Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 12 17:09:11 EDT 2007 | allwave
HI John, I use wave fixtures with titanium inserts. So far I have not seen any problem with walls about 0.010" thickness and 0.120" tall (or deep depending how you see it)...The Titanium-composite interface is also very strong (as long as you have e
Electronics Forum | Thu Nov 15 12:11:40 EST 2007 | George
I use Pentagon EMS (503) 924-2747 with Chad Haima. Note: I do not get a penny for referals. I just like the service, super fast, high quality and excellent customer service. I have worked with them for about 4 years. Thanks, George
Electronics Forum | Tue May 16 15:30:07 EDT 2006 | George
Hi John, Are you talking about cleaning the pallets after running to store them? or during production? well in any case...I recently started to use this cleaning solution "Cybersolv" from Kyzen. It is water soluble and also can be used instead of IP
Electronics Forum | Thu Jul 06 12:52:35 EDT 2006 | samir
..and he can put the flux in and keep it a secret too from his customer.. RSS profile on wave?? I never heard of a soak zone for wave preheat...you may be burning off your activator..hence, the beads. For wave preheat, your main goal is to ramp up
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 17 13:58:54 EST 2007 | ck_the_flip
I made my own wave measuring device using KIC2000 system. KIC2000 has automatic wave detection, so now I have a profiler for both reflow ovens and wave solder. The delmat carrier only cost $500. A guy, Samir, from this forum gave me the idea, actu
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 10 09:25:47 EDT 2006 | nodlac
Here is a nugget from the Data Sheet... Wave Soldering: Excess moisture on the PCB during soldering may lead to random solder balling and poor wetting of some solder joints. IT IS IMPORTANT that the flux solvent carrier (water) is fully evaporated a
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 05 10:13:02 EDT 2006 | jdengler
Is the flux rated for lead free? These higher temps will cause most lead rated fluxes to burn off prior to the wave. Jerry
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 05 13:30:37 EDT 2006 | Chris Griffin
Likely causes of this are: -Preheat temp. too low -too much dross -uncured epoxy -PCB contamination ...also varify the solder flow over the wave is smooth.
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 17 14:16:44 EST 2007 | realchunks
This is funny. Poeple giving answers to a question that isn't specific. What if the shorts he is having are on the top of his board, caused by flooding or Omega wave too high?
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 17 12:06:58 EST 2007 | pjc
5 Steps to Eliminate Bridges: 1. Establish (wave) Parallelism First and foremost, you must establish board-to-wave parallelism. This is the prerequisite to any wave solder process control. For an understanding of the power of this approach go to ht