Electronics Forum: burn in (Page 1 of 3)

Re: How long to burn in a circuit board

Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 18 09:12:13 EST 2000 | Leslie Hall

Thanks Dave F for you 2 cents. You bring up some important points that what one person is doing isn't neccesary right for us. Someone might burn in their boards for 10 hours in temperature but their ramp time is only an hour versus someone else is

How long to burn in a circuit board

Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 11 10:37:54 EST 2000 | Leslie Hall

I'm trying to find out what is considered a standard or what other companies are doing to test their cuircuit boards. Is everyone using a envirmental room if so what is the ramp up and how long do you test it? Thanks

Re: How long to burn in a circuit board

Electronics Forum | Mon Feb 14 12:07:47 EST 2000 | Dave F

Leslie: Product screens and tests of prototypes and test vehicles should be tailored for the specific goal and product. I caution your use of equations and test condition information without specific use environments and design conditions. Lawyer:

problem in solderability

Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 28 07:32:06 EDT 2008 | realchunks

I've been there. Soldering no lead parts in a leaded world can be difficult. Sounds like you are not wetting to your parts becasue you ar enot getting hot enough. Here's the trick - you can turn up your profile to look like a no-lead profile, and

problem in solderability

Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 28 11:15:05 EDT 2008 | omid_juve

I've been there. Soldering no lead parts in a > leaded world can be difficult. Sounds like you > are not wetting to your parts becasue you ar enot > getting hot enough. Here's the trick - you can > turn up your profile to look like a no-lead

Leadfree Dross in Wave Solderpot

Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 11 13:22:11 EST 2005 | patrickbruneel

No they will all crash and burn

Solder particals in the oven?

Electronics Forum | Tue Jun 04 16:12:41 EDT 2002 | Bob

The original profile had a higher ramp rate, and the apertures were 100%. The ramp rate is now much gentler and the addition of a small soak area around 160 � 170 degrees should burn off any excess flux. Appertures are now smaller and we get no leac

Solder Defects in Hast Board

Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 12 05:43:53 EDT 2011 | aungthura

Hi All We have run the Hast Burn-in-Board into 2 soldering Process,first-Reflow and second-Wave. After wave soldering, there are many insufficient solder in the via holes.The via holes are wide as 15mil. Then, as customer's request, we have to cover

Oop's Pb BGA's in a RoHS process?

Electronics Forum | Thu Jun 22 11:24:48 EDT 2006 | mumtaz

Ha ha, very funny. Not as funny as our burn on YOU!

Excess Flux in uBGA rework

Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 25 13:01:48 EDT 2001 | Hussman

If the flux you are applying by brush is alcohol based, use some alcohol on a few failed PCBs and retest. It souldn't take a lot of flux to reflow the balls to a pad that's already covered with solder and flux from the first BGA - unless you are cle

  1 2 3 Next

burn in searches for Companies, Equipment, Machines, Suppliers & Information