Harvey,
? Interesting link on the tin whiskers. And a weird phenomena.
On 10/28/2020 4:55 PM, Harvey
Altstadter wrote:
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Jim,
There is a raft of information on tin whiskers at one of the NASA
sites:
Some really great (scary) photos
As you can see on the NASA site, there actually were several
communications sat failures due to whiskers. The one that most
people remember is the Galaxy 4 Panamsat. That is the one that was
carrying most of the pager traffic in the US. I worked on
equipment that went on the replacement sat. If ever there was a
customer that was jittery and over protective about tin, that one
was it. He was right!
As to how the tin got onto the sats, you will see several examples
of things that were overlooked. "Everybody" knew that the leads on
the ICs, transistors and most electronic parts were tin plated, so
we had them solder dipped. We went out of our way to make sure the
terminal posts we bought were solder plated, or solder dipped.
When we inspected some of the terminal posts that looked odd for
solder plate, we found that some were tin plated. At that point we
stepped up our inspection for the finish, and we found that the
suppliers were ignoring the solder requirement, and sending tin
finish because they were in stock. Other structural hardware
sometimes was tin plated. Several corrective actions were taken to
replace them.
Conformal coat does not protect against tin whiskers. The whiskers
are really sharp, and push through the coatings. They also take on
all kinds of odd shapes, and have been seen to curl over and touch
each other. They also can break off, and become lodged in areas
that are not coated.
Harvey
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