Hi
Ok, it's down to decision time:
TVM802A
--or--
TVM802B
--or--
save the money and buy nothing
I've hopped back and forth between several use scenarios for this machine. I still may hop again. Right now I have it narrowed down to the "lab machine" and not the "short run production machine".
I've ruled out the "no vision" machines. They simply will not handle the 0.5 mm stuff I need to place. I've ruled out the > $7K machines. I simply do not have the need / budget / cash flow to justify one. The application is short run prototypes in the lab. No production volumes. No 10 panels of 64 boards in one run. If the machine runs 4 hours twice a week .... that's about it. I'd rather spend the time on setup and get it right than spend two days placing parts by hand and get it wrong. (Yes, I've priced out contract assembly ... $250 (setup + shipping parts out + shipping stuff back) x 20 jobs = $5,000 ... you just paid for the machine).
Is the A big enough for what I do? If I split jobs and swap reels, sure it is. If I cobble up a tray system and do this or that, I can handle the big IC's. Can I screw in nozzles every 30 minutes? Sure. It does begin to be a bit of a pain when you do all of that though. There also is some cost involved. I'd love to say that cost is not an issue, but it always is. It's also a lot more expensive to buy an A and then go back and get a B six months later.
What do I mean by 0.5 mm pitch parts? I include 0402 passives in that category, but not 0201's. Fine pitch flat pack packages in the 100 to 200 pin range are certainly in that category. 1 mm pitch BGA's are in. I'd love to think that 0.5 mm BGA's are in as well. Yes indeed, placement speed is not an issue. Doing this at "dead slow" with vision on -- not a problem at all. My time (for this exercise) costs nothing if it's used getting the machine set up. Tuning / tweaking / calibrating is an expected part of this. No, I won't come set up your machine for free
Enough background. Here's the questions:
If you have an A, would you get one again or would you go for a B?
If you have a B, would you get an A if you had it to do over again?
If you have either an A or a B, would you *not* get one if you had it to do again?
Do you have a non-vision machine that reliably places 0.5 mm pitch parts?
Then the same set of questions, with the qualifiers of my very low volume and possibly insane fine pitch needs ...
What's the consensus?
Bob