Electronics Forum: ion (Page 2 of 22)

Cleanliness tester Aqueous Zero-Ion G3

Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 12 15:56:25 EDT 2012 | dboudrea

Does anyone have the cleanliness tester Zero-Ion G3 from Aqueous. What are the pros and cons? Any feedback on this machine would be really appreciated. Thanks

Re: Mil-P-28809

Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 11 12:27:48 EDT 1999 | Mike Demos

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 referencing

Re: ionograph testing

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

Corrosion

Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 07 14:23:37 EDT 2003 | Adam

The Omegameter (or Ionograph) detect contamination by measuring the conductivity of the solution used to extract the board. This conductivity number reflects the sum of all of the ionics in the extraction solution. Unfortunately, we can't sort out th

Tarnished surface upon cleaning with DI water + saponifier

Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 13 13:27:22 EST 2004 | blnorman

So Deionized water has high ion concentrations, never knew that.

Ion exchanger

Electronics Forum | Sun Sep 05 14:47:58 EDT 2004 | Irun

What do you think to use distilled water to rinsing? Irun

Necessity of ROSE in commercial quality processes

Electronics Forum | Sun Feb 26 21:48:28 EST 2006 | Mike Konrad

Hi GS, Just a clarification� No-clean does NOT equal no ions. It equals less ions (at best). Automatic R.O.S.E (Resistivity Of Solvent Extract) testers are commonly used to detect ionic contamination from no-clean applications. Your comment rega

Board Cleanliness Monitoring

Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 15 21:15:22 EST 2005 | davef

A fairly painless method for monitoring cleanliness is Resistivity Of Solvent Extract [ROSE]. Equipment is: * Omegameter * Ionograph * Ion Chaser [Zero-Ion] Anyone who desires to use an Resistivity Of Solvent Extract tester should read EMPF repor

wash

Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 10 09:28:54 EST 2006 | stepheniii

Water is known as the universal solvent for a reason. Not because it's a powerfull solvent but because it has hydrogen bonding and is bi-polar. I think it's the polar nature of H20 that makes it disolve ions. D.I. water will pick up ions where it c

SIR Testing

Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 04 09:38:50 EDT 2006 | Mustang

Thanks for your fast respond Dave & Slaine. It was much appreciated. Dave, I'm not familiar with the ion Chromatograph testing i.e. how different it is versus SIR, but you could be right. May be they have mistaken this. Let me try to search for som


ion searches for Companies, Equipment, Machines, Suppliers & Information