Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 24 15:04:22 EDT 2011 | kahrpr
I am going to open the flood gates of comments. The purpose of no clean is so you do not have to clean it. Yes I am aware of no cleans that you can clean. If you need to clean the boards use a water soluble paste. If you do not clean, no clean prop
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 05 14:06:41 EST 2024 | mistrthou
We don't own one, I'm a bit interested to see what you end up with. We do have a triden pcb wash, and I know Aqueous Technologes makes a lineup of misprint and stencil cleaners. We had an engineer in from Zestron chemical company, and while they don
Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 01 12:02:56 EST 2000 | Mike Konrad
Your question may be answered in two parts. First, if you are using a water soluble (OA) paste, then water is an excellent �solvent�. Water, in one way or another, is used to clean all fluxes and pastes from PCB�s. In some cases, a chemical is add
Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 03 01:03:15 EDT 2003 | Truett H.
I would discourage the use of city water at all - where rinsing electronic parts is concerned, it contains too much contamination. If practical, route DI water to your first tank and implement some aggitation (either nitrogen bubbles from the bottom
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 31 21:47:56 EDT 2009 | davef
In response to your question: 3 Saponifier / non saponifier 3a Saponifiers: * Aqueous Technologies: PCB-Wash http://www.aqueoustech.com * Kyzen: XJN http://www.kyzen.com * EnviroSense: Enviro Gold #816 http://www.envirosense-inc.com 3b Non-Sapo
Electronics Forum | Mon Jun 27 01:34:30 EDT 2011 | samsim
I fully agreed do not CLEAN the NON CLEAN process. However, some customer may request to clean the non clean process; and they willing to pay for it. In order to clean the non clean processes (the residual on the board), you need to consider the comp
Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 29 16:28:06 EDT 2011 | rway
Let's be more specific. Why do you need to clean the boards? I assume it is for testing purposes, probe contact concerns and the like. This is the only economical reason I can think of to clean no-clean flux residue from your assemblies. Before y
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 05 13:11:46 EDT 2011 | markhoch
Hi Bill, I agree with not cleaning the no-clean. If you're looking for a cleaner because one of your customers is requiring no residue be left on the PCB's, I'd investigate switching to a Water Soluable Process for those specific assemblies. (You'll
Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 07 11:55:27 EST 2023 | tommy_magyar
What I would look at is the chemicals being used in the facility where the complaints are. Flux/flux gel, IPA, cleaning agents, etc. Perhaps you should limit the usage to certain people only, who would be trained how to properly use these. Something
Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 01 07:50:25 EST 2000 | Jason Bentley
This all depends on the mixture of your solder. If you are using water soluable flux then it will get clean. But not alcohol based flux. As for using the ultrasonic this might be a problem I personally have never heard of someone washing a board in a