Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 04 10:59:04 EST 2019 | dwl
The solder looks a little grainy for Sn/Pb solder but that might just be the picture quality. There appears to be plenty of solder on the pads, so I'd rule out anything to do with the stencil. One possibility that springs to mind; how long is your
Electronics Forum | Tue Dec 03 18:51:57 EST 2019 | kylehunter
Hi all, We are having a confusing defect with one of our client's boards. It is a large board, 30" x 12". The client supplies the LEDs, they are cheap overseas diodes, and it is not uncommon to have reels with the packaging torn. We have w
Electronics Forum | Thu Nov 14 10:03:40 EST 2002 | davef
Doug, Ooooooooo. You're correct Vinny has to be talking about Rogers teflon boards. Vinny, There are many different types of PTFE based products. Generally speaking, PTFE has a melting point of 620degF and withstands solder reflow and HASL proce
Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 26 12:41:53 EST 2019 | emeto
We agree with your statements. 1. Having manually printed board will compromise your print and you don't know how much paste you have on each pad. 2. LEDs falling off that easily might be related to contamination, considering that your profile is not
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 21 08:55:35 EDT 2003 | russ
The pads you use for Reflow will be be fine for handsolder. Russ
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 22 05:38:56 EDT 2003 | mk
This sounds like a job for ssd. No pad shapes to worry about. Look into http://www.sipad.net and please contact me off line to discuss it. Matt Kehoe mkehoe@sipad.net
Electronics Forum | Sat Apr 19 12:00:07 EDT 2003 | modeltech
I am completely new to SMT design and for my next project I plan to use SMT for the first time. Since production volumes of the PCB's will be low, hand soldering is definitely an option, and will be necessary for my prototype PCB assembly. My proble
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 21 21:46:04 EDT 2003 | davef
We agree with Russ.
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 19 11:52:34 EST 2000 | Dave F
PC and Erico: Are yinns talking: 1 A component that will not lie flat on the board? 2 A component that will lie flat to the board that you can't get to solder to the pad? 3 A pad that is no longer attached to the board? 4 Something else. Whazit?
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 13 12:06:53 EDT 2009 | jefflkupkt
BoardHouse, Thanks for the reply. The board supplier did cover the cost of the bare boards. Five years ago I saw a different part pass ET only to fail at final assembly test as well. One engineer called it "acid trap" on the inner layers where the