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Toaster, convection or infrared oven?

We hope this doesn’t look like a oven shootout for baking cakes! For the past 24 hours, we have been experimenting with different 4 ovens ranging from 800 W to 1500 W. We wanted to share our experience on selecting the oven that probably will work for your reflow process.

The [highlight type=”light”]800 W[/highlight] unit which is basically a small 9 l toaster oven with top and bottom heating element. It is capable of going up all the way to 260 °C. We used this little guy since day 1 and it doesn’t have issue of going up the ramp the way we wanted it.

The next unit we tested was a [highlight type=”light”]1380 W[/highlight] unit. This is basically a larger version with 19 l of space inside the oven. We returned this unit back to the shop after few hours only. It barely hit the 230 °C mark although it stated as maximum 250 °C. Without any external control and with all controls cranked to maximum, the temperature goes up so slow (at times < 0.5 °C per second) and this will cause problems especially at the reflow stage of the curve (above 218 °C to peak reflow temperature). This will result in a rather flat reflow curve and lengthy time to get to the temperature point you required.

The next unit is another 1380 W unit with same amount of space inside the oven. This unit is behaving similarly as the previous unit but having quite an amount of fluctuation in temperature.

The last unit was a convection based oven. It’s a 35 l oven with several fan and heating element setting. Trying with the fan on, the temperature rises up pretty slowly and is incapable of achieving the reflow curve characteristic. Turning off the fan improve the temperature rise capability but is still incapable of achieving what we wanted. This unit will roast the chicken instead after this. 🙂

We couldn’t get our hands on an infrared oven and it’s pretty hard to find one here. So, we don’t have any comments on them. It will be nice if anyone have experience on them and share them with us. 🙂

After sitting many hours in front of the hot oven, we have some advise for getting an oven for reflow purposes:

  • You need to make sure the oven is capable of heating up quickly – Something like 2-3 ° C per second is decent enough for preheat stage and reflow stage. If the oven is incapable to heat up that fast, you’ll have problem during the reflow stage as at that high temperature, your components are not supposed to be baked too long during under such high temperature. So, test the oven before using it for reflow. Use any temperature probe and cranked up the temperature to maximum and see how fast and how high it can go.
  • During the soaking period, you only need less than < 1 °C per second. This should be okay for most oven. Software control will come into the picture to slow things down.

So, choose your oven carefully. You don’t want to end up having too many ovens at your disposal!

How much we wish there’s Wallmart and Target here in Malaysia!

5 replies
  1. Paul Cohen
    Paul Cohen says:

    I found two types:
    1. With black metal heating elements.
    2. With quartz glass enclosed heating elements.
    Which will work better for reflow soldering?
    Paul

    Reply
    • Administrator
      Administrator says:

      Paul,

      Those with quartz glass gives a faster heating rate compared to metal based heating elements. Seen few guys using them although myself is using a metal based heating element oven.

      Reply
      • Paul Cohen
        Paul Cohen says:

        Is faster better for the process?
        Is quartz faster because of lower thermal mass or IR emiision/reflection?
        Paul

        Reply
        • Administrator
          Administrator says:

          You need to be able to climb around 3 Degree Celsius per second during the preheat and reflow stage. The volume of your oven will also have an influence on this. I guess quartz gets hot faster but they also tend to cool down faster.

          Reply

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