Electronics Forum | Mon May 24 19:24:35 EDT 2010 | jry74
We bake all of our boards at 220 degrees F for two hours. This bakes out all the moisture. Blow off the parts prior to placing in the oven.
Electronics Forum | Tue May 04 09:45:05 EDT 2010 | dyoungquist
Only use the shop air if it is clean and dry. I know from experience that one can get water and a little oil from the compressor in the air lines. We are in a drier climate with humidity levels in the 25%-35% range on average. All we do is let the
Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 09 19:17:56 EDT 2002 | dragonslayr
steve- once again I mention that the lead that is actually in the water is in solution i.e. the lead is in a molecular form that has attached to a H2O molecule. To have a minimum of lead that is below the regulated ppm, there cannot be any chunks,
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 27 11:08:24 EDT 2002 | slthomas
We use an evaporator, so that we only have a sludge of flux residue and solder metal to dispose of via the hazmat handling service. We also route stencil washer waste water into it. We use a 30 gallon drum and have it hauled off maybe twice a year,
Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 03 14:34:39 EDT 2002 | dragonslayr
All valuable insights are provided by the other posters to this thread. I'd like to add a bit more, if I may. Being environmental friendly is a must. I would not advocate dumping toxic metals to the sewer. In a past worklife, a steel mill, I was r
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 16 18:10:50 EDT 2003 | Gabriele
Before entering the cleaner, the board should reach almost temperature of first pre-wash module (are you using DI water washing machine?), if water cleaner, normally the temp of prewash spry is set from 45 C� to 55 C�. (or it could be 10�C higher, bu
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 16 18:11:19 EDT 2003 | Gabriele
Before entering the cleaner, the board should reach almost temperature of first pre-wash module (are you using DI water washing machine?), if water cleaner, normally the temp of prewash spry is set from 45 C� to 55 C�. (or it could be 10�C higher, bu
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 30 20:32:37 EDT 2010 | davef
So let's see, Cost of Ownership = [[Equipment cost + Setup]+[Operating costs]] / [Yield*Throughput*Utilization], where 'Operating costs' include: chemicals, water, electricity, DI tanks, filters, recycling costs, etc.
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 31 18:34:32 EDT 2010 | aqueous
If the batch cleaner is truly closed loop, then 100% of all of the process fluid (water) is captured, filtered (particulate, carbon, resin) and reused. This answer is based on a traditional closed-loop batch cleaning system with an integrated water
Electronics Forum | Wed Feb 26 13:15:52 EST 2003 | Mike Konrad
The specific answer depends on what your specific application includes. #1: What are you removing? (solder paste, adhesives) #2: What are you cleaning? (stencils, screens, misprints, pallets) #3: What type of machine are you using? (Spray-in