Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 23 10:16:47 EDT 2011 | blnorman
If these are moisture sensitive they are required to be shipped in a moisture barrier bag and labeled as moisture sensitive. Depending on which moisture sensitivity level (MSL) the components have, floor life can range from unlimited to a mandatory
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 17 11:45:48 EDT 2002 | fmonette
The current IPC/JEDEC standard J-STD-033 for moisture-sensitive devices does not include a bake cycle at 90C (it includes cycles at 40C and 125C for non-assembled components in reels or trays). However, the upcoming revision, which should be release
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
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
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 31 05:14:58 EST 2001 | ronih
Hello, Are there any rules for PCB drying (baking) before assembly; Date code criteria, finish process on PCB, storage conditions.. ect. I know some assemblers that are baking all PCB (not ENTEK!) as default before assembly, is it realy nessesary? i
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 12 11:56:20 EDT 2012 | hegemon
You might try to complete all your soldering within a 72 hour or less time frame. For all intents treat your board like a moisture sensitive component after you have baked and completed SMT reflow. Wash, blow dry, and go direct to stuffing and com
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 28 20:28:26 EDT 1999 | Carlos Palacios
Currently, we are baking any PCB before process on SMT, the 'reason' is to dry any possible humidity that could be inner the PCB, it does not matter if the PCB is multilayer or not. We bake PCB's at 107C for 4 hrs and the board must be process into n
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 28 20:56:58 EDT 1999 | Dave F
| Currently, we are baking any PCB before process on SMT, the 'reason' is to dry any possible humidity that could be inner the PCB, it does not matter if the PCB is multilayer or not. We bake PCB's at 107C for 4 hrs and the board must be process into
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 29 00:23:45 EDT 1999 | ScottM
| Currently, we are baking any PCB before process on SMT, the 'reason' is to dry any possible humidity that could be inner the PCB, it does not matter if the PCB is multilayer or not. We bake PCB's at 107C for 4 hrs and the board must be process into
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 29 12:33:38 EDT 1999 | Wolfgang Busko
| Currently, we are baking any PCB before process on SMT, the 'reason' is to dry any possible humidity that could be inner the PCB, it does not matter if the PCB is multilayer or not. We bake PCB's at 107C for 4 hrs and the board must be process into