On Tue, 05 Jun 2007 14:20:25 -0400, Tom Del Rosso wrote:
"Rich Grise" wrote in message
news
On Mon, 04 Jun 2007 21:31:10 -0400, Tom Del Rosso wrote:
"Jim Thompson" wrote
in message
Back in my discrete days I used copper eyelets for connecting large
gauge high current wires.
The military balk because the solder _under_ the eyelet can't be
inspected.
People always say they crack more, even if they're good initially.
I don't know why that's so.
Vibration. The solder work-hardens and makes the joint unreliable.
But why is that different from any other joint?
It's the metal sandwich of the pad, solder, and eyelet surface - when
the eyelet moves relative to the board, it puts a shear stress on the
solder. "Ordinary" joints don't have that problem because the solder
isn't squashed between two metal surfaces.
Well, it sounds good to me. ;-)
Cheers!
Rich