I am curious how these techniques hold up over time (aging of material), temperature and such

ds

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JaMi Smith wrote:
Brian,

I know that you do not want to remove a protective plate such as gold, which 
will
prevent oxidation, such as what you will get with bare silver or copper, which 
is
liable to change over time due to the effects of the oxidation, but you can do 
fine
"tweaking" with solder plate, so long as you do not totally remove it, which it
sounds like you are doing.

Another way to "tweak" a circuit would be to thin out the amount of "solder 
mask"
which will change the "dielectric constant" of a trace, and hence the "velocity
factor", although that would be a change of a different kind than the 
"inductance"
you are dealing with, and probably a little harder to get optimal results with, 
and
where you would probably use something like acetone or some other solvent as 
opposed
to an eraser.

Then again, you could possibly actually get down to bare copper if you really 
wanted
to change inductance by thinning things out, and then give the area a very thin
protective spray to prevent oxidation, without affecting the net change in
inductance too much, if at all.

Respecting cleaning the "card edge connector fingers", which is usually the 
first
thing any Technician will look at: Digital Equipment (DEC) once put out a tech
bulletin back in the early 70's stating that anyone caught using an "eraser" on 
card
edge connectors would be fired on the spot, once they found out that that was 
how
their tech support people were "fixing" their malfunctioning equipment in the 
field,
but they additionally followed it up with much better designs on their 
connectors at
the same time, along with thicker plating on their "fingers", which lead to yet
another problem in some areas, due to the extra "resistance" of the thicker gold
plating. That's why the Military was also freaking out about the amount of gold 
on
connector contacts and fingers back in the early 70's, but for just the opposite
reason, the Military wouldn't stand for the extra resistance, or the gold
embrittlement when it came to soldering.

JaMi

* * * * * *

----- Original Message -----
From: "Brian Guralnick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Protel EDA Discussion List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, November 26, 2004 1:05 PM
Subject: Re: [PEDA] Dielectric constant



Read my full reply/description.

I do know that if you have gold, or silver plating, you will be stripping a
few thousand atoms at a time from the vertical thickness, since, you see
them darkening up the eraser.  Also, it seems to get rid of any oxidizing
layers.  It's especially great at re-finishing gold-thinger edge card PCBs.

________
Brian G.


----- Original Message ----- From: "JaMi Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Protel EDA Discussion List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, November 26, 2004 3:51 PM Subject: Re: [PEDA] Dielectric constant



Brad,

By using an eraser, you can do a very fine trim of the thickness of the
trace, and
hence a very fine "tweak" of the electrical characteristics, especially if
you have
a solder plate / HASL.

JaMi





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