Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 02 20:13:41 EDT 2001 | davef
We agree with Wolfgang. Adding points along his line of reasoning: * Also consider placed component prescience. Sometimes, a mis-pick results in paste on the nozzle, which leads to the next component being stuck on the nozzle and not placed, which
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 03 08:14:49 EDT 2001 | Stefan Witte
If you hold your board sideways in a 90 degree angle you apply a force of 1 g to your components. 1 g translates into 32 ft / sec. square. This is not too much acceleration for fearless roller coaster drivers but Melf�s and Tantalums can fall off at
Electronics Forum | Wed Nov 24 06:24:52 EST 2004 | Joe
Hi, I am an Engineering student doing some research on the component/nozzle interface on SMT Pick and Place machines. Could anyone tell me the force at which the nozzle hits the component as it is picked from the feeder or the placement force on a
Electronics Forum | Wed Nov 16 14:44:31 EST 2011 | olddog
Bobpan, thank you for your speedy response. As to the items you noted: 1. I did a test of Funct 30 for the first 5 nozzles, 2 times each as follows: noz1 Ht=215 & 219, center=1005 (all nozzles all tests), run out 2.2 & 2.7. Noz2 Ht=228 &228, runout=
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 15 13:39:06 EDT 2018 | gregp
Impact is the instantaneous force at the time the component first reaches the PCB. F=M*a....so the acceleration is the key factor. If charted on a graph it would look like a spike...higher force for a short duration. The placement force is typical
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 07 09:53:24 EDT 2019 | dhanish
How do you perform measurement the placement force for NXT machine?Fuji provide the placement force data by nozzle type.How can we verify the actual force?
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 13 18:13:41 EDT 2018 | dleeper
Placement force usually refers to the amount of force an SMT nozzle applies to a part when placing it. You want enough force to push the component onto the paste but not so much that you damage the part. Some specialized applications involve placing
Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 06 18:29:45 EST 2005 | darby
You may also wish to check the speed controllers for both descent and ascent. The higher the ascent speed the more force the jaws close with. It can be difficult to achieve a "good" nozzle placement height as this is mechanically set and your lowest
Electronics Forum | Sun May 26 02:06:39 EDT 2019 | jlawson
Placement force can cause chip cracking-micro cracks also. As machines are getting faster they tend to not control force other than spring pressures and z displacements. There are some machines that have full closed loop place pressure control , but
Electronics Forum | Mon Nov 18 09:04:20 EST 2019 | davef
Review: * Too much placement force * Underside supports are set incorrectly * Component height set incorrectly * Downstroke location of either the pick or placement set incorrectly * Nozzle that is smaller than recommended for the part * Part