Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 05 17:22:14 EDT 2004 | davef
Frank Zomber Ren� advised "Chomerics T405" above in this thread http://www.smtnet.com/Forums/Index.cfm?CFApp=1&Message_ID=27744 Searching the fine SMTnet Archives will give contacts, like: http://www.smtnet.com//forums/index.cfm?fuseaction=view_t
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 25 13:31:42 EST 2004 | Ren�
Hi Daniele: In a design of experiments with four methods for attaching thermocouples : High Temperature Solder, Aluminum Tape (Chomerics T405), Kapton Tape and Conductive Epoxy (Loctite Tak Pak 382. The most reliable method is high temperature solde
Electronics Forum | Sat May 08 13:56:27 EDT 2004 | Ken
If this is a requrement from your customer then: They should supply the name/brand of the material, AND they must supply solder samples because their requiremnt is a destructive profiling technique. You should charge them more dollars for setup and
Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 24 15:48:33 EST 2004 | davef
KIC Thermal Profiling did a DOE [Nepcon West 1999] [you probably can find it posted on their site] on thermocouple attach. Comparing the reliability and repeatability of thermocouple attachment methods: * High temperature solder was found to be the
Electronics Forum | Mon May 10 09:30:35 EDT 2004 | davef
Q1: What are the basic requirements of thermal profiling? A1: Not sure what you�re looking for here, but when doing a profile, you�re trying to measure the temperature at specific points of the board, as the board moves through the oven. Q2: How we
Electronics Forum | Fri Apr 30 08:28:39 EDT 2004 | davef
Roger Saunders, President Saunders Technology, Inc wrote a fairly unbiased paper that compared different thermocouple attach methods. You can probably find it on their site. In it, about gluing thermocouples, he says: There are two general classes