You may think that you have a good connection. The top
manufacturing company who made the bad boards that I had to repair
over and over again certainly did. But you can not trust it.
PERIOD. The brass is swagged over the copper trace with a solder
coating on it. Both brass and solder alloys are soft metals and
expansion/contraction cycles will open a gap large enough for
oxygen and other corrosive gasses in the air to penetrate. You
will get oxidization and other forms of corrosion and eventually
the joint may/will fail. And it will be HELL to find and repair
especially with low level, high impedance signals. You could wind
up completely replacing a PCB that cost hundreds, thousands, or
even tens of thousands of dollars. I have seen it. I have fought
it. Brass tubing or hollow brass rivets MUST be soldered for
reliability and there is NO way to inspect that solder joint. It
will look perfectly normal on the outside while it is was never a
proper joint underneath and corrosion sets in. That is, assuming
that the brass was not coated with corrosion before it was
inserted in the hole.
USE soldered Z wires so you can see and inspect the solder joint
if you want a dependable joint. Or get a board made with plated
holes.
said,
The one thing one could do with the brass tubing is to make a conical
tool for both sides which will flange the tubing. Done right, it would
produce an airtight seal and solder would be superfluous (though highly
advised).