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Hi Mike,
I have seen it both ways in old tube gear. I have seen plenty of mil gear that was defluxed. I have seen plenty of consumer gear that wasn't. The process of defluxing involved dipping or spraying the chassis in carbon tetrachloride, or later trichlorethylene. Flux comes off easily when it is fresh. I wash all joints I make, be they PC board, or otherwise with isopropyl alcohol and a brush. If I can reach the joint with a soldering iron, I can reach it to deflux it. -Chuck Harris Mike Knudsen wrote: Surely you're not saying one should deflux a tube socket, wired chassis solder joint? I can see defluxing PC boards, but I've never heard of defluxing a BA style solder joint, and it would be downright near impossible. Well, maybe with a dozen Q-Tips and an hour of work. Did factories deflux BA chassis? Anyway, my buddy swore he'd deflux things now. And he'll be more careful to read the label before buying any solder. --Mike K. Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me. |
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