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On Sep 27, 2014, at 3:55 AM, Ramon Essers | ETECH-trainingen wrote:
> The metal appearance on the termination depends on the production
> process (cheap process) of the chip component (termination). This
> is a really cheap component, which i can see, with a major
> tollerance. If you want to know more about the different processes
> how a chip (termination) is made, than please send me an email and
> i will provide you a .pdf file explaining the different processes.
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Ramon Essers
> ETECH-trainingen
>
> (Send on The road with iPhone)
>
>> Op 27 sep. 2014 om 03:24 heeft Yuan-chia Joyce Koo
>> <[log in to unmask]> het volgende geschreven:
>>
>> something is not right. the metal termination should be the only
>> one that is wet to the solder, not the ink or protective layer of
>> the resistor material. those are non-wettable to the solder (if
>> the material selection were done correctly). however, the silk
>> screen if not cure properly, you might change the surface
>> characteristic of the material. The metal termination also showed
>> somewhat layer appearance - a bit strange. I would cross section
>> and check the underline metallization and see if it is extremely
>> thin or fragmented. that just me... curious... is it 01005 or
>> 0201? my 1.8 cents.
>> jk
>>> On Sep 26, 2014, at 3:20 PM, David Hillman wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi Jim - I don't think that that extra bit of solder is going to
>>> cause any
>>> solder joint integrity issues and is a low risk for corrosion/
>>> dendrite
>>> issues but clearly the vendor had a process issue which is going
>>> to and is
>>> causing you process issues. Depending on the size of the
>>> population, I
>>> would consider replacing the parts depending on the product use
>>> environment
>>> and expected longevity of the product.
>>>
>>> Dave Hillman
>>> Rockwell Collins
>>> [log in to unmask]
>>>
>>>> On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 12:56 PM, Jim West <Jim.West@nsgr-
>>>> na.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> The solder is directly on top of the silkscreen marking. The
>>>> solder
>>>> covering the resistor terminations is part of the chip
>>>> manufacturing
>>>> process. A little sloppy and something that I have not come
>>>> across before.
>>>>
>>>> Other thoughts?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Jim
>>>>
>
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