Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 15 09:55:54 EST 2000 | CAL
Dave- Follow this link to our November empfasis. In the empfasis there is an article on N2. http://www.empf.org/html/November%202000%20empfasis.pdf Cal
Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 21 01:08:28 EST 2000 | Bentzen
Check out my article about reflow soldering in nitrogen atmosphere on www.smtinfocus.com Hopefully you will find some answers and more detailes on my web-site.
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 15 08:44:17 EST 2000 | DaveJ
I need some advise from the reflow experts. In your experience in nitrogen versus air reflow, what would be the differences in profile parameters? For example, if I profiled a board in nitrogen and achieved (for a particular component) ramps rates un
Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 21 20:13:02 EST 2000 | Brad Kendall
I used to switch my N2 on and off for different products and I had performed profiles on the products with and without the N2 on and there was not a difference in the profiles. So you should not have to adjust your profiles. I think everyone else c
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 15 11:45:38 EST 2000 | DaveJ
All, Thanks for your quick response. However, my primary concern is not the question of solderability advantages of nitrogen versus air. With all things (zone temps, track speeds, flow rates, etc.) being equal, what would be the profile differences o
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 15 11:21:45 EST 2000 | ralph
In my experiance, I have seen no difference in profiles between nitrogen and air reflows. What I understand is that the Nitrogen blanket allows for a greater solderability to gold plated pads. I also found that when dealing with fine pitch componen
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 15 15:59:35 EST 2000 | Hussman
Dave, It will all be about the same - changing atmospheres does not affect your heater output. You may experience some differences in the way your solder joints look (a little duller), but with some of the newer pastes out there, you can overcome i
Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 20 22:24:03 EST 2000 | Greenman
Dave: In terms of heat transfer, air is 78% nitrogen, and the remainder is mostly (20.9%) oxygen (roughly the same molecular weight as nitrogen), with a bit of argon (0.9%), CO2, hydrogen, monosodium glutamate etc. So you would expect virtually no d
Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 20 22:25:26 EST 2000 | Greenman
Dave: In terms of heat transfer, air is 78% nitrogen, and the remainder is mostly (20.9%) oxygen (roughly the same molecular weight as nitrogen), with a bit of argon (0.9%), CO2, hydrogen, monosodium glutamate etc. So you would expect virtually no d
Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 20 22:26:01 EST 2000 | Greenman
Dave: In terms of heat transfer, air is 78% nitrogen, and the remainder is mostly (20.9%) oxygen (roughly the same molecular weight as nitrogen), with a bit of argon (0.9%), CO2, hydrogen, monosodium glutamate etc. So you would expect virtually no d