Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 24 10:23:36 EDT 2007 | ck_the_flip
Michelle, Traditionally, the adhesive side is always run first since most designers put passives (resistors, caps) on the adhesive (solder side) of the board. I worked in an environment where we did the adhesive side first, sometimes the boards "sa
Electronics Forum | Mon Jun 11 22:06:00 EDT 2001 | davef
The issue is not the cleanliness of your in-bound water. The issue is the cleanliness of the board your customer receives. Look at J-STD-001C, Para 8, "Cleanliness Requirements". The end product cleanliness is the end result of your: * In-bound
Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 04 19:34:27 EST 2003 | gregoryyork
Blimey that's a problem and a half. Water Solubles will look completely different residue wise than No Cleans, pending age and solids contents No Cleans will go white powdery - watersolubles will stay oily Alternatively process reworked PCB's through
Electronics Forum | Mon Jun 12 22:02:48 EDT 2000 | Dave F
Jason: Wave soldering is the coolest thing!!!! First, so, what�s the chemical analysis of this white res? Can you point us to either tin, rosin, or something else? Second, how do you know that you are making these white residues? Could your boar
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 13 22:22:14 EDT 1998 | mike
| All Y'll | | How do you clean components that must be added to an assembled board after water wash? | | BACKGROUND | | Our basic process goes like this: | | 1 Print paste with OA flux, place, reflow, wash | 2 Repeat 1 | 3 Insert PTH, OA flux
Electronics Forum | Sun May 30 18:52:35 EDT 1999 | Graham Naisbitt
| | | | | | I have always thought it to be a good practice to wash SMA's with water soluble paste (WS609) soon after reflow. Is there a time limit as to how long a board should sit after reflow before washing said board? For instance; processing a
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 13 20:57:14 EDT 2004 | Mike Konrad
Hey Dreamy, Dave is correct. If you attempt to clean your water soluble (OA) flux with water only, you will turn the no-clean flux white. No inspector or end-user will accept this. If a proper cleaning system is not available to you, then I would
Electronics Forum | Mon Nov 22 17:32:34 EST 2004 | davef
Assemblers often assume that the board and component suppliers provide them with clean product. This was not a problem when everyone used water washable fluxes, because the water washing used to clean the flux residues also cleaned the board and com
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 28 11:17:19 EST 2006 | smartasp
Thanks for the input Guys Yeah the not so knowledgable customer does not like to residues for cosmetic resons. The flux is for lead free process, of the no clean and water soluable type. We have explained to him that technically the residues do not
Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 06 14:05:32 EDT 2007 | grics
Good afternoon... I am pretty new to a lot of things in the electronics manufacturing realm and could use some help on some issues from the big guys... Our company is a contract manufacturer for many customers. We use multiple paste and flux types