[log in to unmask] Wrote:
| 
| 
|      I appologize for the confusion.  The drying I am 
| referring to is after
| aqueous and /or semi-aqueous cleaning.  So far, in my paper I 
| am covering
| physical and chemical methods of drying that exist today.  
| This includes air
| knives, convention ovens, vacuum drying, cetrifical drying, 
| alcohol and
| displacement drying.  Any comments....
| 
| Stan Seelig
| Seelig and Associates, Inc.
| Industrial Cleaning Consultants
| 
| Response from earlier message:
| 
| To anyone,
|      I am presenting a paper at NEPCON in Feb. on "The 
| Importance of Drying
| to the Electronics Industry".  I have many of my own ideas 
| but I would like
| to hear from people in the electronics industry.  Please 
| respond to me at
| [log in to unmask]  Thank you.
| 
| Stanley S. Seelig, FAIC
| Seelig and Associates, Inc.
| Industrial Cleaning Consultants
| 
|      According to pipeline manager, these messages may not 
| have gone through.
|  To update, the NEPCON paper has been submitted but I have 
| time during the
| presentation to give some case studies.  Any responses ?  I 
| am the inventor
| of Genesolv DRSC, a surfactant based-drying solvent system 
| (CFCs) that had
| many applications in the electronics industry and I feel 
| there is still a
| market for a similar product.
| 

Hello Stan -

I am a novice in the field of SMT and PCB assembly who is interested to
learn more about the drying process from the paper that you have published
on drying.  Where can I find it?


Best Regards

Nora Xiao
Process Engineer
Tektronix, Inc.
(503)627-3160