Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
Wouldn't it just about always be better to completely reball than just reflow? I mean, there's really no way without an x-ray machine to see what's under the chip, right? No real way to see if there's solder bridges...I figured since I'm going to have the machine, just remove the chip that needs to be removed, clean the board, clean the chip, reball the chip, reattach the chip to the board. If that doesn't work, replace the chip.
Does anyone have any good suggestions for some lead-free no-clean flux for reballing?
Replacing BGA components with hot air.
Collapse
X
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
think about what your going to be doing before buying stuff.
most times you dont need to reball anyway - just reflow with decent flux.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
I watched a video on the heat stencils. I mean, it seems like there's pros and cons to both type of stencils. With the heat stencils, I gotta line the stencil up exactly with the BGA component, but I don't have to worry about the balls moving out of place once it's lined up.
With the non-heat stencils, because everything's in a jig, it doesn't look like I have to worry about that. But I gotta remove the stencil before applying heat and the balls can get moved out of place...hrmm, which way do I go? Buy the heat stencils, buy the jig and the non-heat stencils?Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
The user manual looks more like a selling brochure. It lists all the features but doesn't really explain jack. Thankfully, there's video's online of people who figured it out. I couldn't find many English sites that talked about the unit so I used Google Translate. People were saying how they wished the manual went more in detail about how to use the touch screen interface. I agree, the manual on Scotle's website just doesn't really go into detail!
I bought the item though. It's a lot of money. It comes with a jig and some stencils for 360's, PS3's and some northbridge chips the guy says. I'm thinking of buying one of those 200 piece sets. A friend on here, who I've been communicating via private messaging, has been giving me a lot of help about the reballing process and answering all my questions.
From what I understand, there's two types of stencils. Hot ones and cold ones. If your chip isn't pre-balled, after cleaning it, etc, you put it in the jig and put flux on it. Then, with the cold type stencils, you put the stencil in the other half of the jig. You attach them and sprinkle your balls to fill the stencil. Then, very careful like, you remove the top part of the jig with the stencil and add heat to melt the balls.
I believe with the hot type of stencils, similar process, but you add heat while the stencil is still attached, if I'm understanding correctly. That way, you don't gotta worry so much about the balls moving out of place and all that jazz.
What do you guys think? Should I be looking for a giant set of heat type stencils? I think there's mainly two different sizes of stencils as well and the jigs aren't compatible with the two types. There's the 90mm jig that accepts the 90mm stencils and then there's some other size one. I'm going to try and find more information on this before I place any more orders.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
I guess the temp can be controlled separately, I just hope I can make that bottom hot air the same temp as the bottom infrared sources for certain components. Thanks Diif.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
The bottom heat is used for warming the whole board to about 100c. It shouldn't be at the temperature where smd components are falling off.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
get the manual, so you can see how it works - i know nothing about the touch-interface.
my m8's one uses a pair of PLC'sLeave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
So, that Scotle HR-460C....you know how it has that bottom hot air heater? You thought that was a good idea, because it'd hit it from both ends, right?
What do you think though? I have some components that aren't BGA. They're SMD. I was going to use this for some of those type of components as well as BGA. But here's the thing, on the bottom side, there's SMD components directly under the SMD ICs. So, if I cannot turn off that bottom heater, I'd think those components would just melt right off. What do you think?
The Zeph got freaking sold on me. I was trying to get clarification from a guy on another site. He said something about my 600 watt preheater being enough to work with BGA equipment and me being able to use my WHA-900 to do BGA rework by hand. While I was waiting for clarification (to see if I misunderstood him), someone bought that freaking Zeph unit. I wanted that more than anything.
So now I'm going to probably buy the Scotle HR-460C. I just want to make sure I can turn off that bottom hot air heater (or keep the temp real low, like pre-heating temps).Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
you can get those for $10 from china now for engine inspection etc.
btw, NASA is owned by the military / DOD so that explains the security.
they dont want spys finding images of any secret shit like x-planes,space assets etc.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
They had an endoscopy unit they were auctioning off. I wanted that soooo bad but someone outbid me. I thought it'd be cool as hell to look down into my friend's stomachs. My friend Jason said if I bought it, he'd let me put it down his throat but we'd have to get him nice and drunk first. It went for a lot of money and I never got it.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
We got cool badges, I still got mine. We picked up our pallet, stopped at the store to buy some no-doze and then we drove all the way home. It was crazy fun.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
i'v heard about the NASA auctions - some guys on the SGI forum went and got a lot of computer gear.
several pallets of it.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
If I remember correctly, the components used were pretty good quality too, not cheap stuff.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
that zt btw either has a huge base like a pallet or has a very small pre-heat area.
what's with the pyramid obsession - are they masons?Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
you do need the right diameter to match the package.
but they arent that expensive for the achi/scotle - more like 40-70$ i thinkLeave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
If I'm reading this right, the Zephyrtronics ZT-7 nozzles are freaking 299$ a pop and the stencils are freaking 349$ a pop! If it was something like 299$ for every nozzle or 349$ for every stencil, then maybe, but at freaking 299$ a nozzle, I can't be paying that!
From what I've been reading, different BGA components need different nozzles with hot air. That's freaking insane man!!!!
http://www.zeph.com/nozzles_bga.htmLeave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
I think I might actually go for the Zephyrtronics if I can get the guy to answer my last question. Picture shows a stand. If it comes with the stand, I'm going to purchase it. He claims it all works. It's just really really cheap for a Zephyrtronics. When I looked into them before, they were really expensive. Although it's all hot air and no IR, I think they're worth it.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
that's nice,
it's similar to my m8's in that it has IR pre-heat and overhead hot-air AND hot-air under the chip.
triple-attack!
i really need to get my m8 to take a foto of the base of his so you can see the duct between the heating plates.
that unit does look nice - 4800w
although the European schuko plug in the foto is only rated at 10A (2200w) so i dont know what that's about unless it has 2 seperate cables - not impossible.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
Man, this is such a tough decision! Now I'm thinking maybe the Zephyrtronics ZT-7 with the ZT-1 BGS Big Grid AirBath. This is harder than trying to pick out just the right parts to build a custom PC!Leave a comment:
-
Re: Replacing BGA components with hot air.
Okay. Thanks Stj. Now I'm looking at the Scotle HR-460C. I like the camera part of it. Three zones but only the pre-heater is IR. The rest, from my understanding, is hot air. It has a touch screen display though and the price is right. I don't want to go any higher. But is the hot air going to work? It has a 7" touch screen display, a CCD high res camera. It has a special heater for the bottom of the board (for the BGA chip getting heated) along with the the top heater. Here's a link to it:
http://www.scotle.com//scotle-hr460c...l384_p147.htmlLeave a comment:
Related Topics
Collapse
-
by SMDFleaCommon SPI bios chip programming Questions and Answers
----------------------------------------------------------
Q: I have a bios request,i can`t post my backup as i can`t read from the chip.
A: If you can`t read from it how do you expect to write to it ?.
Q: Why is my bios chip unreadable ?.
A: The programmer is faulty or has a worn or broken zif socket.
The USB cable is frayed,connector pins worn or some other physical damage.
Not enough amperage or voltage to power the programmer properly.
Bad...-
Channel: BIOS Requests ONLY!
09-02-2021, 04:40 PM -
-
by barbasHi. In the process of troubleshooting an MSI GE78HX laptop that does turn on (on its own), turns on the backlight on and off in infinite cycle, turns on RGB keyboard backlight and light bar. The CPU gets hot, and its fan spins.
The laptop charges the battery, turns on charging lights, which leads me to think the EC (ITE5571E) is ok. Laptop has no shorts, apparently. Memory is ok, tried it in another machine. Tried 5 different sticks in this machine as well, does the same. Memory connector seems ok, no pins bent.
First, I am going to try to backup and reflash its BIOS,... -
Long story short:
- dad converted Asus Chromebox CN62 into Windows compatible, with mrchromebox BIOS, years and years ago
- gave the computer to his son a couple years later
- son now decided to revert it to Chrome OS, to sell it as original (re-writing BIOS with the backup one created by his dad)
- too lazy to remove the board from the case, thought a voltage regulator was the BIOS chip (you know... it has 8 legs)
(seems like the story was not that short)
He used alligator clips to read the chip. No luck reading it. Removed chip and placed on a SOC-8... -
by TroystainHello, anyone here have updated ezp2023+ chip database in .dat file format.
I need to add w25q256jveq chip but I do not know what data should I type.
I'm using the ezp chip dabase editor posted from here https://www.badcaps.net/forum/troubl...ro-programmers
The currenty unit model that I am trying to detect is HP elitebook 640 g9 which is currently locked on admin bios....11-25-2024, 12:53 AM -
by acedogblastThis is a guide that I am writing for helping others to replace their MEC1503 EC chip if it breaks (or to get around an inconvenient prompt to the BIOS). This forum has been extremely helpful to me so I would like to contribute to help others. I will tell you right now that this task is very difficult to do. You MUST have experience and tools to do precision micro-soldering, BGA reballing, trace repair, and general laptop repair skills.
There are some specialty tools needed to do this task. The replacement MEC1503 chips can be acquired from Aliexpress. Do not buy the bare chips as... - Loading...
- No more items.
Leave a comment: