other than spac

resistor networks- leadless vs. gull wing

Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 24 11:38:32 EDT 1999 | danielm

I am in the process of picking a new resistor network for one of our new board. Since we are new to SMT i would like to get some opinions on networks. Currently we use one molded gullwing type network on our boards with no problems. Other than space

Re: resistor networks- leadless vs. gull wing

Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 27 04:08:25 EDT 1999 | Earl Moon

| | | I am in the process of picking a new resistor network for one of our new board. Since we are new to SMT i would like to get some opinions on networks. Currently we use one molded gullwing type network on our boards with no problems. Other than

Plastic tape carrier blues.

Electronics Forum | Fri Aug 04 05:10:57 EDT 2000 | Dougie

Hi, We use a mixture of plastic tape carriers and paper tape carriers for placing chip components. We are experiencing a problem which I know is a problem across the industry...when using the plastic carriers, the chip components stick to the tape c

chip placed upside down

Electronics Forum | Tue Jun 10 17:13:44 EDT 2014 | grauen06

I have seen this on a MyDATA machine and we had to slow our feed rate of the feeder down. That seemed to do the trick. We concluded the carrier tape was too large for the part, but our vendor didn't really seem to care.

Missing componentafter chip placer.

Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 07 07:39:11 EDT 2001 | caldon

Can you confirm the components are being picked up from the feeders? If the Feeder table calibration is incorrect the components could be picked up off from the begining. This would result in 1) nozzle barely picking up the part and as the head moves

Cracked chip capacitors

Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 28 16:58:39 EST 2006 | PWH

Too fast heating/cooling rate in reflow (look at mfg's spec.). Z "overdrive" on pick and place or chipshooter though unlikely I would say. Depanelization method (bending a scored board to break it is tough on things). Bad PCB design - cap. too clo

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