Hey,
The "good" image has not been washed at all. I use no-clean flux. It is a bit hard to see, but I can see it in between the pads of the unpopulated parts and around the INA240 down the bottom.
The oil residue is the only real visible difference. What I am not sure about is the quality of the solder joints, or any damage to the board (in any way) in the presence of the oil.
I was thinking of dunking all the boards into some PCB cleaner I have (Chemtools Kleanium) and giving them a blast in the ultrasonic.
I might try and clean the boards, but just use them for in house testing and demos.
It is the old Galden that still has the burnt oil smell.
I drained the Galden from the machine and filtered it twice (through coffee filters, at the manufacturers recommendation).
I actually asked them to confirm that a simple filter through the coffee paper would be sufficient, and they said "If filtering once isn't enough, then just filter again. It should be enough."
I might drop them another email..
I was actually pretty surprised that there was still a smell. Before I drained it I'm pretty sure I could see that there was oil floating on top of the Galden.
It drains via a hole in the bottom of the process chamber, which has a weld bead around it. So not all the Galden drains out - you might be left with 1mm in the bottom.
I thought that the oil would still be floating on top of the remaining Galden, which I mopped up with cloths and disposed of, but the smell still remains!
As for the machine, after I drained the Galden I cleaned the machine out pretty thoroughly with the recommended oven cleaner. I left it over night with the lid open a bit to air out, then did the same thing the next day - another clean with the cleaner and lid open over night.
There is a hint of the smell still in the machine, but the Galden is definitely worse.
Thanks again