The best method for cleaning mis-printed boards is to immerse the boards in some sort of an ultrasonic dip-tank and clean them with a nonflammable solvent. Such machines are made by JNJ Corp., SmartSonic, and others. Lockheed Martin even made one, a number of years ago, called a JetClean machine. Shop around; you can get excellent values on these machines.
Do not use alcohol as the solvent in these machines; alcohol is a weak cleaner that quickly saturates with paste and will stop cleaning quickly, so you’re constantly draining and cleaning the machine. A better choice is a nonflammable, water-based solvent such as MicroCare’s “BGA Stencil Cleaner” which has been engineered specifically for this application. It’s much stronger than alcohol, lower aroma than alcohol, lower VOC content, nonflammable and in general provides a much better and faster cleaning result.
Cleaning misprints manually, which many companies do, is sub-optimal. Solder paste gets into vias, apertures and/or on the ends of the boards, and unless the techs are extremely conscientious, some residues always remain. Most companies then blow-dry the board with compressed air, which often blows microscopic bits of oil onto the board. This cleaning process also wastes a lot of labor, ties up inventory and consumes quantities of solvents and paper wipes. Overall, this is just a bad idea.
One other thought – if you’re getting a lot of misprints (more than 2-3 per hour at normal production speeds) then the problem isn’t the cleaning, it’s the root cause of what’s causing the misprints. More often than not, it’s ineffective cleaning from the stencil wiping paper. Better paper will give better wiping, which can dramatically reduce misprints and defects at functional test. One such stencil wiping paper, the MicroWipe FP paper from MicroCare, has been proven to boost yield as much as 82%, generating huge savings in rework, throughput and improved yields.