Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 07 04:34:19 EDT 2005 | Lloyd
This problem exists at a very low level but happens on all our discrete components, all our products and in two plants. Between the PCB land and the component termination there is a barrier of flux residue, this actually lifts the component slightly
Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 05 17:37:56 EDT 2001 | seand
Hello Jeff, If you have components on your board be careful of how low the frequency is that you will be applying to your board. Ultrasonics are great for cleaning stencils and bare boards at around 40kHz. These frequencies (and Lower)may however
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 15 18:59:12 EDT 2002 | davef
Points are: * Seminal study is: "Evaluation of Low Residue Soldering for Military and Commercial Applications: A Report from the Low Residue Soldering Task Force," published by Sandia National Labs in June 1995. Look here http://www.smtnet.com/forums
Electronics Forum | Sun Jan 26 09:32:55 EST 2003 | davef
But soon after cleaning and drying with IPA, we find a white residue formation. A: IPA will not nothing to clean your board. The white residue is exactly what you should expect. Search the fine SMTnet Archives for background. >How do we avoid th
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 30 12:08:09 EDT 2005 | slthomas
The answer for us at my previous employer was water soluble flux. Wash the board, no residue. If you're not set up to wash (needing a washer, DI water source, waste treatment, ventilation, etc.) it can be expensive and space consuming. Do some resea
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 27 12:42:36 EST 2019 | rgduval
In your video, it looks to me as though the bottom of the glass is too low, but, I can't tell for certain. As a general rule, keep the top of the wave no higher than the mid-point of the PCB. Top flow will take care of itself thanks to flux and cap
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 27 17:40:55 EST 2019 | rgduval
Using no-clean flux will make the boards very difficult to clean. If you can switch to water soluble flux, your life will be much easier. The "icicles" lead me to think that the board isn't getting hot enough in the pre-heat cycle, and/or there isn
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 06 10:04:29 EDT 2003 | davef
Excess low residue flux is very dangerous to leave on your finished assembly, because it can: * Be corrosive to your solder connections * Promote dendrite growth. To prevent this, follow your supplier's recommendations on: * Applying the proper amou
Electronics Forum | Fri Nov 03 09:41:17 EDT 2017 | davef
On your question about reliability ... " Is there testing we can do (environmental stress chambers) with which we can see the long-term effects of flux residue on solder joints?" Sure, incompletely activated low residue flux residues are potentially
Electronics Forum | Thu Nov 11 17:17:11 EST 1999 | Boca
1. Most ionic testing is measured in NaCl, that is, the ionic residues are quantified in terms of NaCl equivalence. The test does not determine what the ionic residue is, just its relative strengh. 2. I use IPC cleanliness specs on OA fluxes but n