Electronics Forum: solder ball size (Page 1 of 332)

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 07 22:02:57 EDT 2006 | davef

Similarly, we have eliminated solder balls by using an aqueous washer.

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 07 21:54:11 EDT 2006 | mumtaz

Ha ha! davef finishes you guys off again!

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 07 21:45:53 EDT 2006 | davef

We do not understand the question. Take a deep breath, remember not all of us are trained as geologists. The smallest solder ball we've seen is a little less than 5 nm.

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Tue Jun 06 11:57:12 EDT 2006 | Chunks

IPC 610 says acceptable Class 1 (Class 2, 3 indicator) if they are entrapped/encpsulated balls within 0.13mm of lands or pads. or exceed 0.13mm in diameter. Defect Class 1,2,3: Solder ball violates min electrical clearance. Solder balls not entrap

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Thu Jun 08 09:54:07 EDT 2006 | slthomas

Awwww, man. I was looking for something a little less on the anecdotal side for our local municipality's environmental stewards.

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Thu Jun 01 16:30:05 EDT 2006 | slthomas

Just wondering if anyone knows this off the top of there head. I might be able to figure out the math based on surface tension (this is 63/37 so the data is out there) but I REALLY do not want to put that kind of effort into this. :/ Editing to clar

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Tue Jun 06 15:45:18 EDT 2006 | slthomas

Yep. What I'm really looking for is the minimum radius of curvature for 63/37, which is a function of it's surface tension. It's physical properties issue, not an agency issue. I've seen some references that I have interpreted to mean that it's some

minimum solder ball (bead) size

Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 07 10:56:38 EDT 2006 | Chunks

In the past, I would normally tell out highly talented inspectors to leave the balls there. The were trapped in the flux residue and were hard to remove. Never caused a problem. But then there was an incident where someone had the bright idea to u

BGA ball size reliability

Electronics Forum | Fri May 07 16:28:07 EDT 1999 | Andrew Wulff

On 1.27mm (0.050 inches) Standard Ball Grid Array's. The ball size diameter starts at approximately 0.025 inches. If the ball size decreases to 0.012 inches (due to the solder flowing down a via) is the solder connection reliable? This is a known L

Re: BGA ball size reliability

Electronics Forum | Fri May 07 17:02:01 EDT 1999 | Earl Moon

| On 1.27mm (0.050 inches) Standard Ball Grid Array's. | The ball size diameter starts at approximately 0.025 inches. | | If the ball size decreases to 0.012 inches (due to the solder flowing down a via) is the solder connection reliable? | | This

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