Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 30 09:56:37 EDT 2000 | NLykus
Hi Ramon, We have had this problem before on our Seho Wave Solder Machine. We are currently using a spray fluxer as well. By imersing the PCB into the flux you stated you are getting good results. What you need to do is check your spray patter
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 29 15:08:27 EST 2018 | emeto
I still find it weird when people clean "NO clean" - it defeats the purpose.
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 31 07:37:48 EST 2018 | stephendo
Michael What you say is not a reason for washing. It is a reason to not use Can't Clean solder paste. Although I guess if they use the real name they wouldn't sell as much as they do by calling it No Clean.
Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 01 17:34:45 EST 2018 | Mike Konrad
Thanks for the kind words Dave. At no point in my reply was I trying to sell anything. I apologize to anyone who believes otherwise. I agree with the poster, if assemblies are going to be cleaned, consider a flux designed to be cleaned. While this is
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 26 12:57:34 EST 2018 | aqueous
Sorry to disappoint. No-Clean fluxes are resin-based. They are not soluble in water. Water soluble fluxes are by nature Organic Acid and are soluble in water AND must be cleaned within a short period after reflow as they remain conductive and corrosi
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 26 12:19:24 EST 2018 | clockwatcher
I'm looking for a No Clean SAC 305 Solder Paste that can be run through our inline wash. No chemicals just DI water.
Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 01 08:46:54 EST 2018 | charliedci
Your right, he is "selling it". Or I should say he is not selling no-clean solder paste.
Electronics Forum | Tue Jan 30 07:29:21 EST 2018 | charliedci
I believe the correct statement (I've been told) is "the process is no clean". The solder paste is "low residue". As a CM, in the past we had customers that insisted on a wash after soldering. We used DI water with a saponifier which had mixed result
Electronics Forum | Tue Jan 30 10:44:02 EST 2018 | emeto
If you go even further, the flux residue actually isolates the joints from the surrounding atmosphere, so it is actually supposed to be there. Adding a step in your process that is obsolete, doesn't comply very good with the whole lean concept. I don
Electronics Forum | Tue Jan 30 18:25:25 EST 2018 | aqueous
This is one of the most common questions I get asked. Why clean no-clean flux. It was stated earlier that no-clean residues are benign. This may or may not be accurate. It depends on several factors including the reflow process. In a perfect world, t