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
Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 16 12:14:12 EST 1999 | Gregg Reick
| Hope some of you out there can help me with this one. | I am getting feedback from our test department that they are showing opens on solder joints which have visually good wetting. The touch-up operators confirm that the joint looks good. All they
Electronics Forum | Thu May 25 17:18:45 EDT 2000 | Boca
I have not done pin in paste in production quantites, but speculation is always a blast so; OA fluxes are active at room temperature, they grow 'fur' with humidity if not washed off, great stuff for soldering, nasty stuff for reliability (if not rem
Electronics Forum | Mon Jun 11 22:00:19 EDT 2001 | davef
IPC-A-610 uses words to the effect that it�s a Class 2 process indicator, if either: * Entrapped or encapsulated solder balls that are within 0.13 mm [0.00512 in] of lands or connectors, OR * Entrapped or encapsulated solder balls exceed 0.13mm [0.00
Electronics Forum | Fri Nov 02 12:01:26 EST 2001 | mparker
I have two cases where I must bake after DI wash. The moisture entrapment is specifically within microprocessor sockets. Without air gun blow out and baking, oxidation occurs that causes flaky contacts for the PGA. We will bake for 2-3 hours @ 60C. O
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 02 13:55:49 EST 2002 | stepheno
Where I worked we used a different chip bonder. When we had trouble with flux entrapment in the epoxy from the wave solder, we checked the date of the epoxy. The tube didn't have one but the manufacturer gave a shelf life of 6 months and then the s
Electronics Forum | Fri May 27 12:09:59 EDT 2005 | saragorcos
You do want to be very careful with potentially entrapped organic materials as they are prone to causing electrical leakage failures particularly around sensitive devices. There is a new clenliness testing tool available that tests a localized area
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 29 11:05:10 EDT 2005 | foresiteeric
davef: I am a colleague of Sara at Foresite and we came to the conclusion that the solder balls were entrapped based on the minimal amount of information from the original question and the fact that the x-ray showed the balls and it wasn't mentioned
Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 21 08:06:23 EST 2007 | davef
The cause could be a lot of different things. As long as you didn't use excessive reflow temperatures, we'd guess that: * Solder mask blister: Your board fabricator should be able to demonstrate through TMA [or equivalent] analysis that the mask wa
Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 23 15:43:31 EDT 2009 | seankim10
According to 5.2.6.1, it states that defected if Solder balls are not entrapped in no-clean residue or conformal coating. How do you define entrapment or how do you assess if the balls won't dislodge under normal product service environment? The sold