5.1 Cleaning & Cosmetic Inspection
RemovingShiny residueshardware and finalsharp polish.
electronics Themean lastlittle station beforeif the packfinal cellproduct islooks careless. Cleaning and cosmetic inspection form the bridge between technical build quality and customer perception, where perceptionresidues, becomessmears, reality:or cleanlifted surfaceslabels signalcan qualityundo beforethe atrust singleearned LEDby blinks.precision assembly. This step isn’tis cosmeticsmore forthan show—presentation: it safeguards optics, protects labels from lifting, keeps windows clear,surfaces, and preventsensures FODevery (foreignunit objectcommunicates debris)competence fromthe hitchingmoment it’s unboxed. Consistent methods, approved materials, and honest inspection lighting turn finishing work into a ridecontrolled, intorepeatable theprocess field.rather Finishes,than lenses,an and seals each have their own “likes and dislikes,” so the right wipes and chemistries matter as much as the technique. Honest light at arm’s length sets the standard for Grade-A faces, while tidy witness marks and dust caps say the build is complete, not improvised. When cleaning is deliberate and inspection is consistent, the product leaves the line looking as dependable as it was built.afterthought.
5.1.1 Why this step matters (the one-liner)
Customers judge with their eyes and hands. Clean, even, fingerprint-free surfaces reduce returns and make the rest of your build look competent.
5.1.2 What “clean” means here
- No loose stuff: dust, fibers, metal fines (FOD).
- No films: flux haze, adhesive smear, gasket crumbs, TIM/grease mist.
- No marks: fingerprints, water spots, label squeegee lines.
- No damage: scratches, rubs, lifted paint, light leaks around windows.
- Ready to ship: protective caps on, films removed where required, labels stuck hard.
5.1.3 Tools & consumables (use the right ones)
- Gloves: powder-free nitrile (no silicone).
- Wipes: low-lint microfiber or cellulose-poly (class: lens-safe).
- Swabs: foam-tip, ESD-safe handles for tight spots.
- Air: filtered, dry blow-off; ionizer on for plastics/lenses.
- Brush: ESD-safe soft bristle for vents/knurls.
- Chemicals (plant-approved only):
- IPA 70–99% (general degrease; avoid on some polycarbonate/anti-glare)
- DI water or neutral aqueous cleaner (smears/salts)
- Adhesive remover (citrus/acetone-free grade) for label bleed—test first
- Panel/lens cleaner specified by the display/paint vendor
- No silicone polishes unless customer spec says so (label fish-eye risk)
Rule: if the finish is unknown, spot test on a hidden area.
5.1.4 Cleaning playbook (fast, safe sequence)
- Prep the area: bright diffuse light, clean mat, ionizer on, fresh gloves.
- Dry clean first: filtered air → soft brush → tack wipe on seams/vents.
- Wet clean next (smallest effective amount): dampen wipe (don’t flood), wipe in one direction, flip to a clean face each pass.
- Detail: swabs for bezel corners, screw heads, logo relief, connector shells.
- Specials:
- Lenses/windows: use the approved lens cleaner, not IPA if coating is anti-glare/hard-coat sensitive.
- Labels: roll with a clean squeegee; if edges lift, re-press with heat per spec or replace—never glue.
- Adhesive ooze: remove carefully with approved remover; re-wipe with IPA/DI to de-scent.
- TIM/threadlocker smear: lift with dry wipe first, then minimal solvent; keep away from seals.
- Dry & de-static: final microfiber wipe; short ionized air burst.
- Final touch: fit dust caps, port plugs, and protective films only where the customer expects them (don’t hide defects).
5.1.5 Materials & what they like (and hate)
5.1.6 Cosmetic inspection setup (make it repeatable)
- Lighting: bright diffuse overhead (~1000–1500 lx) + optional grazing light to reveal scratches.
- Distance/angle: arm’s length (≈ 500–600 mm) for Grade-A; closer only for Grade-B internals.
- Background: matte neutral; cut reflections.
- Reference: golden sample or photo card at station.
5.1.7 Acceptance cues (starter criteria—tune to your spec)
Light leaks check: dim room, backlight on max—no glowing seams at windows/bezel joints.
5.1.8 What to record (short and useful)
- If your customer/spec demands: cosmetic release tick (Grade-A/labels/windows), photo of front panel, and any exceptions with location.
- For rework: note method/chemical, area, and final PASS check. Attach to the SN.
5.1.9 Common residues → best removal
5.1.10 Common traps → smallest reliable fix
5.1.11 Pocket checklists
Before
- Ionizer on; bright diffuse light; clean mat
- Approved wipes/chemicals at hand; fresh nitrile gloves
- Label map & golden photo card visible
Clean
- Dry: filtered air → brush → tack wipe
- Wet: minimal solvent; one-direction strokes; swap faces often
- Lenses with approved cleaner only; labels rolled and sealed
Inspect
- Grade-A faces: no visible scratches at arm’s length
- Windows: no dust/leaks; LEDs clean; light-leak check
- Labels: position ±0.5–1.0 mm, no bubbles, edges sealed
- Hardware & seals tidy; witness marks clean
Closeout
- Caps/plugs fitted; required films applied/removed per spec
- Cosmetic release ticked; photos (if required) bound to SN
- Place on clean rack or straight to pack cell