I'm surprised at your response...!
I was taught to solder by a euro-mil-spec type of guy many years ago, and not to say he knows everything, I spent 40 years working on the highest quality professional equipment - and all sources indicate that good mechanical design MUST be in place to support good soldering
In that case all through hole boards
must have the
every component physically secured to the board before soldering, and then stress taken off each lead by looping or whatever.
In that case I must have been blind for 35+ years, including more than a decade of which was spend designing military PCB's with extensive experience in vibration testing and component modal measurement because I've never seen such a thing, never been taught to do such a thing, and never seen any standard for such a thing.
Yes, mechanical securing of components is all part of good design practice
when it's required, but the fact is that in the scheme of things almost every PCB ever made uses the solder joint as a mechanical support in some form for most of the components. To argue otherwise is to ignore reality of how boards are constructed.
- for long term reliability, and immunity from mechanical failure over long periods of vibration and environmental cycling.
Sure, and that's what potting and other methods are for when required.
Most components do not get this treatment.
Come on, seriously, in your 40 years of working on the "highest quality professional equipment" have you
ever seen PCB that de-stressed
every solder joint?
Your experiences are respected, but on this one, I'd still opt for snug holes, correct (usually flush) component mounting and adhesive where needed - rather than none of the above!
Unless you glue or otherwise physically fix the body of
every component to the board and de-stress
every lead, by definition the solder joint
is taking some mechanical stress. It must be, it's basic physics.
You said it yourself, use adhesive
where needed. Flush mounting and snug holes does
not remove mechanical support from the components. In fact, you can't have a snug hole
and a good solder joint with solder flowing through the holes to the pad on the other side. And if you are using a single sided board, then that's bad design practice for mechanically critical boards to begin with.