Soldering irons
Moderated By: mods
Soldering irons
After a bit of advice please. I have been using my Mums old (pretty cheap) soldering iron, and have recently switched to another cheapy from Aldi. Both are probably about 15w.
I'm having trouple getting a decent joint, the melting of the solder is very unpredicatable, and I tend to have to take mulitple goes to get a joint to be adequate.
Is this likely to be down to my technique, or is it down to using a cheap, low powered iron? The joints hold up over time, but they look awful - worse than my welding!
I've got a few guitars to wire, and I would like to build an amp kit at some moint, so I need to improve my soldering somehow!
I'm having trouple getting a decent joint, the melting of the solder is very unpredicatable, and I tend to have to take mulitple goes to get a joint to be adequate.
Is this likely to be down to my technique, or is it down to using a cheap, low powered iron? The joints hold up over time, but they look awful - worse than my welding!
I've got a few guitars to wire, and I would like to build an amp kit at some moint, so I need to improve my soldering somehow!
- timhulio
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15W won't do for lead-free solder. Initially I went through a few of those 30w Antex irons and just kept the receipt and exchanged them when they died (regularly). I've got one of these things now, but a different brand, that I bought from Maplin for £60. The first iron died after about four months. So, whatever you buy, keep the receipt!
![Image](http://i292.photobucket.com/albums/mm13/bluefordream/Tester_CA/STINF-SS-0004/AT938D_1.jpg)
![Image](http://i292.photobucket.com/albums/mm13/bluefordream/Tester_CA/STINF-SS-0004/AT938D_1.jpg)
timhulio wrote:15W won't do for lead-free solder. Initially I went through a few of those 30w Antex irons and just kept the receipt and exchanged them when they died (regularly). I've got one of these things now, but a different brand, that I bought from Maplin for £60. The first iron died after about four months. So, whatever you buy, keep the receipt!
Are you restricted to lead-free solder in the UK? I experienced the same problem with the lead-free solder. I experimented with hotter irons, but was concerned that I might damage capacitors and other electronics with the increased heat, so I switched to leaded solder and it ceased to be a problem. The leaded melts like butter and is much easier to work with. I am environmentally and health conscious, but the lead-free solder left me both frustrated and worried.
Disciple of Pain
"I'm like the monkey screwing the skunk. I haven't had enough, but I've about had all that I can stand!"
"Born to Lose. Live to Win." Lemmy Kilmister
"I'm like the monkey screwing the skunk. I haven't had enough, but I've about had all that I can stand!"
"Born to Lose. Live to Win." Lemmy Kilmister
Buy one of these solder stations, cheap & good
http://www.circuitspecialists.eu/solder ... 9d115c2ae1
http://www.circuitspecialists.eu/solder ... 9d115c2ae1
- timhulio
- Redheaded Stepchild
- Posts: 4693
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 10:06 am
- Location: London, UK
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Leaded solder is much nicer to use, there's no doubt. However I do a lot of soldering, often 3-4 hours a day, and when I used to use leaded solder (building much smaller quantities of pedals) a few years ago it gave me headaches. If you're not soldering all the time I'm sure it'd be fine though.speedfish wrote:Are you restricted to lead-free solder in the UK? I experienced the same problem with the lead-free solder. I experimented with hotter irons, but was concerned that I might damage capacitors and other electronics with the increased heat, so I switched to leaded solder and it ceased to be a problem. The leaded melts like butter and is much easier to work with. I am environmentally and health conscious, but the lead-free solder left me both frustrated and worried.
I don't think I've ever destroyed a component due to overheating, and I rarely socket transistors.
For guitar circuits I'd just use the braid, a pump shines with board mounted stuff. Either are acceptable for pot lugs but if you were removing, for example, the globbed on solder on a grounded-to pot casing or something, that's more of a wick job to me in the name of cleanliness.
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