enso wrote:
you can move the chip around until it pops into the dips made by the soldermask, so placing is easy! You hardly need a magnifier.
What kind of soldermask? Would this work with LPI, or only with wet-screened? (Is LPI thick enough to do this?)
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My oven is not PID controlled. If you are more scientific about it, you will be able to do it, but with a plate you can just watch the balls.
Would an electric skillet work?
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The hard part is not the soldering, it's laying out an error-free circuit connecting all those pads under the chip. Breaking out from the grid is a real puzzle - you can't put vias under pins (they suck solder right out)
What if you fill the via with solder first? It kind of sounds like the BGA manufacturers almost assume you're going to make a multilayer board with blind and burried vias. That's not cheap stuff.
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All PCB layout packages simply stink when it comes to dense BGA grids. I use gEDA PCB - it's quirky but at least it's opensource and the files are text-based, so I can generate tricky footprints or adjust placement of things with a text editor on occasion.
I use an old DOS version of Easy-PC Pro. It was only $375 nearly 20 years ago, but I like it because it is so flexible it lets me do almost anything I want, including a lot of things the programmers probably didn't think of. (The advent of Gerber 274X helped with this, because it used to be a pain to explain the merge files to the board houses when all we had was 274D and had to write things up in clear detail in the manufacturing instructions.) I always make my own custom land patterns because I can get better density that way than what comes standard, and we have not had any resulting production problems. I have the book "SMT High Density Design & DFM" by James C. Blankenhorn, put out by SMT Plus, Inc.. It cost something like $300 but it is poorly written and their idea of high density is not very dense compared to what we've been doing. It does not have anything about BGAs though; so what would you recommend for the sizes and shapes of the land pattern pads? It looks like you used round ones. Should I assume that the BGA manufacturers have pad-size recommendations like manufacturers have for other packages? Should the holes in the soldermask be only big enough to ensure that there's no gasketing (which would mean only about .002" or .004" greater diameter than the pad if it's LPI)?