--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Sat, Apr 22, 2017 at 11:53 AM, sokolgeo@posteo.net wrote:
Hello. It seems like NEO900 project (http://neo900.org/) is having some problems with SoC warp soldering memory chips to their PCB:
specific details: http://lists.goldelico.com/pipermail/community/2017-February/001583.html http://lists.goldelico.com/pipermail/community/2017-February/001594.html
Luke - is there similar soldering risk in EOMA manufacturing?
fuck no :) whenever i see "PoP" as an option for a processor i run away very very fast :)
it's also why i haven't done a smart (or dumb) phone, because *without* that smaller size (due to "stacking") you simply can't make a small enough PCB for it to be socially acceptable, these days.
that's why i was so excited when i found the Ingenic M150... and so disappointed when they told me they'd stopped making it. why? because the M150 has 128mb of DDR2 RAM *on board* the same 11x11mm package, as a Multi-Chip-Module.
instead i've focussed on EOMA68 as the first modular design, which is *just* big enough to fit processor and RAM and PMICs onto one side of the PCB., and in some cases big enough to fit NAND or eMMC on as well.
so no - the primary reason why i avoid PoP RAM is because of the MOQ quantities usually being around 1,000.
*sigh* another expensive learning experience for the open / libre hardware community, there. i do wish sometimes that they'd read some of the things that i write. i've *already learned* that you don't try retro-fitting PCBs into pre-existing casework.
never mind - sometimes it's better for people to do things they won't listen on and then fail.
l.