bauer@procase.UUCP (Jerry Bauer) (01/26/89)
If you don't like drilling holes in p.c. boards, you might like this trick. I have on occasion surface-mounted I.C.s to homebrew p.c. boards. First, I bend the leads so they are coplanar (see fig 1, below), then I place the part on a pre-tinned set of pads, and solder it in place. _____ _| |_ _| |_____| |_ ----------------------------------- figure 1. This works, and beats all that drilling. I've also done this with resistors and capacitors, but they only take two holes each. The real benefits come when I surface-mount a 40-pin dip. This doesn't always save 40 holes; I usually need some of those signals on the other side. I haven't tried the hybrid, surface-mounting some pins and through- mounting others; it seems too much a hack, even for me. I may yet do it, though. Note, if you are interested in saving space, the leads can be folded UNDER the body of the I.C. at the cost of eliminating that area for routing traces. In this case, the only practical way to solder the chip is to pre-tin each pad, place the chip, and re-heat the solder. It's more trouble than it's worth, as I see it. -- JRBauer (Jerry) ...!tolerant!procase!bauer ...!hpda!procase!bauer ...!cae780!procase!bauer
smadi@rlgvax.UUCP (Smadi Paradise) (01/27/89)
In article <4115bc7f.14dd6@c> bauer@procase.UUCP (Jerry Bauer) writes: >First, I bend the leads so they are coplanar (see fig 1, below), then I >place the part on a pre-tinned set of pads, and solder it in place. > _____ > _| |_ > _| |_____| |_ > ----------------------------------- Another elegant (but costly) way: use surface-mount IC sockets. Some are available from Digi-Key -- see page 32 of their catalog; they are at (800)-344-4539. On (just a guest here) Paradise