[volt-nuts] volt-nuts Digest, Vol 7, Issue 9

J. Forster jfor at quik.com
Wed Mar 17 20:19:52 UTC 2010


The epoxy I use for repais on circuit boards is completely clear two-part 
without any fillers from HySol. Do not use the 5 minute setting stuff
either. You want something that takes several hours to set up. That's much
better stuff.

-John

==============



[snip] I wouldn't be sure
> that using the automotive epoxy would be a good idea...
>
> Dick Moore
>
>
> On Mar 17, 2010, at 5:00 AM, volt-nuts-request at febo.com wrote:
>
>>
>> Message: 6
>> Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2010 11:20:37 -0000
>> From: "Alan Scrimgeour" <scrimgap at blueyonder.co.uk>
>> Subject: Re: [volt-nuts] Keithley 2001 Multimeter Fault - Update
>> To: <jfor at quik.com>,	"Discussion of precise voltage measurement"
>> 	<volt-nuts at febo.com>
>> Message-ID: <AE27F40615CE4CA08494C3AD153F4414 at AlanPC>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
>> 	reply-type=original
>>
>> Perhaps only the copper was 'etched', but I can imagine even epoxy being
>> attacked by hot electrolysis taking place right next to it. Electrolysis
>> could produce some very active compounds, depending on the electrolyte
>> (and,
>> I'm not sure, but in such close proximity to the electrodes there may
>> also
>> be some extremely reactive short lived species, or is that just
>> Sci-Fi?).
>> But by some mechanism the upper layer of glass fiber in the board was
>> visible before I started digging it away.
>>
>> The excavation is progressing with care. In the centre the damage has
>> gone
>> right through the board to virtually the other side. Presumably air
>> cooling
>> stopped or slowed the progress of the damage actually through the very
>> last
>> layers of the board.  It appears that once the hot electrolysis had
>> begun to
>> damage the pcb it carbonised and in that conductive state, drew current
>> and
>> generated yet more heat leading to a chain reaction in the form of a
>> growing
>> carbonised region.
>>
>> I've just had to cut a wide buried copper track in order to be able to
>> remove the carbonised pcb beneath it, which is disconcerting, but it
>> will
>> just need soldering, or replacing with a piece of wire. I'm more worried
>> about what to use as a 'filling' in this cavity. I said I'd use epoxy
>> resin,
>> but the usual stuff is damaged by soldering temperatures. I have some
>> 'Auto
>> Weld' which says it's resistant to a constant 300C and should do. Once I
>> fill that hole back I'll never get it out again, so I'd better fix it
>> properly!
>> I'd like to add that I'm feeling pretty angry about those electrolytic
>> capacitors. They are sheer vandalism! Time for some companies heads to
>> bow
>> down and appologise! Those unstable low dropout regulators are another
>> annoying self destruct mechanism too!!!
>>
>> Alan
>
> _______________________________________________
> volt-nuts mailing list -- volt-nuts at febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to
> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volt-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
>
>





More information about the volt-nuts mailing list