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Board Talk

At Board Talk, the Assembly Brothers cut through the marketing hype, the platitudes and incompetent un-scientific baloney with a search for the truth.
This episode features:

Phil Zarrow Phil Zarrow, ITM Consulting
Phil has been involved with hybrid and PCB assembly for more than 30 years including equipment design for pcb fab and assembly.

Jim Hall Jim Hall, ITM Consulting
Jim has a wealth of knowledge in soldering and thermal technology, equipment and process basics and is a pioneer in the science of reflow technology.
Thermocouple Attachment Review

Phil
Welcome to Board Talk. This is Phil Zarrow and Jim Hall of ITM Consulting here with Board Talk, and we're coming to you today from the roof of the ITM building in beautiful downtown Mount Rialto.

Jim
For those of you who are regular listeners to Board Talk, you will know that very early in our presentations we talked about attaching thermocouples to printer circuit assemblies for the purpose of profiling a reflow machine or a wave machine.

We got on one of our sacred, holy soapboxes and said we don't like tape and we like to glue down thermoucouples using high-temperature solder because it's more permanent. 

We got a number well thought out responses, people saying, "Hey, we can't do that in our environment. We can't sacrifice a board. We've got to use tape." A lot of people are saying, "We like aluminum tape." And so we just thought we would weigh in and review.

With any temperature measurement, the key element is to get the thermocouple itself in good contact with what you're trying to measure and to do so in a way that does not modify the area with a lot of extra mass or material that's going to give you an inaccurate thing. So if you have to use tape, make sure that the thermocouple is in good contact with what you're trying to measure, be it a material or a solder joint or whatever. Try to strain relief it with some other tape before you put the tape over the thermocouple so there's no pressure on the tape holding down the thermocouple.

So when the tape does heat up and the adhesive may get a little weak, there's no pressure to lift that thermocouple up. Be careful that the location, the shape and the size of the piece of tape you use do not affect the heating of what you're trying to measure.

Phil
Right, and that same principle applies to if you are indeed using the preferred method of conductive epoxy or high-temp solder in that you don't use an inordinate amount of quantity or volume of solder or conductive epoxy. Because for that same reason Jim just outlined, you're going to affect the readings in a bad way.

Jim
You want to measure the temperature of the solder joint, not the temperature of a big piece of tape sitting on top of a circuit board, not the temperature of a big blob of high-temperature solder sitting on the circuit board or a big blob of adhesive.

Phil
Okay, that's it for today's Board Talk. Remember whatever you do, wherever you go –

Jim
Don't solder like my brother.

Phil
Don't solder like my brother.

Jim
Keep the kids away from the flux pot.


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