Electronics Forum | Sat Apr 14 03:25:10 EDT 2001 | kpliew
Hi , As far as I experienced with wave reflow. If u have a refective thermal reader , u will see that the board is exposed to much more temp than the 120 deg that u set. Actually , once u see the board warp or comp. crack u should know that
Electronics Forum | Sat Apr 14 03:25:04 EDT 2001 | kpliew
Hi , As far as I experienced with wave reflow. If u have a refective thermal reader , u will see that the board is exposed to much more temp than the 120 deg that u set. Actually , once u see the board warp or comp. crack u should know that
Electronics Forum | Tue Jun 06 14:31:42 EDT 2000 | Jeff Sanchez
I have 25#'s of bismuth in my shop. I wanted to add some to my 63/37 till it was eutectic. This would allow me to lower the waves temp. Can I do this and still meet standards? Also would it make the solder joints to brittle and would discoloration be
Electronics Forum | Mon Jun 12 10:57:51 EDT 2000 | Jason
I am new to wave soldering. Any information is greatly welcomed. Here is the problem. After soldering the boards they have a film on the bottom of them and sometimes a white powder looking substance. I have tried decreasing the amount of flux on
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 15 21:55:41 EST 2014 | padawanlinuxero
we do that and there's a variation on the solder temp. sometimes around 10 degrees, we have 2 solder pallets that are run in intervals of roughly 3 1/2 minutes a part (the time that take the operator to put all 3 terminals in a 42 pcbs per board, and
Electronics Forum | Wed May 27 07:53:41 EDT 2009 | padawanlinuxero
Thanks ! I will try your recommendations, about the flux and the preheaters, yes they seems to be ok I will bring down de conveyor speed because it looks like if it is to fast is set to 3.6ft thanks again!
Electronics Forum | Tue May 26 06:56:40 EDT 2009 | xinxi
Hi! From your post, it seem like the wave did not really touch the component. You probably need to get the both wave height correct and that it hits the component.It is normal for solder to come through the PCB when using chip wave. The through-hole
Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 16 15:43:50 EST 2003 | patrickbruneel
Kev, I looked up records of various hollis machines with 3 preheat zones. and with progressive preheat temp. of 300 400 and 500 with a speed of 3.5ft/min the topside board temp was 120C before entering the wave. the preheat elements were infrared. W
Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 16 06:42:51 EST 2003 | Kev
I am having problems achieving correct pre-heater temperatures with our Hollis solder wave. Our original "Verification Golden board" program uses a conveyor speed of 5ft per minute and pre-heat temps of 300, 350, 400 respectively. Our "golden Board"
Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 17 03:26:17 EST 2003 | Kev
Hi Lads, Thanks for all of the replies. To answer a few of your questions..... My wave is a Hollis PT500N. It has 3 zones of pre-heater rod elements. Each individual element (601195-01) is 500 watts. There are 16 elements per zone so 8 Kw per zone.