Saline

Saline Lectronics chooses Nikon X-ray system

May 12, 2017

Leuven, Belgium. Nikon Metrology announced it has recently provided its XT V 160 high-precision, flat-panel-based X-ray inspection system to help Saline Lectronics, based in Saline, MI, inspect its most complex and challenging technical assemblies.

Saline Lectronics offers comprehensive assembly and manufacturing support for a range of products that incorporate highly complex, extremely dense circuit-board assemblies. Because of this, inspection is vital in order to guarantee a product’s performance throughout its lifecycle.

To stop the subjectivity of measuring accurate connections in leadless components, Saline Lectronics invested in a Nikon XT V 160 with a Varian 1313Dx flat-panel detector and X.Tract technology. This new, high-quality PCB inspection system gives technicians a highly-magnified view of component connections for complex PCBAs.

Traditionally the company relied on manual visual inspection, or 2D X-ray systems, to determine whether or not a connection was acceptable; however, due to electronic devices getting smaller and more complex, the problem of inspection to ensure the product is fault-free is complex, and these techniques were simply not providing the best inspection method.

“Our old machine was simply an X-ray,” commented Scott Sober, VP of operations and manufacturing at Saline Lectronics. “The Nikon XT is a proper inspection tool. With it, I will definitively know that my manufacturing process is providing excellent results for all bottom-terminated components.”

The Nikon XT V 160 will expose any hidden features allowing further examination into BGAs and other array-style package as well as inspect heels of solder joints, fine-pitch packages, and internal characteristics of solder joints. With a proprietary NanoTech 160-kV X-ray spot and electromagnetic lens, the system offers the latest digital imaging technology available and produces clear, sharp images at the micron level.

Jason Sciberras, Saline Lectronics manufacturing manager, said, “We chose the Nikon system because of the X.Tract software. The laminography technology gives us an unprecedented, magnified view of any ball underneath a BGA. Even if the BGA has 2,000 balls, I can examine each one individually from any angle. This technology will completely revolutionize how we measure appropriate connections.”

The system includes the Inspect-X feature, which provides a full, real-time, automated reporting system that details the X-ray system’s inspection results and clearly defines passed and failed components with quantifiable data to support those determinations. With a variety of customers in the medical and aerospace industries with Class 3 assembly requirements. The company can now supply these clients with real-time data and 3D visual images that guarantee the solder joints on their assemblies, and therefore the functionality and reliability of the entire PCBA.

Mario Sciberras, Saline Lectronics president and CEO, concluded, “As a future-thinking organization, we are always investing in the appropriate tools and resources to provide our customers with unparalleled quality. This Nikon X-ray system will better ensure quality for highly-complex circuit board assemblies with leadless components.”

www.nikonmetrology.com

About the Author

Rick Nelson | Contributing Editor

Rick is currently Contributing Technical Editor. He was Executive Editor for EE in 2011-2018. Previously he served on several publications, including EDN and Vision Systems Design, and has received awards for signed editorials from the American Society of Business Publication Editors. He began as a design engineer at General Electric and Litton Industries and earned a BSEE degree from Penn State.

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