Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 17 21:32:14 EST 2007 | Jnet
Agree. Drop the conveyor speed.....and drop the zone temps accordingly. This should allow the board leads and components heat at a more even rate and stop the over temp. issues. I do not suggest running only the bottom heaters this can bring new issu
Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 18 05:28:36 EST 2007 | pavel_murtishev
Good afternoon, Profile your oven. Try to increase soak zone as much as possible. This must equalize temperature across the board and leads to prevent wicking. �Spike� as slow as possible after long soak. Do you use tooling for this PWB in productio
Electronics Forum | Fri Jan 19 02:03:09 EST 2007 | lococost
As a sidenote, if nothing of the above works, IPC 610 states that it is accetable (class 1,2,3) for solder to touch a SOT body if it is plastic.
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 03 13:04:52 EST 2007 | smtspecialist
Hi! Does anyone out there has a spare solder pot for sale for an electrovert minipak 300?
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 08 15:33:07 EST 2007 | jsloot
We may still have one in storage. I will check for you.
Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 18 07:13:28 EST 2007 | smtspecialist
Thanks for the offer but the one I have is working well now that I got a brand new bath made and I don't need a second Minipak. Thanks again!
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 03 15:11:09 EST 2007 | kennyg
Is it acceptable to apply an acrylic conformal coat, cure and then apply a silicone RTV on top (for staking tall components)? Should there be a concern with the bond between the acrylic and the RTV?
Electronics Forum | Wed Jan 03 15:57:38 EST 2007 | realchunks
Is there a seperate guideline for Pin In Paste process in IPC? I have IPC610 year 2000 rev C (I know rev D is out). Or do most people use the thruough hole part of the Guideline as their criteria?
Electronics Forum | Thu Jan 04 08:19:57 EST 2007 | realchunks
Dave, I assume you mean "IPC", unless there's a new type of rubbing alcohol I could use... hmmmmmmm....... Thanks Loco, like I stated earlier, I have rev C. Well, looks like I need to buy rev D then.
Electronics Forum | Mon Jan 08 10:41:50 EST 2007 | jaime39
If you bake the boards at 125 degrees celcius for about 4 hours it should work. I would also suggest that you talk to the PCB supplier to take care of this baking for you. NOTE: PCB�s with an Entek or any other type of OSP finish should not be baked.