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Different PCB color (is it a different material?)


PCB drilling - drill bit material selectionPresensitised-PCB Build MethodPower supply positioning in PCB designHow to estimate the required PCB surface area for SMD power resistorsHow to design a feed line for a single wire antennapower & GND plane on two layer PCBsTrouble with PCB design for USB3 connectionsI2C Issues with First PCB






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;









22














$begingroup$


I have acquired this PCB.



The right side of the PCB handles high voltage AC power (250 V maximum,) while the left side handles low DC voltages (24 V maximum.)



They are separated, not only by board cuts, but also with this yellowish line in the middle. Is it just coloring to differentiate between the areas or is it some sort of protection material?



If it is some sort of protection material, how do I include it in my future designs?



My PCB










share|improve this question












$endgroup$





















    22














    $begingroup$


    I have acquired this PCB.



    The right side of the PCB handles high voltage AC power (250 V maximum,) while the left side handles low DC voltages (24 V maximum.)



    They are separated, not only by board cuts, but also with this yellowish line in the middle. Is it just coloring to differentiate between the areas or is it some sort of protection material?



    If it is some sort of protection material, how do I include it in my future designs?



    My PCB










    share|improve this question












    $endgroup$

















      22












      22








      22


      2



      $begingroup$


      I have acquired this PCB.



      The right side of the PCB handles high voltage AC power (250 V maximum,) while the left side handles low DC voltages (24 V maximum.)



      They are separated, not only by board cuts, but also with this yellowish line in the middle. Is it just coloring to differentiate between the areas or is it some sort of protection material?



      If it is some sort of protection material, how do I include it in my future designs?



      My PCB










      share|improve this question












      $endgroup$




      I have acquired this PCB.



      The right side of the PCB handles high voltage AC power (250 V maximum,) while the left side handles low DC voltages (24 V maximum.)



      They are separated, not only by board cuts, but also with this yellowish line in the middle. Is it just coloring to differentiate between the areas or is it some sort of protection material?



      If it is some sort of protection material, how do I include it in my future designs?



      My PCB







      pcb pcb-design pcb-fabrication






      share|improve this question
















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited May 30 at 11:15









      JRE

      28.9k7 gold badges53 silver badges92 bronze badges




      28.9k7 gold badges53 silver badges92 bronze badges










      asked May 27 at 13:07









      MalekMalek

      2311 silver badge6 bronze badges




      2311 silver badge6 bronze badges























          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          48
















          $begingroup$

          The green areas have been coated in solder-mask.

          The yellowish area is simply the base color of the PCB material, which has not been coated.

          It's the same base material throughout.



          You would typically achieve this in your designs by adding features to the solder-mask layer(s) of your board.

          The solder-mask layers are usually 'negative' images, so drawing something on those layers will result in the solder-mask being left out in those areas on your board.






          share|improve this answer










          $endgroup$










          • 1




            $begingroup$
            Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
            $endgroup$
            – Hearth
            May 27 at 15:27






          • 6




            $begingroup$
            @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
            $endgroup$
            – brhans
            May 27 at 16:59







          • 2




            $begingroup$
            @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
            $endgroup$
            – Hearth
            May 27 at 17:02






          • 10




            $begingroup$
            More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
            $endgroup$
            – khargoosh
            May 27 at 23:05







          • 5




            $begingroup$
            @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
            $endgroup$
            – Martin Bonner
            May 28 at 10:02


















          22
















          $begingroup$

          The yellowish PCB laminate has better electrical insulation than some solder masks, so sometimes air gaps and solder mask free areas are used to separate the high voltage and low voltage side.



          I work as CAM/CAM designer in a PCB fab, and recently we made a run of boards with no solder mask at all, because the boards were going in X-ray machines. Extremely high voltages, and the voltages would jump very easily through the solder mask.






          share|improve this answer












          $endgroup$










          • 6




            $begingroup$
            When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
            $endgroup$
            – Redja
            May 28 at 22:16










          • $begingroup$
            Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
            $endgroup$
            – Malek
            May 31 at 7:19



















          20
















          $begingroup$

          The yellowish line in the middle of the board is the true PCB colour.



          The green areas either side are solder resist.






          share|improve this answer










          $endgroup$






















            0
















            $begingroup$

            In this case the lack of solder mask won't afford any additional protection that adequate isolation doesn't already provide, so removing it for that purpose is futile. You may want to remove the solder mask for other reasons like adding plated text or artwork, peeling back the mask around pads, while creating custom footprints, and so on. While most programs have different naming conventions for these layers, they generally all have the same approach of applying solder mask anywhere there isn't a line, polygon or text on the layer. For example, in Eagle if you wanted to have a line with no mask separating two halves of the board you would draw a line on the tstop or bstop layers. In KiCAD you would do the same but on the f.mask or b.mask layers






            share|improve this answer










            $endgroup$










            • 3




              $begingroup$
              There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
              $endgroup$
              – rackandboneman
              May 28 at 23:02












            Your Answer






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            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes








            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            48
















            $begingroup$

            The green areas have been coated in solder-mask.

            The yellowish area is simply the base color of the PCB material, which has not been coated.

            It's the same base material throughout.



            You would typically achieve this in your designs by adding features to the solder-mask layer(s) of your board.

            The solder-mask layers are usually 'negative' images, so drawing something on those layers will result in the solder-mask being left out in those areas on your board.






            share|improve this answer










            $endgroup$










            • 1




              $begingroup$
              Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 15:27






            • 6




              $begingroup$
              @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
              $endgroup$
              – brhans
              May 27 at 16:59







            • 2




              $begingroup$
              @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 17:02






            • 10




              $begingroup$
              More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
              $endgroup$
              – khargoosh
              May 27 at 23:05







            • 5




              $begingroup$
              @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
              $endgroup$
              – Martin Bonner
              May 28 at 10:02















            48
















            $begingroup$

            The green areas have been coated in solder-mask.

            The yellowish area is simply the base color of the PCB material, which has not been coated.

            It's the same base material throughout.



            You would typically achieve this in your designs by adding features to the solder-mask layer(s) of your board.

            The solder-mask layers are usually 'negative' images, so drawing something on those layers will result in the solder-mask being left out in those areas on your board.






            share|improve this answer










            $endgroup$










            • 1




              $begingroup$
              Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 15:27






            • 6




              $begingroup$
              @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
              $endgroup$
              – brhans
              May 27 at 16:59







            • 2




              $begingroup$
              @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 17:02






            • 10




              $begingroup$
              More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
              $endgroup$
              – khargoosh
              May 27 at 23:05







            • 5




              $begingroup$
              @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
              $endgroup$
              – Martin Bonner
              May 28 at 10:02













            48














            48










            48







            $begingroup$

            The green areas have been coated in solder-mask.

            The yellowish area is simply the base color of the PCB material, which has not been coated.

            It's the same base material throughout.



            You would typically achieve this in your designs by adding features to the solder-mask layer(s) of your board.

            The solder-mask layers are usually 'negative' images, so drawing something on those layers will result in the solder-mask being left out in those areas on your board.






            share|improve this answer










            $endgroup$



            The green areas have been coated in solder-mask.

            The yellowish area is simply the base color of the PCB material, which has not been coated.

            It's the same base material throughout.



            You would typically achieve this in your designs by adding features to the solder-mask layer(s) of your board.

            The solder-mask layers are usually 'negative' images, so drawing something on those layers will result in the solder-mask being left out in those areas on your board.







            share|improve this answer













            share|improve this answer




            share|improve this answer










            answered May 27 at 13:15









            brhansbrhans

            10.5k2 gold badges25 silver badges33 bronze badges




            10.5k2 gold badges25 silver badges33 bronze badges










            • 1




              $begingroup$
              Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 15:27






            • 6




              $begingroup$
              @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
              $endgroup$
              – brhans
              May 27 at 16:59







            • 2




              $begingroup$
              @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 17:02






            • 10




              $begingroup$
              More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
              $endgroup$
              – khargoosh
              May 27 at 23:05







            • 5




              $begingroup$
              @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
              $endgroup$
              – Martin Bonner
              May 28 at 10:02












            • 1




              $begingroup$
              Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 15:27






            • 6




              $begingroup$
              @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
              $endgroup$
              – brhans
              May 27 at 16:59







            • 2




              $begingroup$
              @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
              $endgroup$
              – Hearth
              May 27 at 17:02






            • 10




              $begingroup$
              More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
              $endgroup$
              – khargoosh
              May 27 at 23:05







            • 5




              $begingroup$
              @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
              $endgroup$
              – Martin Bonner
              May 28 at 10:02







            1




            1




            $begingroup$
            Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
            $endgroup$
            – Hearth
            May 27 at 15:27




            $begingroup$
            Out of curiosity, can one tell what material the PCB is made of from this? The color looks slightly different than what I expect for FR-4.
            $endgroup$
            – Hearth
            May 27 at 15:27




            6




            6




            $begingroup$
            @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
            $endgroup$
            – brhans
            May 27 at 16:59





            $begingroup$
            @Hearth - "FR-4" doesn't really tell you very much about what the PCB substrate is actually made from. It's supposed to conform to this list of specs, and is probably a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate of some kind. The example in the OP's pics looks reasonable normal, maybe slightly on the pale side of average - but that could be the lighting.
            $endgroup$
            – brhans
            May 27 at 16:59





            2




            2




            $begingroup$
            @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
            $endgroup$
            – Hearth
            May 27 at 17:02




            $begingroup$
            @brhans Hmm, and here I was working as an electrical engineer for years thinking FR-4 was one specific material! I guess it doesn't matter exactly what it is if it has all the relevant properties, though.
            $endgroup$
            – Hearth
            May 27 at 17:02




            10




            10




            $begingroup$
            More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
            $endgroup$
            – khargoosh
            May 27 at 23:05





            $begingroup$
            More important is the fact that the "yellowish area" has had the copper etched off. This is what creates the electrical separation to isolate the HV and LV sides. It is not only missing the soldermask, but the copper.
            $endgroup$
            – khargoosh
            May 27 at 23:05





            5




            5




            $begingroup$
            @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
            $endgroup$
            – Martin Bonner
            May 28 at 10:02




            $begingroup$
            @khargoosh It's not only the yellowish area that has had the copper etched off - the dark green area has too. The yellowish area has the solder resist not placed there to clearly mark the separate zones (but that is a purely visual marking).
            $endgroup$
            – Martin Bonner
            May 28 at 10:02













            22
















            $begingroup$

            The yellowish PCB laminate has better electrical insulation than some solder masks, so sometimes air gaps and solder mask free areas are used to separate the high voltage and low voltage side.



            I work as CAM/CAM designer in a PCB fab, and recently we made a run of boards with no solder mask at all, because the boards were going in X-ray machines. Extremely high voltages, and the voltages would jump very easily through the solder mask.






            share|improve this answer












            $endgroup$










            • 6




              $begingroup$
              When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
              $endgroup$
              – Redja
              May 28 at 22:16










            • $begingroup$
              Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
              $endgroup$
              – Malek
              May 31 at 7:19
















            22
















            $begingroup$

            The yellowish PCB laminate has better electrical insulation than some solder masks, so sometimes air gaps and solder mask free areas are used to separate the high voltage and low voltage side.



            I work as CAM/CAM designer in a PCB fab, and recently we made a run of boards with no solder mask at all, because the boards were going in X-ray machines. Extremely high voltages, and the voltages would jump very easily through the solder mask.






            share|improve this answer












            $endgroup$










            • 6




              $begingroup$
              When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
              $endgroup$
              – Redja
              May 28 at 22:16










            • $begingroup$
              Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
              $endgroup$
              – Malek
              May 31 at 7:19














            22














            22










            22







            $begingroup$

            The yellowish PCB laminate has better electrical insulation than some solder masks, so sometimes air gaps and solder mask free areas are used to separate the high voltage and low voltage side.



            I work as CAM/CAM designer in a PCB fab, and recently we made a run of boards with no solder mask at all, because the boards were going in X-ray machines. Extremely high voltages, and the voltages would jump very easily through the solder mask.






            share|improve this answer












            $endgroup$



            The yellowish PCB laminate has better electrical insulation than some solder masks, so sometimes air gaps and solder mask free areas are used to separate the high voltage and low voltage side.



            I work as CAM/CAM designer in a PCB fab, and recently we made a run of boards with no solder mask at all, because the boards were going in X-ray machines. Extremely high voltages, and the voltages would jump very easily through the solder mask.







            share|improve this answer















            share|improve this answer




            share|improve this answer








            edited May 30 at 22:33









            Peter Mortensen

            1,5743 gold badges14 silver badges22 bronze badges




            1,5743 gold badges14 silver badges22 bronze badges










            answered May 28 at 16:21









            JakesanJakesan

            3201 silver badge4 bronze badges




            3201 silver badge4 bronze badges










            • 6




              $begingroup$
              When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
              $endgroup$
              – Redja
              May 28 at 22:16










            • $begingroup$
              Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
              $endgroup$
              – Malek
              May 31 at 7:19













            • 6




              $begingroup$
              When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
              $endgroup$
              – Redja
              May 28 at 22:16










            • $begingroup$
              Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
              $endgroup$
              – Malek
              May 31 at 7:19








            6




            6




            $begingroup$
            When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
            $endgroup$
            – Redja
            May 28 at 22:16




            $begingroup$
            When I saw this question I was wondering why the solder mask was removed, this clears it up.
            $endgroup$
            – Redja
            May 28 at 22:16












            $begingroup$
            Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
            $endgroup$
            – Malek
            May 31 at 7:19





            $begingroup$
            Wouldn't proper conformal coating solve this issue ?
            $endgroup$
            – Malek
            May 31 at 7:19












            20
















            $begingroup$

            The yellowish line in the middle of the board is the true PCB colour.



            The green areas either side are solder resist.






            share|improve this answer










            $endgroup$



















              20
















              $begingroup$

              The yellowish line in the middle of the board is the true PCB colour.



              The green areas either side are solder resist.






              share|improve this answer










              $endgroup$

















                20














                20










                20







                $begingroup$

                The yellowish line in the middle of the board is the true PCB colour.



                The green areas either side are solder resist.






                share|improve this answer










                $endgroup$



                The yellowish line in the middle of the board is the true PCB colour.



                The green areas either side are solder resist.







                share|improve this answer













                share|improve this answer




                share|improve this answer










                answered May 27 at 13:16









                Neil_UKNeil_UK

                87.8k2 gold badges90 silver badges203 bronze badges




                87.8k2 gold badges90 silver badges203 bronze badges
























                    0
















                    $begingroup$

                    In this case the lack of solder mask won't afford any additional protection that adequate isolation doesn't already provide, so removing it for that purpose is futile. You may want to remove the solder mask for other reasons like adding plated text or artwork, peeling back the mask around pads, while creating custom footprints, and so on. While most programs have different naming conventions for these layers, they generally all have the same approach of applying solder mask anywhere there isn't a line, polygon or text on the layer. For example, in Eagle if you wanted to have a line with no mask separating two halves of the board you would draw a line on the tstop or bstop layers. In KiCAD you would do the same but on the f.mask or b.mask layers






                    share|improve this answer










                    $endgroup$










                    • 3




                      $begingroup$
                      There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
                      $endgroup$
                      – rackandboneman
                      May 28 at 23:02















                    0
















                    $begingroup$

                    In this case the lack of solder mask won't afford any additional protection that adequate isolation doesn't already provide, so removing it for that purpose is futile. You may want to remove the solder mask for other reasons like adding plated text or artwork, peeling back the mask around pads, while creating custom footprints, and so on. While most programs have different naming conventions for these layers, they generally all have the same approach of applying solder mask anywhere there isn't a line, polygon or text on the layer. For example, in Eagle if you wanted to have a line with no mask separating two halves of the board you would draw a line on the tstop or bstop layers. In KiCAD you would do the same but on the f.mask or b.mask layers






                    share|improve this answer










                    $endgroup$










                    • 3




                      $begingroup$
                      There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
                      $endgroup$
                      – rackandboneman
                      May 28 at 23:02













                    0














                    0










                    0







                    $begingroup$

                    In this case the lack of solder mask won't afford any additional protection that adequate isolation doesn't already provide, so removing it for that purpose is futile. You may want to remove the solder mask for other reasons like adding plated text or artwork, peeling back the mask around pads, while creating custom footprints, and so on. While most programs have different naming conventions for these layers, they generally all have the same approach of applying solder mask anywhere there isn't a line, polygon or text on the layer. For example, in Eagle if you wanted to have a line with no mask separating two halves of the board you would draw a line on the tstop or bstop layers. In KiCAD you would do the same but on the f.mask or b.mask layers






                    share|improve this answer










                    $endgroup$



                    In this case the lack of solder mask won't afford any additional protection that adequate isolation doesn't already provide, so removing it for that purpose is futile. You may want to remove the solder mask for other reasons like adding plated text or artwork, peeling back the mask around pads, while creating custom footprints, and so on. While most programs have different naming conventions for these layers, they generally all have the same approach of applying solder mask anywhere there isn't a line, polygon or text on the layer. For example, in Eagle if you wanted to have a line with no mask separating two halves of the board you would draw a line on the tstop or bstop layers. In KiCAD you would do the same but on the f.mask or b.mask layers







                    share|improve this answer













                    share|improve this answer




                    share|improve this answer










                    answered May 28 at 10:58









                    MarticusMarticus

                    1




                    1










                    • 3




                      $begingroup$
                      There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
                      $endgroup$
                      – rackandboneman
                      May 28 at 23:02












                    • 3




                      $begingroup$
                      There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
                      $endgroup$
                      – rackandboneman
                      May 28 at 23:02







                    3




                    3




                    $begingroup$
                    There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
                    $endgroup$
                    – rackandboneman
                    May 28 at 23:02




                    $begingroup$
                    There might be differences in how the solder mask vs the bare pcb material behave regarding moisture absorption, dust adhesion, carbon tracking ...
                    $endgroup$
                    – rackandboneman
                    May 28 at 23:02


















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