New Equipment | Solder Materials
Bars / Solid Wires Proposal Pro Contra Wave and selective soldering SN100C® Favourable price
New Equipment | Solder Materials
SN100C is a lead-free solder alloy developed by Nihon Superior in Japan that is comprised of tin-copper-nickel + germanium. SN100C offers user-friendly properties and has been proven in commercial production since 1999. The result of these advantages
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 03 12:04:39 EDT 2009 | davef
Loco: Your post seems to be pasted from a Alpha Metals SACX0807 application sheet. We don't understand the relationship between your SACX0807 and Hoss67 SN100C. They're different alloys.
Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 06 05:57:10 EDT 2009 | lococost
Indeed Dave, But I can't image the extra .5% silver that alpha adds to sn100c will make a huge impact on the difference between the behaviour of the 2 alloys, especially considering SAC gets exactly the same recommendation.
Industry News | 2009-12-07 17:57:03.0
BALVE, GERMANY — November 2009 — The BALVER ZINN Group, a leading provider of high-quality anodes with various alloy, as well as soft solders and special wires, announces it will demonstrate the brand new variant of their unique lead-free solder Balver Zinn SN100C™, in the form of SN100CS™ Solder in Hall A4, Stand 570 of the upcoming Productronica exhibition - scheduled to take place 10th – 13th November 2009 at the New Munich Trade Fair Center in Munich, Germany.
Industry News | 2009-11-02 21:58:24.0
OSAKA, JAPAN — November 2009 — Nihon Superior Co. Ltd., a supplier of advanced soldering materials to the global electronics industry announces that it will display a full range of products based on its unique lead-free solder SN100C in its booth at the SMTA Southeast Asia Technical Conference on Electronics Assembly Technologies at the Equatorial Hotel in Penang, Malaysia, November 18-20, 2009.
| https://www.eptac.com/faqs/ask-helena-leo/ask/solder-selection-for-printed-circuit-boards-and-terminals
. The alloys of SAC 305 and Sn100C will work together so mixing of those two should not be a problem. The concern, however; is the flux and can it be removed after the replacement of the component