Electronics Forum | Wed May 22 16:36:13 EDT 2002 | slthomas
What methods do you guys use for maintaining lot and/or board traceability? When I worked in med. products, we used travelers that we recorded everything on, then serialized them at the end of the build. Not as effective as up front serialization,
Electronics Forum | Wed May 09 12:07:52 EDT 2001 | caldon
My personal favorite is the Siemens F series and the UIC GSM platform. Both Siemens and UIC have awesome resources for csp, flipchip and baredie processing - Siemens= Dan Baldwin from GaTech; UIC = George Westby from UIC labs. My second choice would
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 15 10:51:49 EDT 2001 | davef
On over printing, the general issues are: * Paste deposits being so large that when reflowing, collapse onto many, rather than a single solder mass. * Paste expanding during heating and being close to other solder deposits and bridging [as you say].
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 12 10:05:52 EST 2001 | Charlie
What has been your experance with fine pitch parts taped and reeled? Will I have lead problems?
Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 24 11:00:12 EST 1999 | Steve Schrader
Are the terms "uBGA" and "Fine Pitch BGA" synonomous, different all-together, or is Fine Pitch BGA a subset of uBGA? Thanks. Steve
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 18 17:41:31 EDT 2019 | rgduval
The UFP was a designation for "ultra-fine-pitch"; but, for the most part, you should be able to get the same placements out of both machines. Anything 0402 or above can be mechanically centered. The UFP machine will lean on optical centering for .5
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 14 21:09:20 EST 2000 | Dave F
Emmanuel: Take Jax's word. NiAu (ENIG) primary (some would say only) redeeming characteristic is its flatness that you mentioned, but that flatness appeals to folk placing fine pitch devices, rather than BGA. Good luck. Dave F
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 14 21:09:20 EST 2000 | Dave F
Emmanuel: Take Jax's word. NiAu (ENIG) primary (some would say only) redeeming characteristic is its flatness that you mentioned, but that flatness appeals to folk placing fine pitch devices, rather than BGA. Good luck. Dave F
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 15 17:35:42 EDT 2002 | davef
Micro BGA � (�BGA�). A Tessera brand name for a fine [0.5 mm and 0.75 mm solder ball] pitch BGA.
Electronics Forum | Fri May 07 02:27:57 EDT 2004 | Grant Petty
Hi, They do what we need component wise, however I was wondering if anyone had info on reliability, ease of programming. We are looking XP 142 and 242 series chip shooters and fine pitch placers. Regards, Grant Blackmagic Design