Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 05 12:13:50 EDT 2015 | swiese242
Find someone that has a 3D Printer and create a top and bottom jig that will hold them down. This has worked for our production needs in many ways and has saved us thousands instead having a metal shop create one. www.avcomsmt.com
Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 24 21:34:02 EDT 2015 | kennyg
I am struggling with a water wash process for a very small (1"x1") PCB. It has components that are very esily damaged by contact. I'm stuck with wash. I know, I know, but no-clean isn't an option. We put the board in s compartmentalized wash basked
Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 24 17:02:37 EDT 2015 | cnotebaert
Id say get them panelized to help lock it down in a basket or under a screen, we actually started making our own baskets out of screen material, tight mesh and not as rough. the other option would be to get something to hold them off the wash conv ho
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 03 13:53:59 EDT 2015 | sumote
Panelization is the way to go. Once it is panelized you can get them in a panel the options open up. Custom wash fixturing would be the way I would go if you have a tooling budget. The guys at Pentagon EMS have always been able to put together some n
Electronics Forum | Wed May 15 10:09:56 EDT 2019 | dhanish
Can we bent a PCB using mechanical force ?Will the PCB come back to original condition or it will be bent forever after the mechanical force is removed from the pcb?
Electronics Forum | Wed May 15 18:23:43 EDT 2019 | dhanish
This issue is seen at mechanical process.The pcb is thin 32 mils.Can we bent it just by using mechanical force without the heat?or the pcb will break if the force is high instead of becoming bent at one corner..
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 16 15:24:14 EDT 2020 | noTIME
I am trying to understand why most manufacturers don't offer mechanical feeders anymore? I find them easier to use, easier to maintain/fix. Most importantly they are A LOT cheaper! Electronic feeders are very expensive especially when you need 100
Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 28 07:07:52 EDT 2000 | David Smith
Can anybody help me with finding information on the mechanical properties of PCB materials, particularly with reference to vibration analyses. Thanks
Electronics Forum | Thu Jun 15 05:08:52 EDT 2000 | Frank
Hi, all, does anyone know what mechanical test regime is used to qualify underfills for CSP use.
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 16 08:36:25 EDT 2000 | Paul Houston
We typically use air to air thermal cyling for thermo-mechanical testing. However, you may also want to look at vibration and drop tests. Basically you use the same tests for underfilled CSP's as you would for regular CSP's Paul CBAR Lab