itsmoked
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2005
- 19,114
This morning about 4AM I was working on a 10 board build that my client would like ASAP. I ran my reflow oven
on the first four boards and essentially stood there for the entire twenty five minute cycle with a flashlight
watching the proceedings. It all went fine...
Getting into the rhythm I carefully loaded the second four boards and hit go.
I closed the door to the "shop" part of my office where the stinky (flux) smell normally evolves and continued
puttering about. I have a large squirrel cage blower blowing out of my bathroom window and open the "shop"
window to keep the noxious fumes out of my office.
The controller ramps the oven up to drying temperature and holds that for a few minutes, about a 15 minute process.
Then it ramps fairly quickly to reflow temperature where all the solder melting happens. It stays at reflow
temperature for something around one minute then switches to cooling. Where I come to its aid by cracking the
oven door for about 5 minutes then open the door fully for about 5 minutes. Remove the boards step-and-repeat
as required.
Well this morning second run of four, I open the door to the shop, the oven is eye level immediately to the left
about a foot back from the plane of the door frame and I'm greeted by the sight of ORANGE smoke roiling out the
oven door and ORANGE slime oooooozing down the face of the oven. Through the oven door window I can see 2 inch
high, inch in diameter, black columns of black foaming putricity! I can't see across the room but I can see the
reflow controller displaying 226C and telling me it was in the reflow hold period - I was a few seconds early..
I yanked the very hot oven door open belching more heinous stench out into the space but hoping like heck I'd
headed off ignition of the board fiberglass and resin. I also hit the disconnect switch that isolates the oven
from the controller's power output.
I ran outside, took a deep breath and fetched my full face respirator out of my shop cabinet and ran outside
again gasping for air. After dawning my respirator I opened my office door and all the windows and had to stand
around waiting for the place to air out. This gave me time to think about the loss of four boards out of a build
of 50. Besides the immediate loss of half a K of product I would now have to go thru a complete buying cycle to
replace the parts. A low quantity cycle at that!! And, the 5 hours of stuffing too. Groan. Plus I have to
figure out what's wrong with the controller.
I totally reeked after this. That is the worst &*@%#$ stinking smoke! I had to leave all my clothes on the driveway
when I got home, lucky it was 5AM and only Jupiter and Mars were witness.
Here's the resulting master pieces:
Keith Cress
kcress -
on the first four boards and essentially stood there for the entire twenty five minute cycle with a flashlight
watching the proceedings. It all went fine...
Getting into the rhythm I carefully loaded the second four boards and hit go.
I closed the door to the "shop" part of my office where the stinky (flux) smell normally evolves and continued
puttering about. I have a large squirrel cage blower blowing out of my bathroom window and open the "shop"
window to keep the noxious fumes out of my office.
The controller ramps the oven up to drying temperature and holds that for a few minutes, about a 15 minute process.
Then it ramps fairly quickly to reflow temperature where all the solder melting happens. It stays at reflow
temperature for something around one minute then switches to cooling. Where I come to its aid by cracking the
oven door for about 5 minutes then open the door fully for about 5 minutes. Remove the boards step-and-repeat
as required.
Well this morning second run of four, I open the door to the shop, the oven is eye level immediately to the left
about a foot back from the plane of the door frame and I'm greeted by the sight of ORANGE smoke roiling out the
oven door and ORANGE slime oooooozing down the face of the oven. Through the oven door window I can see 2 inch
high, inch in diameter, black columns of black foaming putricity! I can't see across the room but I can see the
reflow controller displaying 226C and telling me it was in the reflow hold period - I was a few seconds early..
I yanked the very hot oven door open belching more heinous stench out into the space but hoping like heck I'd
headed off ignition of the board fiberglass and resin. I also hit the disconnect switch that isolates the oven
from the controller's power output.
I ran outside, took a deep breath and fetched my full face respirator out of my shop cabinet and ran outside
again gasping for air. After dawning my respirator I opened my office door and all the windows and had to stand
around waiting for the place to air out. This gave me time to think about the loss of four boards out of a build
of 50. Besides the immediate loss of half a K of product I would now have to go thru a complete buying cycle to
replace the parts. A low quantity cycle at that!! And, the 5 hours of stuffing too. Groan. Plus I have to
figure out what's wrong with the controller.
I totally reeked after this. That is the worst &*@%#$ stinking smoke! I had to leave all my clothes on the driveway
when I got home, lucky it was 5AM and only Jupiter and Mars were witness.
Here's the resulting master pieces:



Keith Cress
kcress -