Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 06 04:02:28 EDT 2001 | eliishee
Thanks guys for all the input. i'm still struggling to find out the main cause. at time being, urgently need a suggestion of a effective way to remove all these solder balls. THANKS AGAIN.
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 18 02:09:50 EDT 2001 | winnifred
Steven, You CANNOT just use water to clean away the solder ball when u hv used RMA paste.
Electronics Forum | Thu May 06 10:05:58 EDT 2004 | leon
iam having trouble with solder balls around 1206 caps and resistors, have used different pastes changed oven profiles can any advise something else
Electronics Forum | Sun May 09 12:59:29 EDT 2004 | Lloydy
Try using the wendy-house style on the specififc area's where you have solder balling. It's not always a good idea to do a global reduction to all apperatures.
Electronics Forum | Tue May 11 22:20:42 EDT 2004 | davef
Solder ball problems has to be one of the most popular topics on SMTnet. There is hundreds of postings on the topic in the fine SMTnet Archives. For instance: http://www.smtnet.com/forums/Index.cfm?CFApp=1&Message_ID=15669
Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 08 12:02:15 EST 2001 | slthomas
After reading the variety of responses, I feel moved to ask if you're you talking about what are occasionally referred to as solder beads (mid-chip solder balls, attached to the waste line of your chip caps and resistors) or the solder balls that ten
Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 08 09:07:22 EST 2001 | Hussman
OK, without knowing the specifics, why does everyone blame the oven? Most solder balls occur around R's and C's in almost every shop I've been to. The best place to start looking is the screen printer - not the oven. Sure the oven is the last proc
Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 08 12:16:05 EST 2001 | Antonio
I wasn't specific which type. But all this info helps. Thanks a bunch fellas...
Electronics Forum | Mon May 10 18:43:23 EDT 2004 | steve davis
Just curious what stencil company are you currently using? What style of aperture are you using for the componet?
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 05 10:45:01 EDT 2001 | dougie
Steven, There is a load of info on this if you check through the archives. Quick pointer though are: Solder balls are caused by paste creeping under the component at placement. The part is placed and the paste is squashed under the component, when t