Electronics Forum: carbide (Page 1 of 1)

HSP 4792 dull cutters

Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 31 14:16:43 EST 2003 | kennethk

Dear Paul, My company carbide refurbishs these cutters for Sanyo/UIC chip-shooters as well as for Fuji CP machines. The trick is to add carbide and then precision grind to orginal specifications. I have done this for many customers, most recently Ce

platinum clad nickel soldering

Electronics Forum | Fri Apr 01 18:41:09 EST 2005 | KEN

Agreed. In my experience you will not wet solder to: Platinum Iron Constantine Tungsten Carbide titanium Chromalloy allomega alloy 303, 304 ...and the list goes on and on. You will either need to weld or braze. These are high temperature prcesses

Re: IC plastic encapsulant family

Electronics Forum | Tue Jun 06 20:13:31 EDT 2000 | Dave F

Not as easy as that Bob. But this may help you get started ... IC packaging materials include: � Silicone - Room temperature vulcanized silicone - Heat curable hydrosilation silicone � Biphenol & multifunctional epoxy glob tops � Polyurethane � Pol

Putting a center board support on lead free wave

Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 15 20:55:36 EDT 2004 | Ken

Try: Tungsten, tungsten carbide, ceramics like boron-nitride or how about pyrex glass? Glass blowers could make "hooks" that connect to a cross bar. I would NOT use aluminum (even if anodized). Try stainless steel 316. 303, 304 do not have enough

Mydata My9 placing issues

Electronics Forum | Thu May 27 10:04:27 EDT 2010 | cyber_wolf

I doubt that you will gain any advantage from stainless jaws. I think the stock jaws have beryllium inserts in them. I am pretty sure beryllium is harder than SS. Maybe stainless jaws with carbide inserts in them would work better ? Or what about c

Milling durstone

Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 20 09:46:21 EST 2010 | azbvc

I have to make a few fixtures using durostone Material. I would like to know what end would be best to use for milling pockets out. I tried using HSS 1/4 in all I did was burn it up. Also I tried to use a 1/4 " carbide end and burnt that up too. any

v-scoring

Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 06 18:26:20 EDT 2001 | davef

Groovy!!! [Sorry, I always wanted to say that.] As background, look at: * SMTnet Archives * "Pocket Guide to Excellent V-Scoring" and "Scoring FAQ's" [http://www.accusystemscorp.com] they cover all of the dimensions and give a short summary on the

machining durastone pallets

Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 08 11:56:31 EST 2017 | davef

From my notes ... "Durastone is some of the nastiest material i have ever worked with, first of all i will suggest using a mask and long sleeve shirts and don't do anything to try to get the fiber glass out of your body... take a cold shower and slee

Re: Trimming leads

Electronics Forum | Sat Feb 05 14:51:08 EST 2000 | Bill Petlock

Casimir, The Q and other lead trimmers work extremely well if properly used. Blade life is directly proportional to to the height of the cut. There are a few factors that are very important in trimming. You are working with a solid carbide blade whi

Damaged PCB.. what do you think?

Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 16 10:04:41 EDT 2012 | davef

We'd repair a drop board like this. Here's what our old friend Jeff Ferry said is a published article ... When boards lose their edge: when the corner of a circuit board breaks or is damaged, the problem cannot be ignored by Jeff Ferry One of the m

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