Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 14 13:58:07 EST 2001 | slthomas
This is one I haven't seen before (not in this context, anyway). We have an assembly that we have the SMT done out of house on, because of the high volumes. The boards have two distinct characteristics with respect to the appearance of the solder jo
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 31 18:46:40 EDT 2007 | rpadilla
Well, everyone has provided good advice, but if you are looking for a wave flux that can provide much better dwell times and consistent wetting throughout the hole fill, without making adjustments to your production process, I suggest going with Senj
Electronics Forum | Thu May 11 15:11:14 EDT 2006 | patrickbruneel
I assume you talk about wave soldering. No-clean fluxes are widely used since 1987 or earlier and after all these years they have proven to be reliable. If you clean the board or not the dust bunnies etc. will still reach the board surface. If you us
Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 15 09:24:54 EDT 2000 | C.K.
At my last place of employment, that was the big reason why nobody (especially the Design Engineers) bought into a no-clean process - interference with high-impedance circuits. One guy was so paranoid about flux residues remaining on the board, that
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 22 14:12:09 EST 2001 | slthomas
Interesting...the very reason we use water soluble paste on some of our boards is for that reason, although I've never been able to get anyone to show me something in print that supports it. It's just what engineering has told me. We currently have
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 22 16:35:06 EST 2001 | Steve
Deja vu! When I read your response I turned around to see if you standing behind me listening to our problem. We currently make about 50 different boards all using no-clean that have no problems, yet this newest boards has a couple of issues that eng
Electronics Forum | Sat Jun 09 14:28:58 EDT 2001 | Kelvin
No-clean solder paste is definately a trend for tomorrow. However, there are several points you need to consider before you shift from WS to no-clean: 1. Component quality - No-clean solder paste generally (not essentially) get a lower avtivity than
Electronics Forum | Sat Oct 09 03:26:58 EDT 1999 | Brian
| Always experiencing dross in pot with different characteristic such as color, shape, dry/wet etc. Any paper, wetsites provide the more comprehesive explanation on its characteristic | Dross is a mixture of various things. The obvious ones are met
Electronics Forum | Sat Jun 19 11:44:00 EDT 1999 | Vic Lau
Do anyone have any experience on assembling high frequency product, 1.8GHz or 2.4GHz. In our production line, we manufacture 1.8GHz product with using no clean paste (RMA type) for reflow and no clean wire for rework. In our functinal test,either at
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 18 12:36:52 EDT 1999 | Brian
What is the future of HASL with lead-free solders? I have grave misgivings as, even if it works properly (which I'm not too sure about), the alloy will have to match that used in the soldering process, or nearly so. No use using a Bi-containing HASL