1024MAK wrote:
Whereas some SMD components can fly off, crack or break if they are subjected to high vibration levels especially if the PCB can bend.
At the company that makes the propulsion units for small satellites, where I mentioned consulting, they do the vibration testing, and never have any trouble with SMT components.
For our aircraft products though, I do not use SMT for
connectors, since the stresses of inserting, pulling out, or yanking plugs or daughter boards can definitely tear the foils loose. For those, I use thru-hole. I would comment however that the holes must be plated through. We were slow to go to SMT because in the early years of SMT, our small production volumes meant that the set-up costs were too high to compete with the fact that we had our own thru-hole assembly equipment. Now, we've been using SMT for a dozen years. I have never seen any problem with chip resistors or capacitors, or even ICs for that matter. Remember that SOIC and SOJ IC packages' leads have some flexibility, such that board flex isn't going to be cracking any solder or metalization, or tearing foils away.
I never like to the be guinea pig, and I was glad to let others be the ones to suffer through SMT's early problems which have since been solved.
When I worked in repairs at TEAC in the early 1980's, we were frequently replacing thru-hole relays that seemed to have become intermittent. Somehow we figured out that the relays were fine, but that with single-sided boards with no plate-thru, every time a relay was actuated or releases, it would kind of "jump," and gradually the solder around the pin would crack. So of course when we replaced the relay, the solder was removed and the new relay was soldered in. After we figured that out, we started just re-soldering the existing relays and saving the customer a lot of money.