Electronics Forum: solder thief wave (Page 1 of 484)

Re: solder thief guidelines

Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 04 12:32:13 EDT 1998 | Bob Willis

The design rules for solder thiefs are that the extra pads must be bigger than the proceeding pads to be worth while as a minimum guide the pad is 3x the size of the proceeding pad so if the pad is 0.030" the thief would be 0.090" wide. As steve has

solder thief guidelines

Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 03 13:51:41 EDT 1998 | Ted Nicholas

I am looking for some design guidelines (length, width, spacing) for solder thieves which are placed behind trailing pins of wave soldered SOICs. I'd appreciate it if some one could direct me to the appropropriate reference. Also, has any one perform

Re: solder thief guidelines

Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 04 10:44:41 EDT 1998 | Chrys

| | I am looking for some design guidelines (length, width, spacing) for solder thieves which are placed behind trailing pins of wave soldered SOICs. I'd appreciate it if some one could direct me to the appropropriate reference. | Also, has any one

Re: solder thief guidelines

Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 04 12:15:33 EDT 1998 | Steve Gregory

| | | | I am looking for some design guidelines (length, width, spacing) for solder thieves which are placed behind trailing pins of wave soldered SOICs. I'd appreciate it if some one could direct me to the appropropriate reference. | | Also, has an

Design guidelines for solder thief pads

Electronics Forum | Fri May 07 05:47:44 EDT 1999 | Charles Stringer

This is not strictly a surface mount query but any input welcome I am thinking of using surface mount solder thief pads for a through hole connector. The connector is two rows of 0.1" pitch pins and on waving there is often a bridge on the last two p

Re: Design guidelines for solder thief pads

Electronics Forum | Fri May 07 15:37:22 EDT 1999 | JohnW

| This is not strictly a surface mount query but any input welcome | I am thinking of using surface mount solder thief pads for a through hole connector. The connector is two rows of 0.1" pitch pins and on waving there is often a bridge on the last t

Wave IC, thief or robber pads use.

Electronics Forum | Mon Feb 28 11:33:13 EST 2000 | Charlie

We are in the process of establishing a design for thief pad associated with SOIC on the bottom of our assemblies. We are seek advice on design and alternative to their use. Best Regards, Charlie

Wave IC, thief or robber pads use.

Electronics Forum | Mon Feb 28 11:33:13 EST 2000 | Charlie

We are in the process of establishing a design for thief pad associated with SOIC on the bottom of our assemblies. We are seek advice on design and alternative to their use. Best Regards, Charlie

Re: wave solder bridges

Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 27 12:09:41 EDT 2000 | JohnW

Jason, where on the board is your connector?, front / back / middle? and where it on the PCB that you don't have issues with? Thief pad's are basically dummy pad's taht you have after the last set of pin's on the component are are used to draw the

Re: Wave IC, thief or robber pads use.

Electronics Forum | Mon Feb 28 11:53:08 EST 2000 | Wendy Casker

Charlie, There are 2 ways to go and they both work. 1. Add thieving pads of the same size and pitch to all 4 corners 2. Make the exisiting 4 corner pads "doublewides" Both ways work. I like #2 because you don't get a bridge. Even though a bridge

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