Bottomfeeder
Mechanical
- Jul 19, 2004
- 2
We are providing an assembly to our customer which has a simple 1050 spring steel L bracket adhered to glass with 3M 5915 VHB adhesive. The bracket is the designed and spec'd by our customer. We are purchasing the bracket from their supplier and using it in the assembly.
Initially, the brackets did not spec a plating of any kind - bare steel. These came in very dirty (oil, rust, oxidation, etc) and were completly unsuitable for adhering with the VHB.
The issue was brought up, and the spec was changed to include: Nickel Plate, Min thk 10um, finish to conform to ISO std. 1458 Fe/Ni10b.
This has resolved the cleanliness issue, but we have seen some plating adhesion issues. In some cases, moderate tension (tugging by hand) applied to the mounted brackets results in complete failure of the bond between the base metal and the plating on the entire mating surface.
A corrective action has been sent to the supplier. Their recommendation is to change the plating process to "autocatalytic nickel plating according to ISO 4527"
While I have minimal experience in plating, I question the validity of this solution. Everything I have read indicates surface preparation and proper plating chemistry have the biggest impact on adhesion.
Is there something about the autocatalytic nickel plating process that produces better adhesion over the current process?
Initially, the brackets did not spec a plating of any kind - bare steel. These came in very dirty (oil, rust, oxidation, etc) and were completly unsuitable for adhering with the VHB.
The issue was brought up, and the spec was changed to include: Nickel Plate, Min thk 10um, finish to conform to ISO std. 1458 Fe/Ni10b.
This has resolved the cleanliness issue, but we have seen some plating adhesion issues. In some cases, moderate tension (tugging by hand) applied to the mounted brackets results in complete failure of the bond between the base metal and the plating on the entire mating surface.
A corrective action has been sent to the supplier. Their recommendation is to change the plating process to "autocatalytic nickel plating according to ISO 4527"
While I have minimal experience in plating, I question the validity of this solution. Everything I have read indicates surface preparation and proper plating chemistry have the biggest impact on adhesion.
Is there something about the autocatalytic nickel plating process that produces better adhesion over the current process?