Conformal Coating Stripping

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024

Комментарии • 6

  • @MakeOrRepair
    @MakeOrRepair  2 года назад +4

    Hope people find this helpful, anyone tried paint stripper?

    • @BusyElectrons
      @BusyElectrons 2 года назад +1

      I've only ever stripped small areas on PCBs when repairing electronics from China that happen to be coated. I have no idea what they use as a coating, but most of them will come off with isopropanol and a cotton swab. Any boards that resisted would yield to a subsequent dab of acetone.

    • @MakeOrRepair
      @MakeOrRepair  2 года назад

      @@BusyElectrons just recorded to help those who need it. acetone will handle the acrylic and I think uv cured see the list in the video for all those that can be stripped with ketones. A lot of newer things should be using acrylic because it is safer to handle, but it is not suitable for harsher environments with high temperatures chemical contaminants etc. the problem is the two-part ones such as epoxies, as the polymer chains are longer they resist removal more.

    • @xConundrumx
      @xConundrumx 2 года назад

      Useful, hell ya, just ordered the 850ml can. The cost was reasonable too. Surprised though because MG Chemicals is sometimes a pain. Been trying to get my hands on their liquid tinner for a while but as I understand it you can only get that one stateside.

  • @Lordkels
    @Lordkels Год назад

    I need to remove ECC3010 but i can't find nothing about that u think 8310A will work??

    • @MakeOrRepair
      @MakeOrRepair  Год назад

      It is a 1 part Silicon Air curing coating, so I should think acetone would be my first try after that 8310a would seem a good bet, but with coating it can be trial and error. If it is thick see if you can make progress first scraping or cutting