Thanks a lot everyone for ur suggestions...i really appreciate
it...i looked around for sockets, but i find them to b really
expensive and probably my prof wont allow me to use them for labs.
this is wat i did - > i silvered the copper pads first to prevent
further oxidation and to give a cleaner surface. then i placed the
transistor on the pads and put a tape on it to hold it to the PC
board. and checked in the network analyzer. i was seeing lotta
resonance points. so, i went ahead and tried to put some more
pressure on the transistor to hold it firmly to the pads. then i
could c no resonance points. So for now i'm using a clip arrangement
to exert pressure and that kinda works fine. its wooden clip and so
it isnt affecting my calculations. its not a permanent solution, but
hey it was an easy solution. any comments abt this ??
Sirish
--- In
Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Ron Amundson"
<ron_amundson@h...> wrote:
> > Solder some thin beryllium copper strips onto the microstrip so
that
> > the springness holds down the flat leads of the device onto the
track.
> > There's little extra fringing effects then. If you're testing
thousands,
> > just make a simple pick and place gadget that picks the
transistor out
> > with a vacuum tube, holds it down against the pcb for the test,
then
> > places it back into the packaging.
> >
> Thats a great idea.I'm so used to using pogo's I had never thought
of a DIY
> spring right on the microstrip. This is very good.
>
> Ron