Electronics Forum: ion 37 (Page 1 of 2)

Re: Mil-P-28809

Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 11 12:27:48 EDT 1999 | Mike Demos

Thank you all for your replies. I guess my age in this industry is showing. This military spec. does not appear to be in existance. So, let me make my request a little more to the point: Is anyone aware of a specification specifically referencing

Re: Mil-P-28809

Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 11 13:22:04 EDT 1999 | Dave F

| Thank you all for your replies. I guess my age in this industry is showing. This military spec. does not appear to be in existance. So, let me make my request a little more to the point: | | Is anyone aware of a specification specifically refer

Re: Mil-P-28809

Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 11 15:06:39 EDT 1999 | Dave F

| | Thank you all for your replies. I guess my age in this industry is showing. This military spec. does not appear to be in existance. So, let me make my request a little more to the point: | | | | Is anyone aware of a specification specifically

Water Quality Requirements to wash boards

Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 18 17:29:00 EDT 2002 | dason_c

The industrial standard is follow the R.O.S.E test as a guideline per J-STD-001 and the limit is 10ug/sq. inch. Different tester with different equivalent factor with the ROSE and you can refer back to the manual, the Zero Ion tester with equivalent

Water Quality Requirements to wash boards

Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 18 17:00:05 EDT 2002 | JamesL

We do cleanliness testing each morning using a Zero Ion tester. Our pass/fail number is set at 37ug/square inch NaCl. We are rarely above 10ug/square inch NaCl. We use Aqueous flux. Our inline washer has a prewash (70psi@130 degrees F), wash (?psi),

IONIC CLEANLINESS SPEC FOR BARE PWBs

Electronics Forum | Sun May 09 16:25:00 EDT 2004 | gabriele

Military and most commercial standards requires > post-soldered boards to measure less than 10 > �g/in of NaCl (14 when using an Omegameter, 20 > on a Ionagraph, and 37 on a Zero-Ion). > > As Dave > stated, 6.5 �g/in of NaCl is called out in >

Corrosion

Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 07 14:23:37 EDT 2003 | Adam

The Omegameter (or Ionograph) detect contamination by measuring the conductivity of the solution used to extract the board. This conductivity number reflects the sum of all of the ionics in the extraction solution. Unfortunately, we can't sort out th

Re: Mil-P-28809

Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 12 05:46:12 EDT 1999 | Brian

| Thank you all for your replies. I guess my age in this industry is showing. This military spec. does not appear to be in existance. So, let me make my request a little more to the point: | | Is anyone aware of a specification specifically refer

how clean is clean?

Electronics Forum | Fri May 27 11:55:37 EDT 2005 | Sarag

There is also a new cleanliness tester that looks at localized areas to provide a cleanliness reading and can extract a sample to use in ion chromatography testing. You can find out about it here: http://www.residues.com/C3.html

IONIC CLEANLINESS SPEC FOR BARE PWBs

Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 06 12:24:03 EST 2002 | Mike Konrad

Military and most commercial standards requires post-soldered boards to measure less than 10 �g/in of NaCl (14 when using an Omegameter, 20 on a Ionagraph, and 37 on a Zero-Ion). As Dave stated, 6.5 �g/in of NaCl is called out in Mil-P-55110 for ba

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