Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 05 03:09:57 EDT 2000 | Gyver
Hi Dave, Thanks for your great help! Well, gold fingers are always on any kind of cards, right? Or you were confused by my poor English...sorry!:-( Now we are going to implement some kind of method to prevent the gold fingers from being contaminated
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 21 20:17:08 EDT 2000 | Dave F
Hey Gyver: Oooow, using a pencil eraser has to take time. I would hate to be the person responding to your customer trying to explain the pencil eraser shreds accidentally left on the board. Awww, just spritz it with DI water and wipe it off with
Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 01 04:30:42 EDT 2000 | Gyver
Hello Dave, The gold fingers are on graphic cards. What did you mean by DI water? I need to know that very soon, thanks a lot! Sincerely, Gyver
Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 05 16:16:18 EDT 2000 | Dave F
Yeh, gold fingers are always on any kind of cards. I just can't figure-out why.
Electronics Forum | Sat Sep 02 10:18:16 EDT 2000 | Dave F
Yanno, I just thought of an addition to #3 above. Back in the ol' days (before computer drawing) there were rooms full of people, generally guys (with plastic pocket protectors holding colored pens and ... ) leaning on drawing boards, doing whatever
Electronics Forum | Sat Sep 02 09:59:39 EDT 2000 | Dave F
Hey Gyver: I was just spoofin' ya about the deionized water (DI). Water of any type will probably make your solder connections go white. I posted your question to Dr. Lee on the latest OnBoard Forum. I suggest you check his responses. I short he
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 19 21:23:42 EDT 2002 | davef
I'm not saying that an eraser will necessarily work. What I'm saying is that some erasers may cause more trouble than the eliminate. Look here http://aic.stanford.edu/jaic/articles/jaic28-02-003_2.html We prefer a brand called Ruby Red. The "ole
Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 30 17:32:37 EST 2004 | russ
If you are lucky, you might be able to chip the solder off the fingers with an Exacto knife and then polish it up with a pink eraser. This does work if the solder on the fingers isn't wetted very well. Russ
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 19 17:14:02 EDT 2002 | davef
Comments are: * Use an eraser if the surface of Au is not clean, but make sure the eraser has no/low ionics (such as sulfur that is a common additive for rubber). * If the plating surface required eraser to remove the top surface, the plasma normally
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 19 20:28:59 EDT 2002 | bugsjoe
* What kind of the eraser can clean clearly?I've been use the eraser but the defect still present.