rkcstr
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I was just watching Modern Marvels Engineering Disasters 12 and they talked about these "tin whiskers". I was thinking "WTF are those?" and apparently tin plating, which is used in a lot of electronics, has this strange phenomenon in which microscopic filaments grow out of the surface and can cause spontaneous shorts between pins of chips and whatnot. They have been implicated in many failures of satellites and probably likely something in your own life. But, using a lead alloy (which is non-RoHS compliant now) greatly prevents this.
Here's a link to some info on NASA's website:
http://nepp.nasa.gov/WHISKER/background/index.htm
And the obligatory wikipedia entry:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whisker_(metallurgy)
I've never heard of this before and thought it was pretty crazy. Probably explains why I have so many electronics that just went crap.
EDIT: wikipedia link fixed... automatic linking didn't include the end parenthesis before
Here's a link to some info on NASA's website:
http://nepp.nasa.gov/WHISKER/background/index.htm
And the obligatory wikipedia entry:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whisker_(metallurgy)
I've never heard of this before and thought it was pretty crazy. Probably explains why I have so many electronics that just went crap.
EDIT: wikipedia link fixed... automatic linking didn't include the end parenthesis before