Elector PCB's - thermal relief for ground plane connection
I am not a PCB designer but as a design engineer my designs were laid out by an expert PCB designer. Often these were multi-layer PCB designs with power and ground planes. I have bought a couple of Elector kits recently and had some trouble when soldering the ground connection of many components. Looking at the board closely, it appears that they are designed on double sided board to keep the cost down but "infill" the ground across the board. Looking closer reveals no thermal relief pad for the ground connection and the soldering iron heat is "sucked" away by the infill copper. My iron was a little old so I bought a new 60W one hoping my iron was to blame. Nope, it still doesn't make a good joint even with heat applied for quite a while, probably too long for some components. I thought that the use of thermal relief pads for ground connections to a plane was standard practice, but not for these Elector board designs. I am very disappointed by this as it makes it very difficult to solder the board without worrying about over-applying heat to some components. I would be most interested in other builder's experiences with this and if there are any comments in case I am doing something wrong. Thank you.