Resource Library

showing 445 through 450 of 1320 results. page 75 of 220 pages.
Tech Article
TriggerGrip InfoGraphic

The TriggerGrip Infographic is an easy reference sheet that details the four steps of PCB benchtop critical cleaning – wet, scrub, rinse and dry.  

Video
CleanClicker 750 LC Connector Cleaner Tools — Intro & Demo

If you're using LC connector cleaner tools, then ninety seconds is all it will take to prove the money-saving, time-saving benefits of the 1.25mm Sticklers CleanClicker 750 end-face cleaning tools. These devices are engineered to clean LC connectors faster and more reliably than any other tool on the market today. In addition, they are refillable,…

Video
Cleaning Fiber Optic Networks (Part 1 of 3)

This introduction to cleaning fiber optic networks is the first in a  three-part video training series. This video illustrates the the importance of maintaining perfectly clean ports, jumpers and splices in every fiber network.

Video
MicroCare Leads the Way on Worker Safety and Regulatory Compliance

MicroCare and our Critical Cleaning Lab lead the way on worker safety and regulatory compliance for critical cleaning processes. Still using smelly, old-style solvents? Or wasteful, high-pressure aerosol sprays? Are your cleaning fluids REACHand F-Gascompliant? Struggling with VOCsin today's low-VOC world? Or slow, expensive and energy-hungry aqueous cleaners? It's time to make the change to…

Video
Going Green with Vapor Degreasing

In this going green with vapor degreasing video, vapor degreasing is featured as an environmentally-sound way to clean printed circuit boards. Your manufactured electronic parts must be perfectly clean for next step processing. Vapor degreasing not only uses no water but it also consumes very little electricity. Plus it recycles cleaning fluid for hundreds of hours to cut waste. …

Video
Acid Acceptance Testing with nPB-Based Solvents

Acid acceptance testing is an important maintenance function for companies using nPB in their vapor degreaser. nPB-based solvents can turn acid if  you don’t regularly monitor the acid  level of the solvent; sometimes this can get really nasty. A vapor degreaser that has “gone acid” will actually eat away the internal surfaces of the machine.…