Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 01 18:16:51 EDT 2016 | sarason
I found this rather interesting article on the science of Tin Whisker mitigation. http://iconnect007.uberflip.com/i/721932-smt-sept2016/36 sarason
Electronics Forum | Wed Nov 09 11:01:35 EST 2011 | blnorman
This application is military, which requires a minimum of 3% Pb on the terminations, or mulitple mitigations for tin whisker prevention.
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 23 16:28:36 EDT 2007 | patrickbruneel
Chris, WEEE is great but RoHS doesn�t make since, here�s a couple of threads covering similar issues. http://www.smtnet.com//forums/index.cfm?fuseaction=view_thread&CFApp=1&Thread_ID=10341Message41486 http://www.smtnet.com//forums/index.cfm?fuse
Electronics Forum | Mon Dec 12 09:39:39 EST 2005 | Amol Kane
thank you devef....My point is this....If you solder all the areas that have Imm Sn on them, there wont be any whisker formation DUE TO THE IMM TIN COATING.....whiskers could still potentially form as a result of COMPONENT FINISHES and effective miti
Electronics Forum | Fri Aug 29 10:23:30 EDT 2008 | vladig
Everyone has been playing a guess game so far :-) but we don't even know what the lead finish is:-) Even old (Sn-Pb finish) days, the ammount of Pb in the plating would be on a single digit level (just to mitigate Sn-whiskers growth), meaning that th
Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 16 16:03:43 EDT 2008 | vladig
Well, typical content of Pb in Sn/Pb polating is a few percent (just to mitigate Sn whiskers growth). Therefore, the lead finished with SAC305 won't be much different from those finished with Sn/Pb. You can make one or two cross-sections for sanity c
Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 06 10:40:49 EST 2007 | patrickbruneel
Darby, To my knowledge no case of RoHS (lead) violation has ever gone to court in the EU. The only documented RoHS (lead) violation (again that I�m aware of) has been settled out of court in the UK. Check here: http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/s
Electronics Forum | Tue Sep 26 14:06:33 EDT 2006 | patrickbruneel
Jun 26, 2006 (See Comments Below) Editorial Managing the Naughty Child Mike Martel, Editor, Circuitnet I've been listening to voices on both sides of the RoHS issue and the more I hear, the more foreboding the tone becomes. Despite what some wr
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 25 13:42:35 EST 2010 | patrickbruneel
This is a post from another forum as a response from Bob Landman to a claim that he had no evidence to be concerned about lead-free in hirel applications (interesting read). See below and am sure many technetters will find this interesting **********
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 31 17:34:37 EDT 2013 | hegemon
Keep in mind that you may need to assure that there are no pure tin finishes remaining on your parts. A general idea is that parts with pure tin (RoHs) finish will need to be plated with tin-lead solder to avoid the possibility of tin whiskers formi