Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 27 13:50:52 EDT 1999 | Mike Konrad
Aqueous Technologies manufactures the Zero-Ion ionic contamination tester. The Zero-Ion utilizes dynamic-based technology and has been assigned the highest equivalency value by the NAWC. It is among the most sensitive of all of the military-approved
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 26 17:21:20 EDT 1999 | Tom Terlizzi
any advice on ionograph testing in the 1 microgram/cm^2 for small devices. We have a old Alpha 500 series machine that is dead but ALpha doesn't service this vintage machine.Any other way to perform this test, or a third party vendors to service th
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 28 21:58:18 EDT 1999 | Dave F
| any advice on ionograph testing in the 1 microgram/cm^2 for | small devices. We have a old Alpha 500 series machine that is dead but ALpha doesn't service this vintage machine.Any other way to perform this test, or a third party vendors to servic
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 31 09:30:29 EDT 2009 | d0min0
Hi, we are using Ionograph 500 M since some time, what kind of info You need?
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 31 08:30:23 EDT 2009 | jhowrylak
My OMEGA Meter 600 is no nlonger operational. The new unit that I was looking at is the Ionograph 500. Does anyone have input on the Ionograph, or has anyone ever worked with both the Ionograph and the OMEGA600.
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 31 20:06:44 EDT 2009 | davef
Have you talked to people [Specialty Coating Systems 800-356-8260 317-244-1200 scscoatings.com/parylene_equipment/omegameter.aspx] about repairing your Omegameter? Major differences between the testers are: * Ionograph measures conductivity, while t
Electronics Forum | Sun Jul 29 21:23:27 EDT 2001 | nifhail
When carry out the contamination test,do we measure for Chlorides on water soluble and No-clean fluxes? 1) What is the equivalent factor for machines developed to test the board cleanliness, Omega-meter vs Ionograph vs Zero-ion. 2) What values do we
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 30 21:03:44 EDT 2001 | davef
You should specify the level of res based on the effect of the res on the end-use of the product. J-STD-001 defines cleanliness requirements for ALL flux types, including water soluble and no-clean that you mention. 1 There is no equivalency betwee
Electronics Forum | Sun Jul 29 21:33:30 EDT 2001 | CAL
Your Ionograph and Zero-ion Values are set by you. There is no raw pass of fail criteria only the limits you set up. Ionograph is great for bare board resistivity (salt) test just as a pass fail for incoming inspection but this is all per your facto
Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 18 17:29:00 EDT 2002 | dason_c
The industrial standard is follow the R.O.S.E test as a guideline per J-STD-001 and the limit is 10ug/sq. inch. Different tester with different equivalent factor with the ROSE and you can refer back to the manual, the Zero Ion tester with equivalent