Well, I think I have gotten enough information from the participants of this 3ad.
I plan to consult and look for the recommended products for the one that suits me best but if in the meantime there will be other future interventions in this 3ad, thank you in advance too.
I plan to consult and look for the recommended products for the one that suits me best but if in the meantime there will be other future interventions in this 3ad, thank you in advance too.
For sensitive circuits coatings may compromise the performance. On sensitive instruments like electrometers and 6 1/2 digit DVM they actually open the solder mask around the really sensitive areas because even that can degrade the insulation. On some instruments they use "air-wire" and Teflon inserts to isolate the sensitive nodes. Conformal coatings are usually reserved for instruments subjected to really challenging environments (shipboard, jungle etc.) and the circuits are all low impedance so they do not get compromised by the coatings. I have only seen coatings on a very few devices in the last 50 years, most of which were military.
I read that several are going OT as if protecting pcb circuits was a rare procedure or coming from Mars; in the past, on the other hand, it was normal to coat the PCBs on the side of the welds with a coating which, in the event of replacement of faulty components, allowed the new components to be soldered onto the pads without removing the coating.
There are countless examples that I can show, in these photos you can see the semi-gloss coating applied by the manufacturer.
Photo 1 Technics
Photo 2 Victor Jvc
Photo 3 Denon
There are countless examples that I can show, in these photos you can see the semi-gloss coating applied by the manufacturer.
Photo 1 Technics
Photo 2 Victor Jvc
Photo 3 Denon
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I've worked on (including de/resoldering) quite a bit of consumer electronics and the only place I've encountered such coatings was a HV supply for an electronic central air filter.
After a closely studying your excellent pics, I'm not seeing much of what you described. Sorry. 😕
Cheers
After a closely studying your excellent pics, I'm not seeing much of what you described. Sorry. 😕
Cheers
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Pitrus,
You are showing solder masking. This is done with a silkscreen that prints a solder mask to the circuit card. That way when wave soldering you do not get shorts. That is different than a conformal coating that is applied after soldering to protect the entire circuit card from corrosion.
I suspect just a language issue.
You are showing solder masking. This is done with a silkscreen that prints a solder mask to the circuit card. That way when wave soldering you do not get shorts. That is different than a conformal coating that is applied after soldering to protect the entire circuit card from corrosion.
I suspect just a language issue.
Conformal Coating covers so MANY different things that it is meaningless, except as "not naked". From thin shellac to heavy epoxy and some stranger things.conformal coating
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conformal_coating
I saw a mass production used that stuff for marine audio amplifiers."PLASTIK 70 is a low viscosity, solvent drying acrylic based conformal coating"
Here the Plastik spray smells like the bonding agent used for PVC pipes, which is acrylic or PVC in a solvent.
I mold plastics, so I can discern between most plastics just by the smell.
The commonly used material for solvent bonding acrylic is chloroform, again a familiar smell, which may also be mixed with aromatics like toluene.
Like mentioned above, this is not a regular factory process, but a special modification for harsh conditions like marine.
Come to think of it, not much seen in car audio either, which is a harsher environment than inside a home.
I mold plastics, so I can discern between most plastics just by the smell.
The commonly used material for solvent bonding acrylic is chloroform, again a familiar smell, which may also be mixed with aromatics like toluene.
Like mentioned above, this is not a regular factory process, but a special modification for harsh conditions like marine.
Come to think of it, not much seen in car audio either, which is a harsher environment than inside a home.
After a closely studying your excellent pics, I'm not seeing much of what you described. Sorry
I am not referring and I not would not confuse minds with the copper coating which is the "solder resist" of which I hope we are all aware of how it is called in technical terms but I am referring to the further transparent varnish applied as a final protective transparent by the manufacturer
I hope that the photos are more explanatory than many words, more than this I don't know what to do.
See the photos
Clear coating from the manufacturer before cleaning
Transparent coating removed after cleaning with appropriate solvents
Clear coating from the manufacturer before cleaning
Transparent coating removed after cleaning pcb with appropriate solvents
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