On 6/4/06, Gooijen, Henk <henk.gooijen at
oce.com> wrote:
For repair of non-RoHS complint equipment, it is
still allowed to use the
"old" parts. The RoHS rule only applies to new-built equipment.
As a hobbyist you must make sure that you do not mix RoHS and non-RoHS
parts
because the technique and the material to solder these parts are different.
Well... 1/8W RoHS resistors and decoupling caps can't cost that much,
and presumably the new "solder" will still wick to gold, so one could
still use old gold-plated machine-pin sockets, yes?
I don't know about anyone else, but _I_ socketed 100% of the ICs on my
SBC-6120. Given the cost of the blank PCB, I didn't think that a few
$$$ more for sockets was a burden.
-ethan
The SN/CU/AG RoHS compliant solder works ok for us when re-touching our RoHS
PCBs. It does require a little higher temperature than SN63/PB37 solder (so
dont try on old PCB material) and ends up looking grainier. Its much stronger
than tin/lead solder though.
You probably dont want to use it on a Tin/Lead plated PCB however...
Peter Wallace