Electronics Forum: wave lead free profile (Page 1 of 116)

lead free vitronic(s) profile

Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 14 21:53:07 EST 2006 | davef

Use the thermal recipe suggested by YOUR paste supplier, as the starting point.

lead free vitronic(s) profile

Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 12 01:52:05 EST 2006 | hemu_me

As we have vitronics oven(SMR610A) made in dec,1997,which has 5 heating zones and 2 cooling zones. For Lead free soldering what should be our baseline for low/medium boards.we have gathered profiles from various paste manufacturers,however we don't k

Lead free profile

Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 26 09:51:51 EST 2005 | jbrower

Sure, to be a true lead free enviroment all components need to be lead free or fall within the specifications of lead free as defined by the RoHS Directive. What I am doing is starting stage 1 of our journey. Layed out it looks some thing like this.

Lead free profile

Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 27 15:13:26 EST 2005 | jbrower

Hi Tom, Thanks for the compliment. I've been researching and planning for the time that my company would go lead free since late in 1999. I hear you there, how do we know that the component is lead free. Baring a leap of faith with your vendors, I

Lead free profile

Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 27 16:43:15 EST 2005 | russ

Ther is a solder alloy out there that is supposed to allow lead free wave processing without having to upgrade pumps and such or increasing the pot temp (direct drop in). I have not used it nor do I plan on doing leadfree wave soldering but you may

Lead free profile

Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 01 11:54:14 EST 2005 | TomA

Indy, I found the same findings as you. The claim is that the solder joint may actually look closer to a SnPb solder joint then the SAC alloys. I had commited to the SAC alloys at SMT before finding out about the SN100C alloy. I'm interested in what

Lead free profile

Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 01 12:52:19 EST 2005 | jbrower

Hi Tom, I did talk to Bob Gilbert about the sn100c. His comment is that it is a nickle stabalized alloy. Simplisticly, the tin and copper molecules would rather bond with the nickle. He also mentioned that with the SAC alloys, the manufactuers were

Lead free profile

Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 01 09:54:23 EST 2005 | jbrower

Hi Frank, we're still going to go with FR4 as our prefered material. Our board thickness is .062. We use an on shore and off shore vendor. Prototron I believe offers an immersion tin and excellence in china? offers an immersion tin finish. We fou

lead free

Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 05 11:53:34 EST 2003 | davide grosso

I want to know the advantage of using complete inert soldering wave machine (with Nitrogen, Tunnel concept) in comparison to use just a soldering machine withe inerted solder pot. Thanks

lead free

Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 05 13:12:33 EST 2003 | msivigny

Hello davide, the biggest advantage you'll find with a complete N2 tunnel is the minimization of oxidation during board preheating. Using only an inerted solder pot allows the oxidation to build up throughout the preheat stages and introduces contami

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