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On Thu, 12 Nov 2015 12:20:53 -0600, "Robert L Wilson Jr."
wrote: I was afraid that my rant was going to turn into a discussion on MFJ quality or lack thereof. I was more interested in giving owners of the various MFJ antenna analyzers a clue as to what might be wrong with theirs, than attempting to fix the problem at the source. I'm sure MFJ knows that they have a problem by now. Wave soldering is a marginal thing, I think it is amazing how many times it does work. Think about how it goes: Basically the PC board is suspended just above a vat of molten solder, and a wave is caused to run across the vat. The wave, we hope, just reaches up to the connections on the board and solders them. Nope. PCB's with surface mount devices are not wave soldered. I worked for several companies that had wave solder machinery during the 1970's, before SMT parts were common. Keeping the production line machinery going was one my side projects. These daze, components are attached with solder paste and soldered using infrared or vapor phase reflow ovens. Please note that the MFJ-269 PCB's have all the components on the component side and have no leaded components on the board (except for some flex wires to the meter and battery and several ribbon cables). Too high and it makes solder bridges. Nope. Too low a temperature and you get bridging. The wave has to touch the pads on the bottom of the PCB or the pads don't get soldered. Too low a wave is a bigger problem, where the pads don't get any solder. Too low and it either misses connections or at least does not stay on them long enough. Soldering time is controlled by the speed of the chain drive moving the PAB across the wave, not by the height of the wave. There might be a tiny variation in timing with height, but with the nearly vertical sides of the wave caused by the weight of the solder, the soldering time is about the same for all wave heights. And it is not long on a connection at best, so does it get it hot enough? We had thermocouples stuck into the wave to control the temperature. At worst, were off a few degrees one way or the other. It is not just fairly inexpensive things like my MFJ analyzer that have had problems. I did the "resolder the whole board" thing on my Phase Linear preamp many years ago also, and that was by no means low end! Bob Wilson I'm still slightly mystified how the components looked like they were properly soldered, while the solder didn't stick to the PCB pad. The best I can offer is some grease on the pads. Also, it was only in one part of the PCB (around the RF connector). The other half of the RF board was just fine. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#2
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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... I'm still slightly mystified how the components looked like they were properly soldered, while the solder didn't stick to the PCB pad. The best I can offer is some grease on the pads. Also, it was only in one part of the PCB (around the RF connector). The other half of the RF board was just fine. ================================================== ========= Showing my age, I worked on a tube TV which had a red hum bar floating up through an essentially normal color picture. The ground on the R-Y amp tube heater needed to be resoldered. It was a quick fix after hours of fruitless troubleshooting. (A high resistance joint caused the 60 Hz A/C voltage to be coupled onto the cathode, modulating the R-Y signal. Oddly, the tube was lit, keeping us from looking where the trouble lay.) |
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