Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 13 10:58:58 EDT 2009 | davef
First piece of advice: build the board as you would any other board. Probably, you will be surprised at the holding force of the solder of the connections of the BGA, because the surface area of the solder is very large compared to the weight of the
Electronics Forum | Wed Oct 11 13:40:20 EDT 2023 | proceng1
Agreed. Your "leads" are fairly small compared to the PAD area, so you leave your part lots of room to "stretch it's legs". One thing that I have trouble communicating to my operators is that placement does not have to be perfect, and neither does t
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 16 16:36:37 EST 2009 | rwyman
We've used our standard chipbonder- Heraeus PD944- for this type of application. While it does cure before reflow, when the part is placed onto the site, the material compresses and spreads and thus that potential standoff isn't an issue. We've als
Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 10 16:37:35 EDT 2011 | davef
Yes, there are ways to machine process boards like this. The devil is in the detail. In no particular order, your choices are: Process flow #1: * Print chipbonder on the surface mount side for SMT parts * Mount SMT components * Cure adhesive, if r
Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 04 10:30:16 EST 2007 | slthomas
Q: The question I have is do they wet in wave solder, and if they do, why does it matter what happens to them in reflow? A: Yes, but somebody here don't agree with me that the glued part need help from wave to get the good wetting. They are wrong