Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 28 16:03:53 EST 2005 | Chris
I have lots of experience with thermosonic gold ball bonding. You can read the literature and you will probably find some papers that say you can do it. I have never been able to do it. We gold ball bond all day long with little problems at all bu
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 20 18:15:02 EDT 2002 | davef
Haaaaa!!!! Soldering to plastic!!!! An apt analogy!!! I like to compare it to soldering to dirt. Some thing. In fact, you are soldering on nickel, when soldering on many things. It�s just that the gold, er Pd, flash enables the wetting mechanism
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 20 14:20:46 EDT 2012 | blnorman
From what I was told, gold flash normally refers to 10 microinches of gold.
Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 21 10:35:37 EDT 2012 | davef
Flash gold is just thin electrolytic gold plating over electroless nickel or electrolytic nickel. Flash gold plating ... * Less than 3 microinch thick will be porous and take solder poorly * Greater than 10 microinch thick will cause brittle solder c
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 20 10:05:35 EDT 2012 | guyramsey
What is the state of the art in electroplated gold flash a a surface finish; thickness and tolerance limits?
Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 08 08:18:29 EST 2005 | grantp
Hi, We have recently moved to flash gold as well, as we had solderability issues with emerson gold, and this was supposed to be a solution. However I did not know flash gold would be thicker, and could have other issues. Is flash gold a stable boar
Electronics Forum | Fri Sep 06 14:03:18 EDT 2013 | horchak
If you are a CEM you are setting yourself up for failure and will be left holding the bag. Flash gold has one purpose. It is a protective coating for the base medal to keep it from oxidizing. It is very thin and will be absorbed into the solder joint
Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 24 18:07:25 EST 2006 | Chris
Flash gold is just thin gold plating over electroless nickel or electrolytic nickel. Flash gold is electrolytic gold where the panel is connected to a plating rectifier and current causes the plating process to occur. Gold thickness is controlled b
Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 24 15:44:11 EST 2006 | Hoss
I have no experience with soldering to a flash gold finish. We have specified ENIG for a prototype PCB order and the supplier is asking us if they can use flash gold. They are telling us that the two are interchangable which I don't believe. The