Electronics Forum: moisture (Page 71 of 135)

Baking Moisture Sensitive Components >4.5mm

Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 22 16:41:21 EST 2007 | davef

Contact: * JC-14.1 Subcommittee on Reliability; Chair: Jack McCullen, Intel; jack.t.mccullen@intel.com 480-554-5354 * Rich Shook, Brian Vaccaro, and Brian Pottieger - Agere Systems [ http://www.agere.com ] * Francois Monette; Cogiscan Inc.; 450-534-2

wave frames CAS - cleaning

Electronics Forum | Wed May 16 12:32:34 EDT 2007 | realchunks

Most Durastone product have a very low moisture absorbtion rate. This makes it ideal to water wash them. I wouldn't tlet them soak in the water, but you shoul dbe safe to wash them usinf water. Once the water is used up, you should treat it as a h

Vacuum Bags

Electronics Forum | Wed May 16 13:02:12 EDT 2007 | slthomas

Moisture barrier bags are polymer coated foil so are nearly gas impermeable. There's always some coating left at the weld (or it wouldn't stick) so they're not completely sealed but that's as good as it gets. Usually people use the vacuum to remove

Delamination on IS410 laminate

Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 01 18:14:13 EDT 2007 | swag

We had the same trouble. We baked our boards out but the delamination continued very random. One board would be fine and the next was a nasty explosion of delam. Switched material - no problems since. I never found out the technical reason behind

PWAs & PWB bake out requirements

Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 09 19:13:37 EDT 2007 | htran

DaveF, Our customer requirement is to comply with IPC-STD-001 but the J std doesn't specify the bake out temperature for populated boards and the moisture absortion rate. Right now we are baking the populated PWAs after aqueous wash at 80C at 18-48

Moisture Sensitive part - baking

Electronics Forum | Fri Aug 24 12:20:41 EDT 2007 | petep

I have an MSL3 part (a relay) supplied in tape and reel. From what I am able to determine, these parts require baking at 257 degrees F for a minimum of 8 hours once the integrity of the seal is broken for over 168 hours. How are parts baked at th

Moisture Sensitive part - baking

Electronics Forum | Fri Aug 24 17:30:40 EDT 2007 | jmelson

Oh, for a second there I thought it was 257 C, not F. Solder temperature! Still, one WEEK at 257 F seems way extreme. Maybe this is to bake out a part that has been underwater for a week. Is this a military part? I can't imagine any commercial-g

Moisture Sensitive part - baking

Electronics Forum | Sat Aug 25 08:24:15 EDT 2007 | davef

We're unfamiliar with such component dryout requirements. Commonly, tape & reel cover tape will seperate at 60*C. So, even if your baking on a metal reel, your should keep the bake temperature ~40*C. Sure makes you want to use these parts during th

Moisture Sensitive part - baking

Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 30 09:56:16 EDT 2007 | blnorman

According to J-STD-033 Table 4-1, the bake out time to restore the clock to zero is not only determined by the MSL level, but the package thickness as well. Section 4.2.2 states "SMD packages shipped in low temperature carriers may not be baked in t

Blowholes during wave soldering

Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 29 02:21:42 EDT 2007 | jgrootkoerkamp

It is a lead free process with sac305. We use goldfinish FR4 boards. Preheat is between 110 and 115 degrees. I am sure it is a moisture problem because longer stored boards have more blowholes. What is the maxium period to store the boards without


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