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WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages

C.K.

#11755

WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 23 April, 1999

Has anyone had trouble waving and gluing 0603 R's and C's? At my company, our designers have "opened the floodgates" on bottom-side 0603's.

We've got an EPK+ with rotary chip and omega wave but can't seem to get skip-free soldering on these guys. Often times, we find glue that's migrated to the pads, as well, and these parts aren't friendly with our glue process either.

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#11756

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 23 April, 1999

| Has anyone had trouble waving and gluing 0603 R's and C's? At my company, our designers have "opened the floodgates" on bottom-side 0603's. | | We've got an EPK+ with rotary chip and omega wave but can't seem to get skip-free soldering on these guys. Often times, we find glue that's migrated to the pads, as well, and these parts aren't friendly with our glue process either. | CK

Glueing 0603's, eh? Major pain in the butt. The rotary chip wave is capable of slapping solder on them. It may help if you turn up the RPM's on the rotary shaft to attenuate the activity a little bit.

My guess is that the problem lies more with the glue process than the wave. It's hard to get good dots large enough to provide adhesion but small enough to stay off the pads. What type of adhesive dispensing are you using? Positive displacement pump, time/pressure syringes, or stenciling? Stenciling "dogbones" for these will be your best bet, followed by a diplacement pump, and heaven help you if you are using time/pressure.

If you are unlucky enough to be using time/pressure, let me know and I'll email you an article on how to get the best possible performance out of this all-too-common dinosaur.

Chrys

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Mark Thaler

#11757

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 23 April, 1999

| | Has anyone had trouble waving and gluing 0603 R's and C's? At my company, our designers have "opened the floodgates" on bottom-side 0603's. | | | | We've got an EPK+ with rotary chip and omega wave but can't seem to get skip-free soldering on these guys. Often times, we find glue that's migrated to the pads, as well, and these parts aren't friendly with our glue process either. | | | CK | try setting up 2-dot patterns for dispensor. It may slow throughput, but will lower rework. Allows larger tolerance window. | Glueing 0603's, eh? Major pain in the butt. The rotary chip wave is capable of slapping solder on them. It may help if you turn up the RPM's on the rotary shaft to attenuate the activity a little bit. | | My guess is that the problem lies more with the glue process than the wave. It's hard to get good dots large enough to provide adhesion but small enough to stay off the pads. What type of adhesive dispensing are you using? Positive displacement pump, time/pressure syringes, or stenciling? Stenciling "dogbones" for these will be your best bet, followed by a diplacement pump, and heaven help you if you are using time/pressure. | | If you are unlucky enough to be using time/pressure, let me know and I'll email you an article on how to get the best possible performance out of this all-too-common dinosaur. | | Chrys |

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C.K.

#11758

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 23 April, 1999

| | Has anyone had trouble waving and gluing 0603 R's and C's? At my company, our designers have "opened the floodgates" on bottom-side 0603's. | | | | We've got an EPK+ with rotary chip and omega wave but can't seem to get skip-free soldering on these guys. Often times, we find glue that's migrated to the pads, as well, and these parts aren't friendly with our glue process either. | | | CK | | Glueing 0603's, eh? Major pain in the butt. The rotary chip wave is capable of slapping solder on them. It may help if you turn up the RPM's on the rotary shaft to attenuate the activity a little bit. | | My guess is that the problem lies more with the glue process than the wave. It's hard to get good dots large enough to provide adhesion but small enough to stay off the pads. What type of adhesive dispensing are you using? Positive displacement pump, time/pressure syringes, or stenciling? Stenciling "dogbones" for these will be your best bet, followed by a diplacement pump, and heaven help you if you are using time/pressure. | | If you are unlucky enough to be using time/pressure, let me know and I'll email you an article on how to get the best possible performance out of this all-too-common dinosaur. | | Chrys |

Chrys:

We've got the rotary chip at full blast (300 RPM's)!! I've studied the parts under a high powered camera and found some of the skipped parts with glue on the pads, and some skipped parts with NO GLUE on the pads.....so, we can't say that it's the glue 100% of the time...we've also got an omega wave running at full blast as well!!!

One of our self-proclaimed "gurus" here thought that we had a weak flux...currently we are using alpha 351 alcohol based no-clean, but as i mentioned to you before we're looking into voc-free, with alpha nr310b as one of the top candidates.

Surprisingly enough, ever since the addition of an omega wave, we solder those often-troublesome SOT23's just fine and dandy.. anyways, long-term, well be getting a universal GDM which uses positive displacement pumps..currently we're using fuji gl's time/pressure pumps... hopefully gdm will cure some of our problems with these little fellas..

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Murray Pulman

#11759

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 24 April, 1999

Dear C.K

We are routinely wave soldering 0603 and sot23 on subcontract, hence we get what we are given!!.

Being UK based we use a Blundell cms 400 dual wave soldering machine (made in Coventry), Tecan Stencils and Loctite 3612 adhesive.

You must keep the underside of your stencil spotlessly clean, and have significantly less adhesive on the stencil than you would solder paste.

The design of the stencil appetures is critical, however i am no expert! and can only recommend Tecan (Tecfoil) who have facilities your side of the pond as well.

The dual wave gives much greater control over solder deposition, the first wave blasting the board and then a standard wave configuration to tidy up.

Regards murray

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Bubba

#11760

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 24 April, 1999

| Surprisingly enough, ever since the addition of an omega wave, we solder those often-troublesome SOT23's just fine and dandy.. anyways, long-term, well be getting a universal GDM which uses positive displacement pumps..currently we're using fuji gl's time/pressure pumps... hopefully gdm will cure some of our problems with these little fellas.. | | | I'd be willing to bet money that once you get the GDM most of your problems with glue will disappear. We are using GDM's in our shop and they are great for those small parts like 0603's.

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#11761

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 25 April, 1999

| | | Has anyone had trouble waving and gluing 0603 R's and C's? At my company, our designers have "opened the floodgates" on bottom-side 0603's. | | | | | | We've got an EPK+ with rotary chip and omega wave but can't seem to get skip-free soldering on these guys. Often times, we find glue that's migrated to the pads, as well, and these parts aren't friendly with our glue process either. | | | | | CK | | | | Glueing 0603's, eh? Major pain in the butt. The rotary chip wave is capable of slapping solder on them. It may help if you turn up the RPM's on the rotary shaft to attenuate the activity a little bit. | | | | My guess is that the problem lies more with the glue process than the wave. It's hard to get good dots large enough to provide adhesion but small enough to stay off the pads. What type of adhesive dispensing are you using? Positive displacement pump, time/pressure syringes, or stenciling? Stenciling "dogbones" for these will be your best bet, followed by a diplacement pump, and heaven help you if you are using time/pressure. | | | | If you are unlucky enough to be using time/pressure, let me know and I'll email you an article on how to get the best possible performance out of this all-too-common dinosaur. | | | | Chrys | | | | | Chrys: | | We've got the rotary chip at full blast (300 RPM's)!! I've studied the parts under a high powered camera and found some of the skipped parts with glue on the pads, and some skipped parts with NO GLUE on the pads.....so, we can't say that it's the glue 100% of the time...we've also got an omega wave running at full blast as well!!! | | One of our self-proclaimed "gurus" here thought that we had a weak flux...currently we are using alpha 351 alcohol based no-clean, but as i mentioned to you before we're looking into voc-free, with alpha nr310b as one of the top candidates. | | Surprisingly enough, ever since the addition of an omega wave, we solder those often-troublesome SOT23's just fine and dandy.. anyways, long-term, well be getting a universal GDM which uses positive displacement pumps..currently we're using fuji gl's time/pressure pumps... hopefully gdm will cure some of our problems with these little fellas.. | | | Hey CK,

(Not trying to oversimplify or anything, but) It takes three things to make a solder joint: Flux, Heat, and Solder. If you're missing any one of those three, you don't get a solder joint.

When there's glue on the pad, it's easy to determine that the missing component is solder. When there's not glue on the pad, it's time to look elsewhere. Given that the rotary chip is at 300 RPM, let's assume there's plenty of solder available for anything that's fluxed and hot. If it's an EPK +, there's convection preheat, so I'll assume that heat ain't the missing element, either.

So that brings us to flux. The alpha 351 is a good product, but the 310B is AMAZING. It's the only thing that I can get to solder my dog-boards. These puppies have bare copper pads with a cheap Entek knockoff on them and have been sitting on the shelf for well over a year in open packages.

So what makes the 310B so great? Well, it's got a couple of good things going for it: - Water based. Water ionizes better than alcohol, so it is by nature more active. The water carrier doesn't evaporate as quickly as alcohol, so the carrier can get spread into the nooks and crannies and up into holes to get the activators where they need to be before it dries up. - Thermal stability. This "new generation" of wave fluxes has a longer thermal stability than its predecessors, so it doesn't get exhuasted by the chip wave or too much preheat. - Stonger activators. I forget, off the top of my head, which acid this contains and why it is stronger than the alcohol-based fluxes, and since I'm at home right now I can't just whip out the data sheet and look it up, so you'll have to take my word for it.

So, in a nutshell, the stronger flux should definitely help you. In no case can it hurt you, except that you may have to verify your profile to avoid the snap, crackle, and pop when you make wave contact.

The other area to investigate is the fluxer. Have you verified good distribution from your fluxer? A quick & dirty test is to sandwich some thermal fax paper between two boards. Flux them, pull them out, and look at the paper. Alcohol turns the paper varying shades of gray, depending on how much alcohol is on the paper. You can do this to verify that there are no skips or light area in your flux pattern.

Good luck!

Chrys

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C.K.

#11762

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 26 April, 1999

| | | | Has anyone had trouble waving and gluing 0603 R's and C's? At my company, our designers have "opened the floodgates" on bottom-side 0603's. | | | | | | | | We've got an EPK+ with rotary chip and omega wave but can't seem to get skip-free soldering on these guys. Often times, we find glue that's migrated to the pads, as well, and these parts aren't friendly with our glue process either. | | | | | | | CK | | | | | | Glueing 0603's, eh? Major pain in the butt. The rotary chip wave is capable of slapping solder on them. It may help if you turn up the RPM's on the rotary shaft to attenuate the activity a little bit. | | | | | | My guess is that the problem lies more with the glue process than the wave. It's hard to get good dots large enough to provide adhesion but small enough to stay off the pads. What type of adhesive dispensing are you using? Positive displacement pump, time/pressure syringes, or stenciling? Stenciling "dogbones" for these will be your best bet, followed by a diplacement pump, and heaven help you if you are using time/pressure. | | | | | | If you are unlucky enough to be using time/pressure, let me know and I'll email you an article on how to get the best possible performance out of this all-too-common dinosaur. | | | | | | Chrys | | | | | | | | | Chrys: | | | | We've got the rotary chip at full blast (300 RPM's)!! I've studied the parts under a high powered camera and found some of the skipped parts with glue on the pads, and some skipped parts with NO GLUE on the pads.....so, we can't say that it's the glue 100% of the time...we've also got an omega wave running at full blast as well!!! | | | | One of our self-proclaimed "gurus" here thought that we had a weak flux...currently we are using alpha 351 alcohol based no-clean, but as i mentioned to you before we're looking into voc-free, with alpha nr310b as one of the top candidates. | | | | Surprisingly enough, ever since the addition of an omega wave, we solder those often-troublesome SOT23's just fine and dandy.. anyways, long-term, well be getting a universal GDM which uses positive displacement pumps..currently we're using fuji gl's time/pressure pumps... hopefully gdm will cure some of our problems with these little fellas.. | | | | | | | Hey CK, | | (Not trying to oversimplify or anything, but) It takes three things to make a solder joint: Flux, Heat, and Solder. If you're missing any one of those three, you don't get a solder joint. | | When there's glue on the pad, it's easy to determine that the missing component is solder. When there's not glue on the pad, it's time to look elsewhere. Given that the rotary chip is at 300 RPM, let's assume there's plenty of solder available for anything that's fluxed and hot. If it's an EPK +, there's convection preheat, so I'll assume that heat ain't the missing element, either. | | So that brings us to flux. The alpha 351 is a good product, but the 310B is AMAZING. It's the only thing that I can get to solder my dog-boards. These puppies have bare copper pads with a cheap Entek knockoff on them and have been sitting on the shelf for well over a year in open packages. | | So what makes the 310B so great? Well, it's got a couple of good things going for it: | - Water based. Water ionizes better than alcohol, so it is by nature more active. The water carrier doesn't evaporate as quickly as alcohol, so the carrier can get spread into the nooks and crannies and up into holes to get the activators where they need to be before it dries up. | - Thermal stability. This "new generation" of wave fluxes has a longer thermal stability than its predecessors, so it doesn't get exhuasted by the chip wave or too much preheat. | - Stonger activators. I forget, off the top of my head, which acid this contains and why it is stronger than the alcohol-based fluxes, and since I'm at home right now I can't just whip out the data sheet and look it up, so you'll have to take my word for it. | | So, in a nutshell, the stronger flux should definitely help you. In no case can it hurt you, except that you may have to verify your profile to avoid the snap, crackle, and pop when you make wave contact. | | The other area to investigate is the fluxer. Have you verified good distribution from your fluxer? A quick & dirty test is to sandwich some thermal fax paper between two boards. Flux them, pull them out, and look at the paper. Alcohol turns the paper varying shades of gray, depending on how much alcohol is on the paper. You can do this to verify that there are no skips or light area in your flux pattern. | | Good luck! | | Chrys | |

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C.K.

#11763

Re: WAVE SOLDERING and Gluing 0603 packages | 26 April, 1999

Chrys:

I have checked all the basic elements of Wave solder joint formation: fluxing, preheating, and lastly soldering.

For checking the fluxer, i used a product from ECD that's very similar to what you desribed called the flux-o-meter. It did a good job of checking our optifluxer's spray pattern. For profiling and checking the wave dwell times, etc, i used the good ol' wave optimizer. All checked out fine.

The last couple things i loooked at were 1.) Some (but not all) 0603's, are sitting on a ground plane with no thermal relief (and maybe the flux is volatalizing before wave)....and 2.) we're getting shadowing from higher profile parts in front of lower ones, and also our pad geometries are wrong!!! Our designers decided to use the same pads for wave as reflow...in a nutshell, a good % of our problems are design-related.

Now, one last thing we haven't tried is a different flux. we have been using the 351 here for the past 5 years..

I'll let you know (via the forum) what results we get when we start our VOC-Free evaluations.

Thanks for your advice.

CK

p.s. i'm interested in getting your time/pressure study on glue machines (we are a fuji gl5 house here)

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