Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection
arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. A superfluity of mains fuses all ok, on 240V UK mains, 5 amp in plug, 4 amp chassis mounted and internal 5 amp all in series. Mains transformer seems right sort of primary and secondary resistance. All other internal fuses ok and no other visually obvious problems. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug surrounding the L pin melting where heat conducted through the pin presumably. Remainder of IEC receptacle distorted from heat but holding together. The N pin soldering at the pcb is bad, but has continuity, I assume pre-existing rather than from heat damage as 3/4 inch from the main L arcing, so temp would not have reached solder melt point on the N pin. I assume the L pin solder was worse and initial cause of arcing. Amp was just idling , with no sound throughput, is that why so much damage as only tens of mA passing in the arcs. ? If 0.5 amp or more, then the damage would have been more extreme , but shorter duration, before total break in pcb track or solder joint meant a fuse action in effect, before greater heat damage could take effect. The remnant pcb charring is not obviously conductive (30 M ohm DVM) Incidently the earth pin soldering although smoke stained looks fine, coincidence? or passing of electricity have an initiation effect on good solder to become bad or does it require porous solder or something inherently bad with it for a heating effect to come into play, long before any full arcing? -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#2
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
fuses are 5A mains,2AT,5AQ
after cleaning away as much grime as possible , any suggestions for disguising/absorbing the remanant pong ? |
#3
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
N_Cook wrote:
Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. A superfluity of mains fuses all ok, on 240V UK mains, 5 amp in plug, 4 amp chassis mounted and internal 5 amp all in series. Mains transformer seems right sort of primary and secondary resistance. All other internal fuses ok and no other visually obvious problems. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug surrounding the L pin melting where heat conducted through the pin presumably. Remainder of IEC receptacle distorted from heat but holding together. The N pin soldering at the pcb is bad, but has continuity, I assume pre-existing rather than from heat damage as 3/4 inch from the main L arcing, so temp would not have reached solder melt point on the N pin. I assume the L pin solder was worse and initial cause of arcing. Amp was just idling , with no sound throughput, is that why so much damage as only tens of mA passing in the arcs. ? If 0.5 amp or more, then the damage would have been more extreme , but shorter duration, before total break in pcb track or solder joint meant a fuse action in effect, before greater heat damage could take effect. The remnant pcb charring is not obviously conductive (30 M ohm DVM) Incidently the earth pin soldering although smoke stained looks fine, coincidence? or passing of electricity have an initiation effect on good solder to become bad or does it require porous solder or something inherently bad with it for a heating effect to come into play, long before any full arcing? Has someone spilled liquid into it? If you measured the resistance of the charring with low voltage, you might have had a false high reading; with 240v you could find that it flashes over or sputters badly. What would the normal running current and the maximum fault current from a shorted transformer secondary have been? A bad joint of 5k-ohms in a circuit carrying 20 mA will develop 2 watts, which is enough to char a PCB. I have come across some connector pairs purporting to be IEC-compliant, where the pins and the socket connections hardly touched. I submitted them to Trading Standards and was told that both halves did comply with the specification - so you might have come across a similar problem to that; and the fault may not be in the soldering. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk |
#4
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Adrian Tuddenham wrote in message
valid.invalid... N_Cook wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. A superfluity of mains fuses all ok, on 240V UK mains, 5 amp in plug, 4 amp chassis mounted and internal 5 amp all in series. Mains transformer seems right sort of primary and secondary resistance. All other internal fuses ok and no other visually obvious problems. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug surrounding the L pin melting where heat conducted through the pin presumably. Remainder of IEC receptacle distorted from heat but holding together. The N pin soldering at the pcb is bad, but has continuity, I assume pre-existing rather than from heat damage as 3/4 inch from the main L arcing, so temp would not have reached solder melt point on the N pin. I assume the L pin solder was worse and initial cause of arcing. Amp was just idling , with no sound throughput, is that why so much damage as only tens of mA passing in the arcs. ? If 0.5 amp or more, then the damage would have been more extreme , but shorter duration, before total break in pcb track or solder joint meant a fuse action in effect, before greater heat damage could take effect. The remnant pcb charring is not obviously conductive (30 M ohm DVM) Incidently the earth pin soldering although smoke stained looks fine, coincidence? or passing of electricity have an initiation effect on good solder to become bad or does it require porous solder or something inherently bad with it for a heating effect to come into play, long before any full arcing? Has someone spilled liquid into it? If you measured the resistance of the charring with low voltage, you might have had a false high reading; with 240v you could find that it flashes over or sputters badly. What would the normal running current and the maximum fault current from a shorted transformer secondary have been? A bad joint of 5k-ohms in a circuit carrying 20 mA will develop 2 watts, which is enough to char a PCB. I have come across some connector pairs purporting to be IEC-compliant, where the pins and the socket connections hardly touched. I submitted them to Trading Standards and was told that both halves did comply with the specification - so you might have come across a similar problem to that; and the fault may not be in the soldering. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk Where the pins of the IEC chassis part go through the plastic there is no melting or burning but the linecord plug (softer plastic) shows signs of melting around the line pin , no burning. So the initial problem not mis-mating of IEC pins. Downstream problems , transformer, ps etc is possible I suppose , no blown fuses though. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#5
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 21, 2:59*am, "N_Cook" wrote:
Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. If you can clean away the char, do it (I've used glass bead blasting to good effect). Paint the affected region with Q-dope/styrene varnish/corona dope when cleaning/soldering/flux cleaning is done. Replace any AC fittings that look damaged, of course. |
#6
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
N_Cook wrote:
Adrian Tuddenham wrote in message valid.invalid... N_Cook wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. A superfluity of mains fuses all ok, on 240V UK mains, 5 amp in plug, 4 amp chassis mounted and internal 5 amp all in series. Mains transformer seems right sort of primary and secondary resistance. All other internal fuses ok and no other visually obvious problems. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug surrounding the L pin melting where heat conducted through the pin presumably. Remainder of IEC receptacle distorted from heat but holding together. [...] I have come across some connector pairs purporting to be IEC-compliant, where the pins and the socket connections hardly touched. I submitted them to Trading Standards and was told that both halves did comply with the specification - so you might have come across a similar problem to that; and the fault may not be in the soldering. Where the pins of the IEC chassis part go through the plastic there is no melting or burning but the linecord plug (softer plastic) shows signs of melting around the line pin , no burning. Some of those IEC chassis connectors are almost indestructible. I have tried to melt one of the pins out of one with a soldering iron and it simply would not move. I had to tear the rivetted tag off the back with a vice, then file down the remains of the pin and punch it out. I can quite believe that the items each side could be damaged by heat but the connector in the middle would show no signs of burning. So the initial problem not mis-mating of IEC pins. Downstream problems , transformer, ps etc is possible I suppose , no blown fuses though. If the direct cause of the heat was a high resistance joint, you wouldn't expect a blown fuse. A shorted secondary on a small transformer wouldn't necessarily blow the fuse either. It has occurred to me that if a solder joint had gone high resistance, the increase in temperature would either melt it back together or blow it open before the board became damaged. I still think a poor plug/socket connection is a likely cause. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk |
#7
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Adrian Tuddenham wrote in message
valid.invalid... N_Cook wrote: Adrian Tuddenham wrote in message valid.invalid... N_Cook wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. A superfluity of mains fuses all ok, on 240V UK mains, 5 amp in plug, 4 amp chassis mounted and internal 5 amp all in series. Mains transformer seems right sort of primary and secondary resistance. All other internal fuses ok and no other visually obvious problems. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug surrounding the L pin melting where heat conducted through the pin presumably. Remainder of IEC receptacle distorted from heat but holding together. [...] I have come across some connector pairs purporting to be IEC-compliant, where the pins and the socket connections hardly touched. I submitted them to Trading Standards and was told that both halves did comply with the specification - so you might have come across a similar problem to that; and the fault may not be in the soldering. Where the pins of the IEC chassis part go through the plastic there is no melting or burning but the linecord plug (softer plastic) shows signs of melting around the line pin , no burning. Some of those IEC chassis connectors are almost indestructible. I have tried to melt one of the pins out of one with a soldering iron and it simply would not move. I had to tear the rivetted tag off the back with a vice, then file down the remains of the pin and punch it out. I can quite believe that the items each side could be damaged by heat but the connector in the middle would show no signs of burning. So the initial problem not mis-mating of IEC pins. Downstream problems , transformer, ps etc is possible I suppose , no blown fuses though. If the direct cause of the heat was a high resistance joint, you wouldn't expect a blown fuse. A shorted secondary on a small transformer wouldn't necessarily blow the fuse either. It has occurred to me that if a solder joint had gone high resistance, the increase in temperature would either melt it back together or blow it open before the board became damaged. I still think a poor plug/socket connection is a likely cause. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk The half inch radius destruction was total , burning down to glass mat , the thickness of the board. I just cannot see that happening due to an arcing contact inside the mated plug and socket and the heat conducted through an inch or so of metal conductor , with only marginal melting to the line cord plug. Without carving into the line plug I cannot see the surface of the female part but the male pins in the chassis section show no pitting or sign of arcing. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#8
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Another maybe relevant factor. The IEC socket was rivetted to the pcb and
very firm but the section that is chassis mounted had much smaller diameter screws than I would normally expect. Although star washers under the nuts they undid easily. Maybe that due to the heating but also could be due to normal inserting of cord into socket straining the pcb solder connections over years of use/stowage. Would also explain why no obvious bad solder on the ground pin as that is mechanically more remote by another half inch of conductor compared to the active conductor lengths. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#9
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() N_Cook wrote: Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug surrounding the L pin melting where heat conducted through the pin presumably. Indicates vast overcurrent. Did someone put aluminium foil in the plugtop fuse ? Typical musician practice. Graham |
#10
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Adrian Tuddenham wrote: Has someone spilled liquid into it? If built to BSEN60065 properly it wouldn't matter. Fault currents should be dealt with by blowing fuses or adequate copper foil thickness / area to withstand the current. I'll bet some clot replaced a fuse with some ali foil. Graham |
#11
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham |
#12
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Adrian Tuddenham wrote: I still think a poor plug/socket connection is a likely cause. Loose contact pressure high resistance joint. I've heard of it and had it reported to me but never seen it personally. It happens when cheapskate bands treat their kit like **** and don't look after cables and their own personal safety. Graham |
#13
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() N_Cook wrote: Without carving into the line plug I cannot see the surface of the female part but the male pins in the chassis section show no pitting or sign of arcing. If you're reading my posts ( which I doubt since you ask so many daft questions the answers to which that you ought to *know ) do these thing. Insert the apparently undamaged part into a new mating half. Does it hold firm ? Apply a serious current through each contact and measure the volt drop. That'll tell you the contact resistance from which much can be deduced. And when bands bring in gear with 'tatty' mains leads, replace them and destroy the defective one ( hand it back in a bag). They cost bugger all and could save a life. Also check the plugtop fuse rating fitted. It's easy to put a 13A fuse in the plug of a 5A lead. And VERY stupid. Graham |
#14
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() N_Cook wrote: Another maybe relevant factor. The IEC socket was rivetted to the pcb and very firm but the section that is chassis mounted had much smaller diameter screws than I would normally expect. Although star washers under the nuts they undid easily. Maybe that due to the heating but also could be due to normal inserting of cord into socket straining the pcb solder connections over years of use/stowage. Would also explain why no obvious bad solder on the ground pin as that is mechanically more remote by another half inch of conductor compared to the active conductor lengths. Look for the basics instead of pontificating. That's where it'll be. Getting on for 40 yrs experience tells me that. Graham |
#15
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa |
#16
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Arfa Daily wrote in message
... "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa This is a 1998 amplifier, made in China so conventional solder ? does not look "volcanic" or tin-pesty dusty grey solder points on the boards. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#17
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
N_Cook wrote:
Arfa Daily wrote in message ... "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa This is a 1998 amplifier, made in China so conventional solder ? does not look "volcanic" or tin-pesty dusty grey solder points on the boards. It probly started off as a hairline crack around one of the soldered joins, caused by repeated connecting and disconnecting. It started 'fizzling', no one noticed (or cared) until the amp failed to work by which time there was a socking great hole in the board and a nasty smell. It`a amazing how long a lot of musicians will put up with faulty gear, prefering to ignore problems till the item stops working. Doesn't really need a post mortem. Ron(UK) |
#18
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ron wrote in message
... N_Cook wrote: Arfa Daily wrote in message ... "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff .... Arfa This is a 1998 amplifier, made in China so conventional solder ? does not look "volcanic" or tin-pesty dusty grey solder points on the boards. It probly started off as a hairline crack around one of the soldered joins, caused by repeated connecting and disconnecting. It started 'fizzling', no one noticed (or cared) until the amp failed to work by which time there was a socking great hole in the board and a nasty smell. It`a amazing how long a lot of musicians will put up with faulty gear, prefering to ignore problems till the item stops working. Doesn't really need a post mortem. Ron(UK) I agree that is the normal etiology and pathology, carrying on the medico-speak. But this was a socking great burnt patch and billowing smoke out of the 1/4 inch socket holes, that developed after sound check and before use proper. Agreed there could have been long term, unnoticed, minor fizzing but I've never seen this sort of damage in this sort of mains power line circumstance. |
#19
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
N_Cook wrote:
Ron wrote in message ... N_Cook wrote: Arfa Daily wrote in message ... "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa This is a 1998 amplifier, made in China so conventional solder ? does not look "volcanic" or tin-pesty dusty grey solder points on the boards. It probly started off as a hairline crack around one of the soldered joins, caused by repeated connecting and disconnecting. It started 'fizzling', no one noticed (or cared) until the amp failed to work by which time there was a socking great hole in the board and a nasty smell. It`a amazing how long a lot of musicians will put up with faulty gear, prefering to ignore problems till the item stops working. Doesn't really need a post mortem. Ron(UK) I agree that is the normal etiology and pathology, carrying on the medico-speak. But this was a socking great burnt patch and billowing smoke out of the 1/4 inch socket holes, that developed after sound check and before use proper. Agreed there could have been long term, unnoticed, minor fizzing but I've never seen this sort of damage in this sort of mains power line circumstance. I`m surprised, it`s a pretty common failure mode. Bear in mind that the point of arcing usually comes before the equipments internal mains fuse, but after the fuse in the plug top, which is more often than not rated at 13amps. Once the board starts to carbonise quite a large current can flow, and the current is only flowing between two points it was intented to flow anyway - at least initially. It doesnt take long for it to burn a hole in a board. |
#20
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Eeyore wrote:
The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? In the past I have many times agreed with your facts, but I have often disagreed with your way of expressing them. On this occasion I am with you all the way. Let's hope the first aeroplane to crash because of lead-free solder has only Brussels diplomats and anti-lead campaigners on board. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk |
#21
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Adrian Tuddenham" wrote in message alid.invalid... Eeyore wrote: The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? In the past I have many times agreed with your facts, but I have often disagreed with your way of expressing them. On this occasion I am with you all the way. Let's hope the first aeroplane to crash because of lead-free solder has only Brussels diplomats and anti-lead campaigners on board. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk As far as I know, at this point in time, the avionics industry still has an exemption from having to use the stuff. Now I wonder why that could be ... ? Arfa |
#22
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() N_Cook wrote: Do you know the most authorative source/group, academic or industry expert/s, on tin-pest, lead-free solder, in-service degradation of solder in connjunction with temperature and vibration. ie those issues, as distinct from tin whiskers aspect that seems to have more coverage. ERA, I thin, did a report for the EU which smelt of trying to brush the evidence under the carpet. Graham |
#23
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Arfa Daily wrote: To N.Cook The place that I got my research material from was Tin Technology Ltd with a website of www.lead-free.org The person that I spoke to at that body, pointed me to www.dti.gov.uk/sustainability/weee/index.htm I also spoke to a Dr Goodman at ERAT Technology Ltd That's Paul Goodman at ERA Technology. The final report is here. http://ec.europa.eu/environment/wast...nal_report.pdf There was a simpler 30 or so page interim report I've mislaid which definitely showed indications of problems from vibration. Whilst assembly houses may have optimised the processes, for sure it's far more difficult for an individual to use. Graham |
#24
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Eeyore wrote: Arfa Daily wrote: To N.Cook The place that I got my research material from was Tin Technology Ltd with a website of www.lead-free.org The person that I spoke to at that body, pointed me to www.dti.gov.uk/sustainability/weee/index.htm I also spoke to a Dr Goodman at ERAT Technology Ltd That's Paul Goodman at ERA Technology. The final report is here. http://ec.europa.eu/environment/wast...nal_report.pdf There was a simpler 30 or so page interim report I've mislaid which definitely showed indications of problems from vibration. Whilst assembly houses may have optimised the processes, for sure it's far more difficult for an individual to use. I've emailed Dr Goodman again to see if the simpler report still exists. In the meantimes this google search gave a host of results. " ERA interim report lead-free " without the quote marks as I tried it. Graham |
#25
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Ron wrote: N_Cook wrote: Ron wrote in message It probly started off as a hairline crack around one of the soldered joins, caused by repeated connecting and disconnecting. It started 'fizzling', no one noticed (or cared) until the amp failed to work by which time there was a socking great hole in the board and a nasty smell. It`a amazing how long a lot of musicians will put up with faulty gear, prefering to ignore problems till the item stops working. Doesn't really need a post mortem. I agree that is the normal etiology and pathology, carrying on the medico-speak. But this was a socking great burnt patch and billowing smoke out of the 1/4 inch socket holes, that developed after sound check and before use proper. Agreed there could have been long term, unnoticed, minor fizzing but I've never seen this sort of damage in this sort of mains power line circumstance. I`m surprised, it`s a pretty common failure mode. Bear in mind that the point of arcing usually comes before the equipments internal mains fuse, but after the fuse in the plug top, which is more often than not rated at 13amps. Once the board starts to carbonise quite a large current can flow, and the current is only flowing between two points it was intented to flow anyway - at least initially. It doesnt take long for it to burn a hole in a board. I'd agree with your analysis. I have seen both hairline cracks such as you mention and 'cold joints' caused by failure to use an appropriate soldering temperature, or soldering time when soldering components with large thermal mass such an IEC connector PCB pin ( pressure will keep it working for a while but it'll finally go high resistance ). Even seen that on TO-220 devices. Graham |
#26
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Eeyore wrote: Ron wrote: N_Cook wrote: Ron wrote in message It probly started off as a hairline crack around one of the soldered joins, caused by repeated connecting and disconnecting. It started 'fizzling', no one noticed (or cared) until the amp failed to work by which time there was a socking great hole in the board and a nasty smell. It`a amazing how long a lot of musicians will put up with faulty gear, prefering to ignore problems till the item stops working. Doesn't really need a post mortem. I agree that is the normal etiology and pathology, carrying on the medico-speak. But this was a socking great burnt patch and billowing smoke out of the 1/4 inch socket holes, that developed after sound check and before use proper. Agreed there could have been long term, unnoticed, minor fizzing but I've never seen this sort of damage in this sort of mains power line circumstance. I`m surprised, it`s a pretty common failure mode. Bear in mind that the point of arcing usually comes before the equipments internal mains fuse, but after the fuse in the plug top, which is more often than not rated at 13amps. Once the board starts to carbonise quite a large current can flow, and the current is only flowing between two points it was intented to flow anyway - at least initially. It doesnt take long for it to burn a hole in a board. I'd agree with your analysis. I have seen both hairline cracks such as you mention and 'cold joints' caused by failure to use an appropriate soldering temperature, or soldering time when soldering components with large thermal mass such an IEC connector PCB pin ( pressure will keep it working for a while but it'll finally go high resistance ). Even seen that on TO-220 devices. p.s. ( The TO-220 device acting as a heatsink to the solder via its leads, hence preventing the alloying connection needed ). I've literally seen TO-220 devices 'fall out' of a PCB after a year or two leaving 3 nice rectangular holes in what look to be perfect solder joints. p.p.s The hairline crack around soldered joints is especially common where the drilled hole size is not ideal ( oversize ) for the lead diameter. I have seen manufacturers specify hole sizes very poorly with the inevitable outcome. Hence my PCB footprints often use my own estimation of the appropriate drill size rather than the data book one. Plenty of other people do the same. Graham |
#27
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Meat Plow" wrote in message ... On Fri, 22 May 2009 01:49:59 +0100, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa Glad I stockpiled enough 60/40 to last me a lifetime. I could probably sell it on Ebay for an exuberant price one day :-) This Tin Pest stuff sounds like a serious problem though. 60/40 is still readily available here in pretty much all of the varieties that it always was - I got a new roll just a couple of weeks ago. What was interesting though, is that they have jacked up the price to match - almost exactly - the cost of the dreaded lead-free, which up until recently, was like 50% more expensive. Arfa |
#28
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Arfa Daily wrote in message
... "Meat Plow" wrote in message ... On Fri, 22 May 2009 01:49:59 +0100, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff .... Arfa Glad I stockpiled enough 60/40 to last me a lifetime. I could probably sell it on Ebay for an exuberant price one day :-) This Tin Pest stuff sounds like a serious problem though. 60/40 is still readily available here in pretty much all of the varieties that it always was - I got a new roll just a couple of weeks ago. What was interesting though, is that they have jacked up the price to match - almost exactly - the cost of the dreaded lead-free, which up until recently, was like 50% more expensive. Arfa Do you know the most authorative source/group, academic or industry expert/s, on tin-pest, lead-free solder, in-service degradation of solder in connjunction with temperature and vibration. ie those issues, as distinct from tin whiskers aspect that seems to have more coverage. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#29
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "N_Cook" wrote in message ... Arfa Daily wrote in message ... "Meat Plow" wrote in message ... On Fri, 22 May 2009 01:49:59 +0100, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa Glad I stockpiled enough 60/40 to last me a lifetime. I could probably sell it on Ebay for an exuberant price one day :-) This Tin Pest stuff sounds like a serious problem though. 60/40 is still readily available here in pretty much all of the varieties that it always was - I got a new roll just a couple of weeks ago. What was interesting though, is that they have jacked up the price to match - almost exactly - the cost of the dreaded lead-free, which up until recently, was like 50% more expensive. Arfa Do you know the most authorative source/group, academic or industry expert/s, on tin-pest, lead-free solder, in-service degradation of solder in connjunction with temperature and vibration. ie those issues, as distinct from tin whiskers aspect that seems to have more coverage. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ I spoke by email with a couple of industry advice bodies, when I was preparing an article on lead-free solder for a mag. I'll see if I can find the references for them. Arfa |
#30
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Arfa Daily wrote in message
... "N_Cook" wrote in message ... Arfa Daily wrote in message ... "Meat Plow" wrote in message ... On Fri, 22 May 2009 01:49:59 +0100, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "Eeyore" wrote in message ... I spoke by email with a couple of industry advice bodies, when I was preparing an article on lead-free solder for a mag. I'll see if I can find the references for them. Arfa I did not find , on this site, the expected date for the results of their study CALCE Long-Term Pb-Free Study http://www.calce.umd.edu/lead-free/longterm.htm Generally, it seems to be just anecdotal evidence so far -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#31
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Meat Plow" wrote in message ... On Sat, 23 May 2009 02:01:09 +0100, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "Meat Plow" wrote in message ... On Fri, 22 May 2009 01:49:59 +0100, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "Eeyore" wrote in message ... whit3rd wrote: On May 21, 2:59 am, "N_Cook" wrote: Obviously I've come acros melting/burning, starting from bad connection arcing , but not this amount of damage, so am requesting other opinions. Burning right thru the pcb for 1/2 inch around the L pin of the IEC, melting of the plastic of the IEC above the burning and even the linecord plug Yep, ring crack around a power solder connection, generates lots of heat. Possible. A victim of lead-free soldering ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tin_pest Note that pure tin solder degrades below 13C. Yes that's right. And turns to dust. Adding a little copper doesn't stop it but slows it some but not enough. The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? Graham Just what I've been saying since they first mandated the hateful stuff ... Arfa Glad I stockpiled enough 60/40 to last me a lifetime. I could probably sell it on Ebay for an exuberant price one day :-) This Tin Pest stuff sounds like a serious problem though. 60/40 is still readily available here in pretty much all of the varieties that it always was - I got a new roll just a couple of weeks ago. What was interesting though, is that they have jacked up the price to match - almost exactly - the cost of the dreaded lead-free, which up until recently, was like 50% more expensive. Arfa Last I bought was for copper plumbing. I tried the lead free crap and it was laughable on 1/2 inch water pipe. I have many years experience soldering and brazing but won't touch the lead free crap again. I have an acquaintance who is a plumber, and some long time ago when the stuff was first becoming mandated for electronic construction work, which was actually some time after it became so for live water systems, I asked him how he got on with it. He told me that at first they had a lot of problems getting it to 'stick' to a joint, and problems with leaks. He said that they had eventually got used to it, and that they could now make joints as good as with leaded solder. However, he said that it required rather different techniques to those conventionally used for plumbing soldering in that the surfaces to be joined must be *very* clean as opposed to just fundamentally clean, and that an aggressive flux helped. He also said that it was funny stuff to work with in that it reached its melting point very suddenly, and then had a tendency to run out of the joint, before re-setting very suddenly also, so no 'pasty' phase, which I guess would knock on the head the old technique of 'wiping' a joint. Given that copper expands very readily, it will be interesting to see if joints start breaking and leaking in 15 years' time due to the total lack of ductility that lead-free has. We've all seen the effects of rather more intense thermal cycling on the short-term integrity of electronic joints. Perhaps plumbing joints are a ticking timebomb ... :-) To N.Cook The place that I got my research material from was Tin Technology Ltd with a website of www.lead-free.org The person that I spoke to at that body, pointed me to www.dti.gov.uk/sustainability/weee/index.htm I also spoke to a Dr Goodman at ERAT Technology Ltd All of this was 3 years ago now, and I have not visited those sites since, if they still exist, but they did contain some good stuff at the time, and they might lead you where you want to go, now. Arfa Arfa |
#32
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Eeyore wrote:
p.p.s The hairline crack around soldered joints is especially common where the drilled hole size is not ideal ( oversize ) for the lead diameter. I have seen manufacturers specify hole sizes very poorly with the inevitable outcome. Hence my PCB footprints often use my own estimation of the appropriate drill size rather than the data book one. Plenty of other people do the same. Graham My Dad - who taught me to solder some 50 years ago - use to say that a good solder joint started off as a good mechanical joint. As a teeenager, I probably spent thousands of hours wiring up uniselectors and GPO relays with tinned copper wire and sleeving, on every joint, the wire was either wound around the tag or passed through a hole, if it was a lead through a circuit board, the wire was bent over at right angles on the solder side. We manufacturerd slot machines btw. Ron |
#33
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ron wrote in message
... Eeyore wrote: p.p.s The hairline crack around soldered joints is especially common where the drilled hole size is not ideal ( oversize ) for the lead diameter. I have seen manufacturers specify hole sizes very poorly with the inevitable outcome. Hence my PCB footprints often use my own estimation of the appropriate drill size rather than the data book one. Plenty of other people do the same. Graham My Dad - who taught me to solder some 50 years ago - use to say that a good solder joint started off as a good mechanical joint. As a teeenager, I probably spent thousands of hours wiring up uniselectors and GPO relays with tinned copper wire and sleeving, on every joint, the wire was either wound around the tag or passed through a hole, if it was a lead through a circuit board, the wire was bent over at right angles on the solder side. We manufacturerd slot machines btw. Ron Very true , unfortunately assembly time/cost preclude that. Hence the notorious guitar input socket problem. The sockets used to be wired between the chassis mounted socket and pcb , so mechanically decoupled from routine use of the socket. Now all soldered to the board and the insertion/removal forces are transmitted to the pcb solder joint. -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#34
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
N_Cook wrote:
Ron wrote in message ... Eeyore wrote: p.p.s The hairline crack around soldered joints is especially common where the drilled hole size is not ideal ( oversize ) for the lead diameter. I have seen manufacturers specify hole sizes very poorly with the inevitable outcome. Hence my PCB footprints often use my own estimation of the appropriate drill size rather than the data book one. Plenty of other people do the same. Graham My Dad - who taught me to solder some 50 years ago - use to say that a good solder joint started off as a good mechanical joint. As a teeenager, I probably spent thousands of hours wiring up uniselectors and GPO relays with tinned copper wire and sleeving, on every joint, the wire was either wound around the tag or passed through a hole, if it was a lead through a circuit board, the wire was bent over at right angles on the solder side. We manufacturerd slot machines btw. Ron Very true , unfortunately assembly time/cost preclude that. Hence the notorious guitar input socket problem. The sockets used to be wired between the chassis mounted socket and pcb , so mechanically decoupled from routine use of the socket. Now all soldered to the board and the insertion/removal forces are transmitted to the pcb solder joint. Even then if you bother to bend the tags over when replacing them, the problem is less likely to recur. Ron |
#35
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Ron" wrote in message ... Eeyore wrote: p.p.s The hairline crack around soldered joints is especially common where the drilled hole size is not ideal ( oversize ) for the lead diameter. I have seen manufacturers specify hole sizes very poorly with the inevitable outcome. Hence my PCB footprints often use my own estimation of the appropriate drill size rather than the data book one. Plenty of other people do the same. Graham My Dad - who taught me to solder some 50 years ago - use to say that a good solder joint started off as a good mechanical joint. As a teeenager, I probably spent thousands of hours wiring up uniselectors and GPO relays with tinned copper wire and sleeving, on every joint, the wire was either wound around the tag or passed through a hole, if it was a lead through a circuit board, the wire was bent over at right angles on the solder side. We manufacturerd slot machines btw. Ron Arrrggghhh !! Dontcha just hate trying to unsolder and remove components with bent-over legs ... ? Very true though that you should have a good mechanical joint first. It's the way I was taught too, not quite so long ago, but close. At college, we had to make connections to lengths of tagstrip, without melting the insulation on the single-strand wire, as practice pieces. Arfa |
#36
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 24 May 2009 16:54:32 +0100, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: Arrrggghhh !! Dontcha just hate trying to unsolder and remove components with bent-over legs ... ? Very true though that you should have a good mechanical joint first. The first transistor radio (and television) pcbs were designed so that, wherever possible, a component wire hole was /not/ in a piece of copper. This meant that all leads had to be bent over at right angles to meet the correct piece of copper. The great advantage of this was the ease of temporaily disconnecting a component for test/repair. Of course this was before auto-insertion made all the girls redundant... (quips here) -- Geo |
#37
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Ron wrote: Eeyore wrote: p.p.s The hairline crack around soldered joints is especially common where the drilled hole size is not ideal ( oversize ) for the lead diameter. I have seen manufacturers specify hole sizes very poorly with the inevitable outcome. Hence my PCB footprints often use my own estimation of the appropriate drill size rather than the data book one. Plenty of other people do the same. My Dad - who taught me to solder some 50 years ago - use to say that a good solder joint started off as a good mechanical joint. As a teeenager, I probably spent thousands of hours wiring up uniselectors and GPO relays with tinned copper wire and sleeving, on every joint, the wire was either wound around the tag or passed through a hole, if it was a lead through a circuit board, the wire was bent over at right angles on the solder side. We manufacturerd slot machines btw. Doubtless needed it to cope with the environment. Graham |
#38
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Ron wrote: N_Cook wrote: Very true , unfortunately assembly time/cost preclude that. Hence the notorious guitar input socket problem. The sockets used to be wired between the chassis mounted socket and pcb , so mechanically decoupled from routine use of the socket. Now all soldered to the board and the insertion/removal forces are transmitted to the pcb solder joint. Even then if you bother to bend the tags over when replacing them, the problem is less likely to recur. Good point. I gather that Cadac 'hand wire' even pots to the PCB via short lengths of wire btw. Graham |
#39
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Arfa Daily wrote:
"Adrian Tuddenham" wrote in message alid.invalid... Eeyore wrote: The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? In the past I have many times agreed with your facts, but I have often disagreed with your way of expressing them. On this occasion I am with you all the way. Let's hope the first aeroplane to crash because of lead-free solder has only Brussels diplomats and anti-lead campaigners on board. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk As far as I know, at this point in time, the avionics industry still has an exemption from having to use the stuff. Now I wonder why that could be ... ? They may be exempt, but what might they do when they can't get the proper stuff any more because no manufacturer can afford to run two production lines for the same product simultaneously and daren't risk getting them muddled? 1) Set up special production lines. 2) Stop making avionics. 3) Change the rules and use lead-free. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk |
#40
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Adrian Tuddenham" wrote in message valid.invalid... Arfa Daily wrote: "Adrian Tuddenham" wrote in message alid.invalid... Eeyore wrote: The EU Commission should be strung by their necks from lamp-posts for being a bunch of technically ignorant ****s. Why do they think lead was used in solder in the first place ? For fun ? In the past I have many times agreed with your facts, but I have often disagreed with your way of expressing them. On this occasion I am with you all the way. Let's hope the first aeroplane to crash because of lead-free solder has only Brussels diplomats and anti-lead campaigners on board. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk As far as I know, at this point in time, the avionics industry still has an exemption from having to use the stuff. Now I wonder why that could be ... ? They may be exempt, but what might they do when they can't get the proper stuff any more because no manufacturer can afford to run two production lines for the same product simultaneously and daren't risk getting them muddled? 1) Set up special production lines. 2) Stop making avionics. 3) Change the rules and use lead-free. -- ~ Adrian Tuddenham ~ (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply) www.poppyrecords.co.uk There are no plans at the moment, from what I can gather, for manufacturers to stop producing leaded solder, nor for distributors to drop it. There is much 'legacy' equipment out there, which is manufactured in leaded solder, and should not, as a consequence, be repaired using lead-free solder, according to published wisdom from those who should know. There is no legal requirement to use lead-free for the purposes of effecting such repairs. As well as avionics, there are a number of other exemptions in important fields such as medical equipment, and some military areas. Again, I wonder why that could be ... ? As far as I understand it, the American military will not tolerate the stuff being used in any of their equipment. How eminently sensible of them. Pity we haven't got the same courage of our convictions to stand up to the green mist brigade on this side of the pond ... Arfa |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Connector for MC? | Home Repair | |||
Pictures. To post or not to post. Musing about the option. | Woodturning | |||
WC connector | UK diy | |||
WC pan connector help please | UK diy | |||
Wood Question: Which is stronger, a round post or square post? | Woodworking |