Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 05 12:06:12 EST 2006 | Rob
It wasn't corroding the stencil, it was corroding the cleaning fluid system.
Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 17 08:38:21 EDT 2006 | pjc
Any materials that come in contact with the flux should be made from stainless steel, titanium, or plastics. These materials will not corrode from OA fluxes. Overspray is an issue. I think Pillerhouse has that jet fluxer, so I don�t think there is mu
Electronics Forum | Fri Jul 18 11:05:07 EDT 2003 | davef
A highly activated flux will begin to corrode the imm tin coating after 10 minutes. Corroded tin has poor solderability.
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 04 22:09:57 EST 2016 | a290668789
It's amazing. I rarely saw that ENIG finish could be corroded. It should be the Nickel corroded issue and then affected the solderability. Not clear how to clear this, if you get the answer, let me know. good luck
Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 16 09:25:26 EDT 2009 | clampron
Are you using a SAC305 or high tin alloy? That will corrode the solder tip as well. Chris
Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 16 09:58:23 EDT 2009 | geb
Its SAC305 paste. Will that corrode the tip or the tin alloy?
Electronics Forum | Sun Sep 09 08:38:14 EDT 2018 | devinpcb
I have found the paste flux is the worst. It leaves a black residue that can corrode.
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 27 13:28:11 EST 1999 | Brian W.
Depending on the components you are seeing this on, one thing to check would be the solderability of the parts. Sometimes you will find the plating leeches away, and this is a component plating issue. When you solder, the plating actually leeches a
Electronics Forum | Sun May 02 16:57:09 EDT 2004 | davef
You're correct. We prefer to probe solder, rather than copper, because the solder absorbs the impact of the probe better than copper and so, helps preserve the life of the probe. Beyond that, OSP has a limited "shelf life". If the OSP is not coate
Electronics Forum | Tue Feb 22 09:01:50 EST 2005 | davef
It could be that you're starting with hyper corroded nickel, before you even begin work. With electroless nickel, everybody looks at the nickel, but the cause turns out to be the immersion gold is too aggressive [during fabrication]. Immersion gold