Electronics Forum | Mon Mar 17 18:37:59 EDT 2008 | aqueous
We manufacture both bulk and localized ionic contamination testers. My answer is from the perspective of the cleanliness testing method. The issue with all bulk ionic contamination testers (Ionagraph, Omegameter, Zero-Ion), is that they test the en
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 27 13:50:52 EDT 1999 | Mike Konrad
Aqueous Technologies manufactures the Zero-Ion ionic contamination tester. The Zero-Ion utilizes dynamic-based technology and has been assigned the highest equivalency value by the NAWC. It is among the most sensitive of all of the military-approved
Electronics Forum | Sat Jun 25 19:35:31 EDT 2005 | Mike Konrad
The Kenco ionic contamination tester (Zero-Ion) is now manufactured and supported by Aqueous Technologies. www.aqueoustech.com service@aqueoustech.com (909) 944-7771 Mike Konrad
Electronics Forum | Wed May 11 14:02:53 EDT 2011 | pct1410
I am looking for a used Aqueous Technologies' Zero-Ion Ionic Contamination Tester. If anyone has a used one for sale please contact me! Thank you
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 27 07:09:37 EDT 2015 | prameel_84
Hi Everyone, I got an approval to buy a Ionic Contamination Tester in my company, hence i require expert advise to proceed further for machine procurement At present I've fixed for Zero-Ion G3 Ionic Contamination of Aqueous Technologies and SMD V T
Electronics Forum | Thu May 14 19:05:02 EDT 1998 | Mike Konrad
Dave, Ionic contamination testers are considered to be a valuable tool to determine the cleanliness of both bare boards and post solder boards. There are some instances when SIR testing is more suitable for determining cleanliness than ionic contamin
Electronics Forum | Thu May 15 13:13:16 EDT 2008 | arminski
thanks a lot sir davef. which is better between the two, static or dynamic? localized testing (C3) or bulk testing (Omegameter/Zero Ion)? do I really have to purchase this unit despite having an aqueous cleaner? thanks again...
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 11 15:06:39 EDT 1999 | Dave F
| | Thank you all for your replies. I guess my age in this industry is showing. This military spec. does not appear to be in existance. So, let me make my request a little more to the point: | | | | Is anyone aware of a specification specifically
Electronics Forum | Fri Aug 14 10:26:55 EDT 1998 | Mike Konrad
5 micrograms per sq. cm. is actually not too clean. The maximum military allowed post-clean, on-board contamination is 5.7 micrograms of NaCl /cm squared (when using the Zero-Ion brand ionic contamination tester). We are use to seeing cleanliness re
Electronics Forum | Thu May 15 19:36:56 EDT 2008 | davef
Q1: static or dynamic? A1: search the fine SMTnet Archives. For instance, http://www.smtnet.com/forums/Index.cfm?CFApp=1&Message_ID=44837 Q2: localized testing (C3) or bulk testing (Omegameter/Zero Ion)? A2: depends on the contamination that you're