Electronics Forum | Fri Apr 28 09:51:10 EDT 2000 | Erik
I'm looking for an adhesive to attach a metal can to the PCB to stop it from vibrating. The temperature spec is -50C(-58F) to 85C(62.8F). Thanks for the help Erik
Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 17 12:50:31 EST 2006 | Cmiller
DaveF, would the adhesive be strong enough to keep the part from vibrating free over time? DO you know any part numbers? These inductors have quite a high mass. I would profer to lay them down on thier side but there is not enough room.
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 31 20:42:54 EST 2005 | davef
We don't think chip mount adhesives have very good sheer strength. If there's any flex induced during vibration, we doubt them to be a good choice.
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 23 11:49:46 EDT 2007 | ck_the_flip
Wow, you're using the Surface Mount Adhesive for mechanical vibration? I've never heard of SMT adhesive being used for things other than holding the components in place before wave solder. Does it work for mechanical purposes? Glue/Wave is a proce
Electronics Forum | Wed Oct 04 00:47:57 EDT 2017 | silversurfer11
Hello, I am experiencing a high pitched noise coming from a computer component and I think it might be the 18 inductors they have placed on the PCB as part of the VRM. I am think of using a 2 part Thermal Conductive Adhesive and fix all the inducto
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 27 15:03:40 EDT 2001 | davef
Essentially, you want to ruggedize this component. Various adhesives could work great, depending on the source of the energy that is causing the solder connection fatigue. So, what are your looking to: * Rigidly bond the component to the board? * A
Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 14 11:25:02 EDT 2008 | hegemon
ol' hege has got to agree with Chunks and Dave. Seems every time there is a problem, the finger is first pointed at the process. For my $.02 it doesn't matter if your process is 100% bulletproof, procurement will screw it up by finding a vendor that
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 14 17:07:46 EST 2009 | davef
In BIG-boy, high vibration applications to secure large components, we've used 3M #2214 structural adhesive [One part, 250*F (121*C) curing 100% solids, paste consistency epoxy adhesives designed for bonding metals and many high temperature plastics
Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 10 21:41:54 EST 2010 | plaiming
We experiences some failures on PCB assemblies from the field when a methacrylate epoxy adhesive was used to secure some through-hole components to pcb board as reinforcement against vibration. During application, the epoxy covered some smaller SMT c
Electronics Forum | Thu Jun 22 16:48:17 EDT 2000 | MikeF
Most RTV's depend on atmospheric moisture to cure. You can put them in an oven with a pan of water and that will speed up the cure. I'd suggest about 150 to 180 degree F, time period to depend on the thickness of the RTV. You'll have to do some tests