Getting started with BGA (Ball Grid Array) reflow and reballing is a great skill if you're into electronics repair (especially GPUs, consoles, and laptops). But it’s also one of the more demanding areas of soldering—so starting with the right mindset and tools matters a lot.
๐ง What You’re Actually Doing
- Reflow: Heating the existing solder balls under a chip until they melt and reconnect.
- Reballing: Removing the chip, cleaning it, and applying brand-new solder balls before reinstalling.
๐ Reflow = quick fix (sometimes temporary)
๐ Reballing = proper repair
๐งฐ Essential Equipment
1. BGA Rework Station
- Hot air + bottom heater combo
- Examples: brands like Quick, ATTEN
- Budget option: IR (infrared) stations (less precise)
2. Hot Air Station
- Needed even if you have a full rework station
- Look for stable airflow + accurate temp control
3. Preheater (VERY important)
- Prevents PCB warping
- Ensures even heating
4. Stencils (specific to chip model)
- Used for placing solder balls during reballing
5. Solder Balls
- Common sizes: 0.3mm – 0.76mm
- Leaded (easier) vs lead-free (more realistic)
6. Flux
- High-quality flux is critical
-
Popular choices:
- Amtech NC-559-ASM
- Mechanic XG-Z40
7. Microscope or Magnification
- You cannot do this properly with the naked eye
๐ฅ Basic Reflow Process (Beginner Level)
- Preheat board (~120–150°C)
- Apply flux around chip
- Heat with hot air (~220–260°C depending on solder type)
- Watch for slight chip movement (“floating” effect)
- Cool down slowly
⚠️ Risks:
- Overheating = dead chip
- Warping PCB
- Fix may only last weeks/months
๐ Basic Reballing Process (Proper Method)
- Remove chip with hot air
- Clean old solder (chip + PCB pads)
- Apply stencil to chip
- Add solder balls
- Heat until balls form perfectly
- Reinstall chip using reflow process
๐ This is where precision matters most.
๐งช Practice First (Seriously)
Before touching valuable boards:
-
Practice on:
- Old motherboards
- Dead GPUs
- Scrap electronics
Focus on:
- Heat control
- Flux usage
- Chip alignment
⚠️ Common Beginner Mistakes
- ❌ Too much heat (kills chips)
- ❌ No preheating (warped boards)
- ❌ Cheap flux (bad joints)
- ❌ Moving chip during cooling
- ❌ Skipping cleaning step
๐ง Pro Tips
- Leaded solder (Sn63/Pb37) is easier to work with for beginners
- Always clean with isopropyl alcohol after work
- Use thermocouples if you want precision
- Learn temperature profiles (this is key for consistency)
๐ก Is It Worth It?
✔ Worth it if:
- You repair GPUs, consoles (PS4/PS5, Xbox), laptops
- You want a business/side hustle
❌ Not worth it if:
- You just want occasional fixes (risk too high vs cost)
Here’s a realistic budget vs professional BGA setup, based on what actually works in practice (and what people in repair shops end up using long-term).
I’ll keep it practical—no fluff, just setups you can actually build.
๐ธ Budget Setup (≈ €300 – €800)
๐ Best for learning, occasional repairs, small chips (laptops, consoles RAM, etc.)
๐ง Core idea: “Modular setup” (NOT cheap all-in-one)
Cheap all-in-one BGA machines look tempting—but they’re usually inconsistent and hard to control.
๐งฐ What you should get
1. Hot Air Station (main tool)
-
Example tier:
- Quick 861DW (very popular)
- ATTEN ST-862D
-
Why:
- Stable airflow = consistent reflow
- Cheap stations = temperature lies (kills chips)
2. IR Preheater (CRITICAL)
-
Example models:
- T-8280 / T-862++
-
Why:
- Prevents PCB warping
-
Gives even heat from below
๐ Without this, you will destroy boards (especially GPUs)
3. Basic Support Tools
- Microscope (USB or trinocular)
- Stencils (chip-specific)
- Solder balls (0.3–0.6mm)
- Flux (Amtech / Mechanic)
- Tweezers + wick + IPA
๐ก Real-world insight (from repair techs)
Many people successfully do BGA work with just hot air + preheater + practice boards
But: consistency is the issue
๐ Budget setup = manual skill > machine quality
⚠️ Limitations
- No optical alignment (you align by eye)
- Harder for large chips (PS4 APU, GPUs)
- Repeatability is inconsistent
- More risk of overheating
๐ญ Professional Setup (≈ €2,000 – €10,000+)
๐ For serious repair work, daily use, or business
๐ง Core idea: Semi-automatic BGA rework station
These systems are designed to replicate factory reflow profiles with controlled heating stages.
๐งฐ What you get
1. Full BGA Rework Station
Examples of this class:
- ACHI IR PRO SC (entry pro)
- Scotle / Honton machines
- High-end: systems like Manncorp RW1500
2. Key Features (THIS is what matters)
๐ฅ Multi-zone heating
- Top heater + bottom heater + board heater
- Mimics real reflow profiles (preheat → soak → reflow → cool)
๐ฏ Optical alignment (huge upgrade)
- “Split-vision” system overlays chip + PCB
- Lets you align perfectly before soldering
๐ก️ Programmable temperature profiles
- Save profiles for PS4, GPUs, laptops
- Consistent results every time
๐ก Example high-end capability
Machines like SV560A BGA Rework Station include:
- Automated placement
- HD camera alignment
- Multi-zone IR heating
- Large board support (servers, GPUs)
⚠️ Reality check (important)
- Expensive machines ≠ automatic success
- You STILL need skill (profiles, heat control, experience)
⚖️ Budget vs Professional (Quick Comparison)
| Feature | Budget Setup | Professional Setup |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | €300–800 | €2k–10k+ |
| Heating control | Manual | Programmable |
| Alignment | By eye | Optical (split-vision) |
| Repeatability | Low | High |
| Risk of damage | High | Much lower |
| Best for | Learning, small jobs | Business, GPUs, consoles |
๐ง My Honest Recommendation
๐ Start like this:
- Buy good hot air + preheater
- Practice reballing manually
- Kill some boards (normal)
๐ Upgrade when:
- You can consistently reball chips
- You start working on GPUs / consoles daily
๐ Pro Tip (Most People Miss This)
If your budget is around €500–700:
๐ DO NOT buy a cheap BGA machine
๐ Build a modular setup instead
From Reddit repair techs:
“A preheater + hot air setup is often better than cheap all-in-one stations”

Comments
Post a Comment