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SMT PCB Assembly: Technical Reference for Buyers

SMT assembly for China-sourced PCBAs: solder paste printing, pick-and-place, reflow, and inspection stages — essential before auditing a Chinese factory.

by Martin @ China Sourcing Agents Updated 6 min read manufacturing

SMT (Surface Mount Technology) assembly is the dominant process for attaching components to PCBs in modern electronics manufacturing. Understanding the full SMT flow lets you ask the right factory audit questions, catch process failures early, and set realistic yield expectations before committing to a PCB assembly supplier — whether you’re building simple consumer boards or complex industrial IoT gateways.

Overview

SMT places and solders surface-mount components directly onto the PCB surface — no through-holes drilled per component. A complete SMT line runs: solder paste printing → SPI (solder paste inspection) → pick-and-place → reflow oven → AOI (automated optical inspection) → X-ray (for hidden joints) → functional test. Each stage has measurable process controls; a factory that can’t show you data from each is running on hope, not process discipline.

Key Parameters

ParameterTypical ValueNotes
Stencil aperture area ratio>0.66Below this, paste transfer becomes unreliable
Paste printing speed30–80 mm/secSlower = more consistent, faster = higher throughput
SPI volume tolerance±15%Out-of-range deposits predict solder defects
Pick-and-place accuracy±0.05 mm (Cpk >1.33)BGAs and fine-pitch QFPs require tighter
SAC305 liquidus217°CLead-free process reference point
Reflow peak (SAC305)235–250°C35°C above liquidus, per J-STD-020
Time above liquidus30–90 secToo short = cold joints; too long = component damage
First-pass yield (good factory)>98%>99.5% is excellent; <95% indicates process problems
BGA void limit — Class 2<25% per jointPer IPC-7095C
BGA void limit — Class 3<10% per jointMedical, defense, automotive

Process Steps

1. Solder Paste Printing A metal stencil (laser-cut, 0.12–0.15 mm thick for standard components) is aligned over the PCB. A squeegee pushes solder paste through the apertures onto the pads. Critical variables: stencil thickness, aperture design, paste viscosity, squeegee pressure (4–12 kg typically), and print speed. Paste must be at room temperature before use (cold paste from refrigerator prints poorly). The area ratio rule — aperture area divided by aperture wall area must exceed 0.66 — governs reliable paste release. Below 0.66, paste bridges the aperture and doesn’t transfer cleanly.

2. SPI — Solder Paste Inspection 3D laser or structured-light measurement system scans every deposit immediately after printing. Checks: volume (±15% of target), height, area coverage, presence/absence. SPI data feeds statistical process control. If a factory skips SPI, they will discover printing defects at AOI after reflow — when rework is much harder.

3. Pick-and-Place Component placement machines — Fuji NXT, Panasonic NPM, JUKI FX-3 are common in China — pick components from tape/reel feeders and place them on paste deposits. Modern machines achieve ±0.05 mm accuracy at 20,000–50,000 placements per hour. When auditing: ask which machines are on the line, their age, and last calibration date. A 10-year-old machine with worn feeders will place inaccurately.

4. Reflow Soldering The populated board travels through a 6–12 zone convection oven. See the Reflow Soldering article for full profile details. Key: the oven profile must be characterized for your specific board (thermal mass, component mix) — not a generic saved profile.

5. AOI — Automated Optical Inspection High-resolution cameras check component presence, polarity, value (by color coding on passives), solder joint appearance. IPC-A-610 defect classification governs accept/reject criteria. A critical point: AOI pass rate without the accompanying rejection rate is meaningless. Ask for monthly first-pass yield and defect Pareto data — the rejection categories reveal what the process is struggling with.

6. X-Ray Inspection Required for BGAs, QFNs with large thermal pads, and any hidden solder joint. 2D X-ray for spot checks; 3D AXI for production volume. See the X-Ray Inspection article for full details on void limits and equipment.

7. Functional Test ICT (in-circuit test) uses bed-of-nails fixture to verify component values and shorts/opens. FCT (functional circuit test) powers the board and exercises firmware. Not all factories offer both — confirm which tests are in scope before placing an order. For a broader view of how these stages fit into a supplier evaluation, see our quality control approach.

What to Specify When Ordering from China

  • Paste type: SAC305 (lead-free, RoHS), Sn63Pb37 (leaded), or low-temp SnBiAg for heat-sensitive assemblies — confirm your compliance requirement first
  • IPC class: specify IPC-A-610 Class 2 (commercial) or Class 3 (high reliability) — drives accept/reject criteria at AOI and visual inspection
  • BGA void limit: if your design includes BGAs, specify maximum void percentage per IPC-7095C; default to Class 2 (<25%) unless your application demands Class 3
  • Test coverage: specify whether ICT, FCT, or both are required; provide test fixture design files or confirm factory will design them
  • Yield reporting: require monthly CPK/first-pass yield reports by defect category — make this contractual

When you’re ready to source a turnkey board, the same parameters apply whether you order bare panels or full PCBA SMT assembly — bring this specification list to every quote.

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Quality Checks

Before production:

  • Review stencil design file — confirm aperture area ratios for all SMD pads, especially 0402 and 0201 passives
  • Request paste qualification data (print test results with your stencil)
  • Verify SPI is installed and operational on the line

During production (if possible):

  • Review SPI data from the first panel or two
  • Check that components are loaded from correct reels (part number, date code)

Incoming inspection / pre-shipment:

  • AQL sampling per ANSI/ASQ Z1.4; AQL 1.0 for major defects — consider a professional quality inspection service for first production runs
  • Full visual + AOI correlation check on sample
  • X-ray spot check on all BGA packages in the sample

Audit questions:

  • “What is your monthly first-pass yield at AOI, and what are the top 3 defect categories?”
  • “Show me your last SPC chart for paste volume on the line”
  • “Which pick-and-place machines are on this line, and when were they last calibrated?”

Common Issues

Solder bridging on fine-pitch components: Usually traced to paste over-printing (squeegee pressure too high, worn stencil apertures) or misalignment between stencil and PCB. On 0.4 mm pitch QFPs, a 0.02 mm stencil offset can cause bridging. Check stencil condition and printer calibration.

Tombstoning on 0402/0201 passives: One end of the component lifts during reflow. Root causes: unbalanced land pattern (unequal pad sizes), unbalanced paste volume between the two pads, or asymmetric reflow thermal profile. DFM review catches pad balance issues before production.

BGA cold joints (opens after reflow): Often caused by insufficient peak temperature, board warpage during reflow, or moisture in the BGA package (MSL violation). If you see X-ray images showing incomplete ball collapse or irregular joint geometry, ask for the thermal profile log from that run.

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FAQ

Common questions

What does a complete SMT assembly line include? +

A standard SMT line runs seven stages: solder paste printing → SPI (solder paste inspection) → pick-and-place → reflow soldering → AOI (automated optical inspection) → X-ray inspection for hidden joints → functional test. Skipping any stage increases defect escape risk; for example, omitting SPI means printing defects are only found after reflow, when rework cost is much higher.

What first-pass yield should I expect from a Chinese SMT factory? +

A well-run SMT line should achieve &gt;98% first-pass yield at AOI, with &gt;99.5% considered excellent. A sustained rate &lt;95% indicates process problems — ask for the monthly defect Pareto to see whether the root cause is paste printing, placement, or reflow profile drift.

What BGA void limits should I specify in my order? +

For commercial electronics, specify IPC-7095C Class 2 with &lt;25% void area per BGA joint. For medical, automotive, or defense boards, require Class 3 at &lt;10% per joint. If your factory quotes a generic 'IPC standard' without a void percentage, push back and make the limit contractual.

Why is AOI pass rate alone not enough to judge quality? +

AOI pass rate without the accompanying rejection rate is meaningless because factories can tune detection thresholds to pass more boards. Require monthly first-pass yield data plus a defect Pareto by category, and correlate AOI results with [AQL 1.0 sampling](/wiki/aql-sampling/) during incoming or pre-shipment inspection.

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Martin Wang Founder & Sourcing Engineer LinkedIn Facebook
Hardware engineer turned sourcing agent — reads schematics, audits factories, and translates technical specs accurately, not approximately. About →