itsmoked
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2005
- 19,114
I have access to a pick and place machine and an order for a bunch of double-sided boards. In the past I've been placing one side and reflowing it to completion, then hand soldering all the parts on the bottom (only about 1/4 the parts). But with a large order I'd like to avoid hand soldering the bottom at all.
I believe regular board houses have some way to dab glue on the bottom side then they place the parts and then they can flip the board and do the top side then reflow the whole thing one time without the parts on the bottom falling off.
Not having the glue application equipment I'm searching for an alternative.
One thought is different melting-point solders. The first thing that comes to my mind is using lead-free and leaded solder. Lead-free takes another 100F to melt over leaded. Has anyone tried doing one side with lead free then doing the other side with lower temp leaded at it's lower melting point and so having the first parts be unaffected by the second reflow?
Keith Cress
kcress -
I believe regular board houses have some way to dab glue on the bottom side then they place the parts and then they can flip the board and do the top side then reflow the whole thing one time without the parts on the bottom falling off.
Not having the glue application equipment I'm searching for an alternative.
One thought is different melting-point solders. The first thing that comes to my mind is using lead-free and leaded solder. Lead-free takes another 100F to melt over leaded. Has anyone tried doing one side with lead free then doing the other side with lower temp leaded at it's lower melting point and so having the first parts be unaffected by the second reflow?
Keith Cress
kcress -