Electronics Forum: rtv cure (Page 2 of 2)

Corrosion due to RTV adhesive

Electronics Forum | Mon Feb 11 17:07:07 EST 2008 | blnorman

3145 is methoxy cure, so the cure by product is methanol.

Conformal coating mask dots and halos

Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 25 10:21:49 EST 2010 | jdumont

My guess would be that the adhesive used on the dots contains silicone. We use 1B73 which is also acrylic and it hates silicone. We use silicone RTV to permanently mask around some connectors and unless its fully cured before coating it will cause l

Coating under Mil connector....

Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 22 21:29:05 EST 2005 | davef

Josh: Room Temperature Vulcanizing (RTV) is Dow Corning's trade name for it's family of silicone cure sealants. RTV is about the worst kind of coating there is. Its chemistry is highly ionic and it requires atmospheric humidity absorbed to "complete

Epoxy application

Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 20 19:08:15 EST 2007 | Peter

Hello, I would like to ask for opinion on an epoxy application. We apply RTV to bond and secure 2 electronic devices on a PCB. But after noticing the RTV bond breaking off during vibration test, our customer has specs in a 5min 2-part epoxy (made

silicone conformal coat and electrical contacts

Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 31 14:07:24 EST 2007 | electronhose

Material, fumes, cured or uncured, all are suspect. Silicone gets on an operator's hands, that operator handles components ( even a day or more later ) silicone is transferred to the solder connections = contamination. Process and workcell control

Epoxy damaging SMT Components

Electronics Forum | Thu Feb 11 12:02:47 EST 2010 | plaiming

We have temporarily switched to an RTV for the vibration reincforcement, but it is not compatible with acrylic conformal coating and we really do not want to switch conformal coatings to a silicone based. Additionally we are testing the product in h

Epoxy application

Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 20 20:26:54 EST 2007 | davef

Peter: The above link to the the picture of the assembly is broken. Comments are: * Yes, RTV is completely useless for applications like you describe. Epoxy is a much better choice. * Dave G, in an archived thread on SMTnet, talks about using 3M Jet

Re: Conformal Coating that doesn't require fancy equipment...

Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 28 17:35:07 EDT 1998 | Brian Stumm

Steve, I know it is tempting to go for the cheapest method of applying conformal coatings but I must warn you. If you are a contract manufacturer then you don't want to limit yourself in the types of coatings you can work with. Just as soon as you se

Photo version: Conformal Coating that doesn't require fancy equipment

Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 28 17:44:03 EDT 1998 | Brian Stumm

| Steve, | I know it is tempting to go for the cheapest method of applying conformal coatings but I must warn you. If you are a contract manufacturer then you don't want to limit yourself in the types of coatings you can work with. Just as soon as yo

Re: Conformal Coating that doesn't require fancy equipment...

Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 24 06:50:58 EDT 1998 | Wayne

| Hey youse guyz... | We're finally getting our first real job at the start-up I'm working at. It's actually a pretty unique little board too. Simple as all get out, but unique. You're not gonna believe what this goes into...guess? (I bet ya' you'll

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