Lead-free solder: FELDER Sn97/Cu3
Really? It's a high temperature solder, not something you should normally use for electronics.
Almost all lead-free solder is high temperature, and as I said, these two I've listed may be not the best choice.
I've seen leaded solder that is much worse at typical lead-free solder temperatures than these two alloys.
Can't say it's really good for soldering semiconductors, but it works well for passives and mechanical components, at least it is not bad - flows well, has enough flux, makes clean joints, doesn't drag after iron. I don't use lead-free as much as leaded solder, so maybe I'm wrong on some account.
p.s. Once I had a very funny Chinese leaded solder which loved to be stuck to soldering iron so much that it barely left any footprint on components except for a tiny film, at any temperature. The only thing it was good at is desoldering, because putting it on board and components was nearly impossible - all of it remained on the soldering iron tip.
