Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 20 15:47:29 EDT 2000 | William
Bob, what alloy is leading the pack for sn-pb replacement. Will this alloy adapt itself to component leads? What circuit board finishes will we be dealing with?
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 20 16:04:22 EDT 2000 | Bob Willis
Tin/silver/copper is the alloy I have done most with and it would seem that it will be the alloy of choice if you look at the people doing the work. There are still some issues of fillet lifting which I have seen on PIHR soldering and the same in wav
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 16 10:51:09 EDT 2007 | patrickbruneel
D. Hillman, et al., �The Impact of Reflowing a Pb free Solder Alloy Using a Tin/Lead Solder Alloy Reflow Profile on Solder Joint Integrity,� International Conference on Lead-free Soldering, CMAP, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, May 24-26, 2005, http://www.
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 05 15:41:36 EDT 2006 | Mario Scalzo, SMT CPE
Good afternoon. From what it sounds like is that the solder joins are not getting hot enough or if it Au, then the increase in the Au content of the joint is increasing the melting point of the final solder joint. To some extent, this will also hap
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 22 09:30:31 EDT 2000 | Kelvin Chow
Mr. Lee, Although most of the lead free alloy used for solder paste and wave soldering have been identified, a suitable alloy used for leaded Ic packages (like QFP, PLCC..etc) have not been identified yet. Do you have any suggestion on this lead-f
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 22 11:09:15 EDT 2000 | Eugene Smelik
Dr. Lee, Following up on this thread, I have read that a Pd-Ni lead finish is one promising option, but that Ni-oxidation might be problem. Can you explain this more? Thanks, Gene Smelik Cookson Performance Solutions
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 22 11:23:40 EDT 2000 | Dr. Ning-Cheng Lee
Plating houses seem to exhibit various results. Unacceptable Ni oxidation levels appear to be related to poor Pd plating processes. Ni oxidation can occur at 3 process stages: 1) prior to the Pd being applied (Ni already oxidized) 2) during the p
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 22 11:03:45 EDT 2000 | Dr. Ning-Cheng Lee
Hi Kelvin, Regarding to the surface finish of the leads, Sn or Pd may be the direction that the industry takes. First of all, the answer must be "Pb-Free", limiting our choices. Sn has good solderability, and it won't have too great of an impact o
Electronics Forum | Mon Nov 14 10:10:52 EST 2005 | davef
When soldering your full tin (no lead) and Pb95/Sn5 solder components, you need to modify your PbSn reflow recipe to compensate for the higher melting point of the changed solder alloy [with your Sn62/Pb36/Ag2 solder paste] on those component leads.
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 31 12:33:14 EDT 2013 | pbarton
You should have no difficulty with QFN or QFP parts when using non-RoHS solder. The QFP's are most likely to have tin plated leads and the metallisation on the QFN lands the same, or ENIG. Check the component part datasheets to verify the plating an