Electronics Forum: clean water soluble (Page 1 of 149)

no-clean vs. water soluble

Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 13 12:36:14 EDT 2000 | Steve Thomas

In the following thread, http://www.smtnet.com/electronicsforum/view_message.cfm?message=9584& John Thorup touched on some applications where no-clean fluxes could be a bad idea. I'm looking for some more detailed info. (papers, references, texts

water soluble marking pen

Electronics Forum | Mon Nov 12 09:52:44 EST 2001 | dennis

Hello! I need some help! Does anyone know marking pen that is water soluble? I want to wash off marker in a cleaning machine using only hot water. I tried many different type of water soluble marking pen, but it did not come off easily.

Re: water soluble mask

Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 27 08:52:11 EDT 1999 | Brian

| i had a problem here, during the wave soldering process, we apply a water soluble mask on the gold finger to protect it from contamination. But after washing, there is still some mask left on the gold finger. | Can anyone pls advise is there any pa

Re: water soluble mask

Electronics Forum | Sun Sep 26 11:54:06 EDT 1999 | Earl Moon

| i had a problem here, during the wave soldering process, we apply a water soluble mask on the gold finger to protect it from contamination. But after washing, there is still some mask left on the gold finger. | Can anyone pls advise is there any pa

Re: no-clean vs. water soluble

Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 13 20:37:56 EDT 2000 | Dave F

Awww Stevo, just chill. I think of NC as the process engineers' full employment material. Water solubles are for wimps!!! Har har har

Encapsulating water soluble flux residue?

Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 16 10:25:37 EST 2005 | solderiron

Rather than cleaning a water soluble flux residue off the board, by encapsulating the product. covering the board or the component with lets say a Hysol encasulant. Would this prevent the active flux residue from migrating and deteriorating the elect

Re: no-clean vs. water soluble

Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 14 11:39:59 EDT 2000 | Steve Thomas

Ahhhh, Dave, I'm glad I can still count on you for some real cutting edge info. yuck, yuck. Believe me, there's a lot more information available on how to resolve no-clean issues than there is on how to keep this stupid board wash/DI/Stencil wash/

Re: no-clean vs. water soluble

Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 22 16:45:32 EDT 2000 | Casimir Budzinski

It realy depends on what no-clean you use, I had on that would get under IC's and not get fully activated it was fine here in the states but when it was shipped over seas the salt air and humidity gave us fits, another we used didnt have that problem

Re: no-clean vs. water soluble

Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 14 19:44:25 EDT 2000 | Brian W.

I cannot give references to papers, etc, but I can tell you from experience that High Impedance circuits and High Power RF circuits are not something to try no-clean on. For an aerospace customer, I had a circuit that any residue left between two pa

Re: no-clean vs. water soluble

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

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