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Question......silver solder is MUCH stronger than standard solder, so are you using this for the extra structural strength of the joint, or for some other reason?I haven't bought any silver solder in decades, so I can't help with the acquisition......sorry.
This is a similar product: http://www.chipquik.com/datasheets/SMD3SW.020%208OZ.pdfDigi-Key stocks 8 oz. rolls: https://www.digikey.com/products/en?keywords=SMD3SW.020%208OZ-ND
Solder melting point ranges according to Kester (http://www.kester.com/Portals/0/Documents/Knowledge%20Base/Alloy%20Temperature%20Chart.pdf):Sn60/Pb40 183-190 C, 361-374 F,Sn63/Pb37 183 C, 361 F,Sn62/Pb36/Ag2 179-189 C, 354-372 F
True, but it is the eutectic property of 63/37 that is very important for making good solder joints.
Are you suggesting that Sn62/Pb36/Ag2 alloy solder does not exhibit eutectic behvior?
https://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&field-keywords=silver%20solder&index=blended&link_code=qs&sourceid=Mozilla-search&tag=mozilla-20
It would appear that 63/37 is far better for electronic joints than even 60/40, since the melting range is a single temperature, implying that the entire alloy melts and then re-solidifies at one very narrow temperature, whereas the 60/40 has a range as broad as the silver-bearing solder. I did not realize the difference between 60/40 and 63/37 was so dramatic.