Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 21 07:24:12 EDT 2002 | bayanbaru
What is the correct method to bake or cure the component?Standard baking practise by us is to place the units into oven at 125 �C for 8 hrs directly. But I was told that the correct baking practise is to cool down the Baking Oven to Room temp and onl
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 16 01:12:31 EDT 2002 | ppcbs
We find that baking PCB assemblies at 90 degrees C in a Blue M forced air oven is safe for most all PCB's that we have encountered over the past 12 years. We remove any external plactic hardware that may be attached to the assembly and also like to
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 16 00:53:39 EDT 2002 | kennyg
What is a typical time/temp baking cycle for an assembly prior to BGA rework? This bake is intended to prohibit PCB or nearby component damage as well as protect the component being removed for reball. A 24 hr bake at 125C would be great, but often
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 17 11:45:48 EDT 2002 | fmonette
The current IPC/JEDEC standard J-STD-033 for moisture-sensitive devices does not include a bake cycle at 90C (it includes cycles at 40C and 125C for non-assembled components in reels or trays). However, the upcoming revision, which should be release
Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 07 07:26:50 EST 2010 | grahamcooper22
In an oven over 100 C any moisture will escape through vents. There will not be huge volumes of moisture in the oven when you are baking components so it should easily escape through vents / holes in the system leaving you with a humidity of near zer
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 03 05:32:03 EST 2010 | libandara
Dear Graham, Thanks for the information. is there any way to control the humidity inside the oven..? At over 100 C. how the evaporated vapour from the component remove out from the oven..?
Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 30 02:46:21 EST 2010 | libandara
We want to handle the materials such as PCB & MSD components as per IPC 1601 & J-STD-033. As such, we need a baking oven to perform this and to monitor (temperature – we have to maintain up to 200’C & humidity – below 5%)the control environment & ma
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 03 04:11:47 EST 2010 | grahamcooper22
A baking oven over 100 C will be at zero humidity. Do you really need to store pcbs/devices at 200 C...this will surely harm some products ? IPC 33B01 allows storage of MSDs in a dry cabinet at less then 5%.....these can operate at room temp or 40 /
Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 20 16:06:53 EDT 2004 | blnorman
We require that the ovens used for bake out are vented, thus removing the vapor from the oven.
Electronics Forum | Sun Sep 19 19:51:31 EDT 2004 | aaronrobinson
thanks for your reply ....yes the air is then able to hold more water vapour.... but so is the component hence there is no water vapour pressure difference and the component and the air in the oven would still be in equilibrium???? hence no effective