Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 24 04:46:54 EDT 2009 | joannetjy
Hi Radek, Thanks for your reply. I use this flux with manual soldering process for the product. Is this flux suitable for manual soldering? or it is only for wave soldering? I have sent the board for analysis, and the report shown that the white res
Electronics Forum | Sun Aug 23 22:13:45 EDT 2009 | joannetjy
Hi All, Recently, I need to deal with a customer complaint that specify the PCBA white residue (flux residue from ecofree 303) may be the reason why the board intermittent. Anyone have such experience with this flux? Anyone can tell me is this flux
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 24 07:32:34 EDT 2009 | hurr
Hi Joane, this flux is primarily designed for wave soldering. I think that manual soldering it´s possible. Certainly it´s very hard to dispensing correct amount of the flux. Succinic acid is one from all ingredients of this flux. If you have this
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 24 03:59:26 EDT 2009 | hurr
Hallo Joanne, I had employed by producer of Ecofrec 303. We make many tests of corrosion and conductive test in our company. All results of this tests was OK . Vast majority correspond mil standarts. When I ask my labor assistent in BRY, white residu
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 24 06:12:31 EDT 2009 | ghepo
joanne please pay attention, each heavy no-clean flux residues not completely heated due to hand soldering becomes a moisture absorbing conductive pathway, causing electrical leakage. So I suggest you to clean well the board after hand soldering or
Electronics Forum | Wed May 10 11:03:04 EDT 2006 | Mike Konrad
I would be far more concerned about the flux residue intentionally left on the board than the �dust bunnies� sticking to the flux. In �perfect� no-clean applications, flux residue, although present, is nearly invisible and marginally conductive. In
Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 01 16:47:25 EDT 2020 | charliedci
The problem that we have seen applying NC flux (EF2210) at selective solder is that the flux overspray (relative to the nozzle path) did not see high enough temperature to activate the flux and turn it to a non-conductive, benign residue as one would
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 03 01:15:52 EDT 2020 | kylehunter
> The problem that we have seen applying NC flux > (EF2210) at selective solder is that the flux > overspray (relative to the nozzle path) did not > see high enough temperature to activate the flux > and turn it to a non-conductive
Electronics Forum | Mon Mar 23 16:28:14 EDT 2015 | aqueous
Dendritic growth is always a result of three combined factors: Conductive/corrosive residues Electrical current Moisture A wave solder process normally applies a higher volume of flux than a printed process. Flux however is not the only source. F
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 29 01:25:32 EST 2006 | yusuf
About one year we have that problem with some of pcbs. Our customers told us about that. Because they can't mounting components on those pcb reason of flux residue. As you know flux not conductive chemical. We didn't change anything before having tha