Should I Be Conformal Coating My PCBs?

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Clbraddock

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2021
Messages
140
Location
Columbia, MO
Just found out about conformal coating. Is this something I should be doing to pcbs after I finish them? The pcbs are just used in my home studio, not in any weird weather. I'd never seen it mentioned in any diy projects though.
 
I don't think it's necessary in your case. We did it on a pcb that ran inside a chicken grill/stove where it would potentially get greasy and dirty. We never did it on the studio tape recorders we built (3M). It might be advisable on a high impedance circuit like a condenser mic capsule pre.
It's actually not that bad for rework, but it's worse than none, that's for sure.
 
It's mostly for wide temperature range (where moisture collects going from cold to warm) or corrosive environments (salt-air) or mil-spec/aerospace (design requirements). It does complicate desoldering repairs quite a bit (adding extra steps).
 
It's mostly for wide temperature range (where moisture collects going from cold to warm) or corrosive environments (salt-air) or mil-spec/aerospace (design requirements). It does complicate desoldering repairs quite a bit (adding extra steps).

I'm assuming it is a modern thing, is that right? Were they doing conformal coating on Urei, Teletronix, DBX etc back in the 60s-80s? zoji12 mentioned 3M not doing it for studio tape recorders. Sounds like I don't need to worry about it since I'm far from the ocean and the hardware never leaves my temperature and humidity controlled room, but just curious.
 
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