braclark
Mechanical
- Jan 25, 2002
- 4
I just inherited a project to design fixtures for holding PCB’s in a De-ionized water wash machine. All current fixtures were made out of machined Lexan sheets and glued together.
The part of these fixtures that has failed the most is a spring retaining feature. It is machined into a row of tabs, heated, and the tabs are bent to form the part that retains one edge of the PCB’s. I’m told they are heated in a fixture that applies pressure while they are baked in the oven, and then they are cooled slowly while still under pressure.
All of the tabs show cracking at the location where they bend, and many have broken off. Since this fixture is glued together, replacing just the tabs is not an option.
Is Lexan a material that can be used as a spring?
What would a better material be for this?
I can easily change the design to remove heating and bending of the tabs. Would that help the durability of the tabs?
The part of these fixtures that has failed the most is a spring retaining feature. It is machined into a row of tabs, heated, and the tabs are bent to form the part that retains one edge of the PCB’s. I’m told they are heated in a fixture that applies pressure while they are baked in the oven, and then they are cooled slowly while still under pressure.
All of the tabs show cracking at the location where they bend, and many have broken off. Since this fixture is glued together, replacing just the tabs is not an option.
Is Lexan a material that can be used as a spring?
What would a better material be for this?
I can easily change the design to remove heating and bending of the tabs. Would that help the durability of the tabs?