Electronics Forum: hard gold plating vs enig (Page 1 of 3)

soft gold vs immersion gold

Electronics Forum | Wed Aug 11 18:36:03 EDT 2004 | davef

90 Knoop. Q2: Thickness is 4 to 10 u" for Au and 300 to 400 u" for nickel A2: This looks like a ENIG spec. Although, the Ni is quite heavy, 150 uin is sufficient for most applications. [IPC-4552 ENIG specification: * Gold thickness of 0.075 - 0.125

Poor reflow over gold plating

Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 29 16:25:51 EDT 2005 | mattkehoe

When discussing this with the customer he said that his vendor recommended a hard gold plating finish on the board due to the BGA. I said "hard gold"??? And he said yes, hard gold. Turns out the boards were plated with hard gold, not ENIG. Thank

Why gold plating on PCB?

Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 28 11:02:06 EST 2020 | slthomas

I'm not 100% sure which type of gold you're asking about, but if you're talking about hard gold plating, I think the most common use is to provide a durable surface for things like membrane switch contacts because it resists abrasion and other mechan

soft gold vs immersion gold

Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 16 11:49:44 EDT 2004 | Kris

Hi Guys thanks for the replies. Dave, the spec is not for enig but for hard gold does your response alter if thats the case /

soft gold vs immersion gold

Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 16 16:37:08 EDT 2004 | davef

As we mentioned in an earlier response in this thread [Q5], you do NOT want to solder to hard gold. Hard gold is a wear surface. [That's IT, that's the LIST.] If you want to solder to gold, then either use: * IPC-4552 ENIG specification, mentioned

soft gold vs immersion gold

Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 16 13:18:46 EDT 2004 | davef

You bet our reponse changes. Q2R: Hard gold thickness is 4 to 10 u" for Au and 300 to 400 u" for nickel A2R: This is a hard gold spec?? It looks like a ENIG spec. Although, the Ni is quite heavy, 150 uin is sufficient for most applications. The gol

soft gold vs immersion gold

Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 12 14:50:12 EDT 2004 | russ

This is interesting, I was once told by a PCB supplier that "soft gold" was immersion and the "hard gold" was the plated. But I agree with Dave F., Chris, what's going on? Russ

ENIG vs Flash Gold

Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 24 18:07:25 EST 2006 | Chris

Flash gold is just thin gold plating over electroless nickel or electrolytic nickel. Flash gold is electrolytic gold where the panel is connected to a plating rectifier and current causes the plating process to occur. Gold thickness is controlled b

ENIG vs Flash Gold

Electronics Forum | Sat Mar 25 07:10:12 EST 2006 | davef

We agree with Chris. If your gold is applied properly and is the correct thickness, you will see no difference. One nit on Chris' comments: immersion gold will plate-out [self-limit] around 8 thou, although we've heard 12 thou.

ENIG vs Flash Gold

Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 20 13:42:23 EDT 2006 | fredericksr

I've seen embrittlement %s down to 3%, but a standard 5 mil solder pad would require well over 100uIn of plated gold to cause embrittlement. -Other Russ

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