Why the Raspberry Pi Won't Ship In Kit Form
An anonymous reader writes "A post at the Raspberry Pi blog shows an image containing the device's SoC and memory chip to help explain why the tiny PC won't ship in kit form. Clearly, the chips are so small, and the solder blobs required so tiny, that most people would mess up doing it by hand. Add to that the fact one chip has to sit on top of the other, and if you're a millimeter out, your chips are fried."
The post also addresses the use of closed source libraries for graphics acceleration.
BGA packages are intimidating, even to a guy who's been hand soldering other SMD packages since around/before 1990 (that being me)
Plain SMD is easy to do by hand, even the 0402 stuff.
The thing with BGA is its an alignment problem. Some entrepreneur will likely invent a magic clamp that holds the chip in perfect registration to the PCB, at which point it'll be dirt simple to solder BGAs.
I donno where the "if you're a millimeter out, your chips are fried" stuff comes from because thats /.ed. I've done analog microwave RF work where that is actually true. That is not possible on a logic level board. "oh noes, /ce has been grounded, whatever shall we do?" Well just fix the solder bridge and stop whining. Its not like you just shorted out a 20 amp 24 volt power supply thru the bias/bypass network of a microwave FET amplifier, nothings going to blow up on a digital ckt.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
It would probably cost more to package the components for a kit than to assemble the thing anyway, so your kit would not only cost more, it would probably never work anyway.
Your reflow oven would need the correct temperature profile, you'd need a solder paste stencil, you'd also need fresh solder paste of the correct type - because it has an expiry date and should also be kept refrigerated.