Operation Detective Print

The Case of the Missing SMT Pads

Everyone loves a good mystery, unless, of course, that mystery has to do with something important that’s missing from your valuable circuit boards! We often discuss methods of repairing circuit boards, and things that are already on the board – but what about replacing pads that were never there to begin with?

Figure 1: Pads were missing and needed to be replaced in the locations outlined.
Here’s a mystery that could well be called “The Case of the Missing SMT Pads”, and in this example, “Whodunit” wasn’t as important as “Who’s-gonna-fix-it” in time to meet a shipping deadline.

It was late on a Friday evening – not a dark and stormy night, really - when we heard a knock on the office door. Apparently, a military contractor had a problem. Some SMT pads were missing from some circuit board assemblies. No one could say for sure how or why they had seemingly vanished into thin air, but unless we could reliably place 2 SMT pads on a batch of boards, missiles were not going to fly. In essence, this customer needed two new pads installed, so that a chip capacitor could be installed between a surface signal trace and a ground layer. Surface wires were unacceptable.

Of course, the usual suspects were rounded up (us), and questions were asked. Can you install new SMT pads? When? How? Of course, they had to ask the big question, i.e., will it be reliable? Tough questions for a Friday night, but commonplace these days.

Figure 2: A milling machine and .025" end mill was used to cut out the section of the conductor where the new pad on the left would be added and to spot face down to the ground plane at the two circular locations shown to the right.
Look for a moment at Figure 1. This is, ahem, the crime scene. Pads were missing and needed to be replaced in the locations outlined. Adding a pad on the left side was a relatively simple matter, and only required a surface connection to the conductor. The pad on the right side, however, was another matter. It not only needed to be added, but also needed to be connected to the power connection below the surface of the circuit board.

How did we do it? The first step was to prepare the area. A milling machine outfitted with a .025" end mill was used to accurately remove the thin surface coating at the two individual pad locations, and to cut out the section of the conductor where the new pad on the left would be added. The same milling system was then used to spot face down to the ground plane at the two circular locations shown to the right of the right side pad. (See Figure 2.) This milling procedure is a delicate step and was completed using the precision of a milling machine while the circuit board was properly fixtured.

Figure 3: New pads bonded in place, lap soldered, and joint sealed with high strength, thermoset epoxy.
Next, the short length of solder mask covering both ends of the severed conductor were scraped away to expose the conductor surface. The two circular spot faced holes, and both ends of the prepared conductor, were then tinned with solder. This was followed by proper cleaning to remove flux residues.

A replacement adhesive-backed surface mount pad was then selected, one that had short lengths of conductor protruding from opposite sides of the pad. These conductors naturally lined up with the conductors on the circuit board surface. A second adhesive-backed replacement surface mount pad was selected that also had short lengths of conductor that lined up with the spot faced areas. The adhesive backed coating was removed from the short sections of the new pads that would be lap soldered in a later step.

Let me take a moment to explain what these pads are. They are not simply pads, but actually a pad replacement system. They are dry-film epoxy backed replacement SMT pads, and are hot bonded to the circuit board surface, a better method than attempting to work with messy liquid epoxies on such small items. This method of SMT pad replacement is recommended by the IPC.

To accomplish the pad bonding, the new surface mount pads were placed in position on the board surface and temporarily held in place with high temperature tape. After a quick heat application to tack the pad in place, the tape was removed. A bonding system was then used to apply heat and pressure to the new pads to thermally bond them to the board surface. The system uses special flat tips to cure the adhesive backing in 30 seconds at 500 degrees F. This simple 30-second bonding fully cured the B-staged adhesive backing on the new pads, to reliably bond them to the circuit board surface.

Once bonding was accomplished, the connecting conductors on the new pads were then lap soldered to the pre-tinned conductors and spot face areas on the circuit board. This soldering procedure was followed by a thorough cleaning.

The final step required was to overbond the two small lap joints on the pad on the left side, and also the two spot-faced areas on the right side pad with high strength, thermoset epoxy. This sealed and insulated these connections from further reflow. (See Figure 3.)

Our mystery is solved. Case closed. 

Several members of the Circuit Technology Center team contributed to this feature story.