Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 22 14:24:39 EDT 2001 | markhoch
I used a CamAlot 5000 to apply conductive epoxy on an aluminum substrate about 4 years ago. I used the largest diameter nozzle CamAlot had, and I bumped the dispense and dwell times way up. It was the slowest stage in the process, but it worked out o
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 23 09:11:06 EDT 2017 | jchris
I have a few LED pcb's that have an aluminum substrate that are ridiculous to rework. They heat-sink like crazy and I can't reflow the bad LED's, no matter how much heat I apply. Any suggestions on techniques or equipment to use?
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 12 08:49:38 EDT 2017 | williamaxler
I have a few LED pcb's that have an aluminum > substrate that are ridiculous to rework. They > heat-sink like crazy and I can't reflow the bad > LED's, no matter how much heat I apply. Any > suggestions on techniques or equipment to use? > I ha
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 16 15:34:14 EST 1999 | CHUCK B
My engineering Dept. has informed me that they want to start using pins, on an aluminum substrate in the smt process. Pins are interconnect for daughter bds. Dia. of pins 0.020" 0.040" 0.080" flat bottoms 1) Does any one know how to hold pins
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 13 02:30:29 EDT 2017 | jandon
We are using hot-plate. It is the safest method to rework aluminum substrate PCB's. http://www.martin-smt.de/en/rework/products/pre-heater-hotbeam.html "For efficient rework on heavy electrical systems with flat bottom surface and LED PCBs the pow
Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 23 12:43:14 EST 2020 | pavel_murtishev
Hello, There is curious PCB technology used for one aluminum LED PCB. First of all there is no solder mask. PCB tracks look grainy and there is no fillet near components. Tracks near components are thicker. A kind of material has been applied to
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 18 10:09:57 EST 1999 | Stefan Witte
| My engineering Dept. has informed me that they want | to start using pins, on an aluminum substrate in the | smt process. Pins are interconnect for daughter bds. | Dia. of pins 0.020" 0.040" 0.080" flat bottoms | 1) Does any one know how to
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 27 10:09:33 EST 2020 | charliedci
Looks like a screen printed circuit using a platinum or palladium silver paste. This would account for the grainy appearance. I 've seen this on a white ceramic substrate but not on aluminum. Any components are attached using a silver conductive epox
Electronics Forum | Fri May 29 08:25:13 EDT 2009 | floydf
We are getting what looks like cold solder joints on one of our boards. The boards have an aluminum substrate, and use OSP plating. The solder is lead free - 96.5 Sn, 3.0 Ag, .5 Cu. The flux is no clean. When we first had the problem, my solder profi
Electronics Forum | Wed May 09 17:26:57 EDT 2001 | davef
Awww, don beso tuff on ursef!!! It sounds like you�re thinking correctly with what you�ve done, but it�s possible that the test you ran did not represent your actual production environment as well as you would have liked. So, you just need to "cran