Eric The Viking
Established Member
- Joined
- 19 Jan 2010
- Messages
- 6,599
- Reaction score
- 76
You may have heard of a case of lead poisoning from exposure to electrical solder, but I haven't.
Last week I mended the fourth item (recently) that has died because of lead-free solder joint failure. I've one more in the queue, I think, too. The stuff not only fails with vibration and flexing, it doesn't wet the surfaces well, and some variants grow conductive whiskers (crystals) that cause short circuits. It needs higher soldering temperatures (+20deg C depending on composition), so my older soldering irons are inadequate, and you'd be wise to use a decent flux too, and not trust anything new called 'multicore'.
It's banned in aerospace applications, and, I think there's an exemption for the motor industry too.
I'm wondering when someone will have the guts to admit the stupidity and cost of all this and allow good old 60:40 again.
Frustrated,
E.
Last week I mended the fourth item (recently) that has died because of lead-free solder joint failure. I've one more in the queue, I think, too. The stuff not only fails with vibration and flexing, it doesn't wet the surfaces well, and some variants grow conductive whiskers (crystals) that cause short circuits. It needs higher soldering temperatures (+20deg C depending on composition), so my older soldering irons are inadequate, and you'd be wise to use a decent flux too, and not trust anything new called 'multicore'.
It's banned in aerospace applications, and, I think there's an exemption for the motor industry too.
I'm wondering when someone will have the guts to admit the stupidity and cost of all this and allow good old 60:40 again.
Frustrated,
E.