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Date: | Fri, 10 Feb 2012 15:42:04 -0600 |
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Good afternoon all,
Recognizing that asking a question of this group late on a Friday
afternoon is questionable judgement on my part, I will give it a shot
anyway.
I am in the midst of the most perplexing material investigation of my
life. Provided I do not get shot, hung or tarred/feathered, I will have
some neat stuff to publish in the next few years. I have a general
question on testing coatings, other than what you might do in aerospace.
Most temperature-humidity tests done on conformal coating are of the
cyclical variety, 25C to 65C, 90% RH for a week. This one is found in
MIL-I-46058 and IPC-CC-830 and is used for material qualification. Nothing
unusual there.
There are cyclical temperature-humidity test that are done as part of
product qualification, such as DO-160E or MIL-STD-883. But these are also
of the cyclical variety and 25C to 65C is common there as well. Nothing
unusual there.
How would one simulate a coated assembly, stored in a cold and clammy
environment (40-50F, 85-100% RH with probable dew points each day) for
months at a time, then powered up?
Are there any tests done in your industry that tests a coatings resistance
to a prolonged cold and clammy conditions? Ideally with some form of
acceleration factor? I know that the automotive industry has something
called a "damp heat" kind of test, but have no experience with that.
I know I can program my humidity chamber for an environment, but don't
really have time to let it sit 3-6 months. It has been suggested that I
jump in my time machine and go back 6 months and I would be done by now,
but my flux capacitor went through our Kyzen cleaning process and has no
flux left. I blame Hillman.
So, any thoughts would be appreciated.
Doug Pauls
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