Hi,
I saw a previous post about soldering these manually (hot air) here:
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/projects/soldering-wlcsp-for-prototypes-by-hand-placement-and-reflow/The general consensus was, using hot air on the underside of the board, because the chip is so light, even gentle air flow seems to blow it about. As a test, I desoldered one from a scrap board, cleaned and fluxed the pads, as well as re-tinned the chips pads (not reballed). As soon as the hot air went on it floated ontop of the flux, and seemed to just not have the weight to sit on the pads. Of course, trying to steady it with tweezers was a task in itself.. so is there a reliable way of doing this?
Perhaps using much thinner flux - I'm using Amtech 559 jelly right now.
The actual job is on a samsung phone board, but I daren't touch that until I can reliably - not as in an every day job but reasonably - solder one on a board. I can't really use hot air on the underside of this board as there is a large connector there, which could drop off under its own weight. I guess I could strap it up with kapton tape.
Please note, I'm not trying to "hand solder" with an iron. I'm fairly sure I could dead bug it with 36AWG vero wire but thats a bit of a fudge, and will have to take 2A through it anyway.