Well, I suppose you get quite a lot for ?10. I can't work out how you're supposed to use the soldering iron rest, as I really don't want to burn a hole in my carpet.
It also comes with "soldering paste", is this flux? It's brown. All the soldering guides I've looked at seem to talk about flux core solder.
The Shiznit:
Ok, so its an alternative to using the iron.
I was looking up "tinning" but I don't understand it, I have to melt solder onto the tip of the iron before i can use it?
One, that is a pretty nice starter kit. That multimeter appears to have a hFE measurement. it looks like the one I use.
Two, WTF IS WITH THE MASSIVE PLUG?!
Three, the paste is for...I think it cleans dirt and oxidation from the site to be soldered. I never use it, that is all in my solder. OTOH I would like to get a jar of this to ease tinning wires and cleaning the iron, I have a sponge but it doesn't get it all.
euan wrote:
I'm running in monoscope right now. I can't read multiple dimensions of meta right now
All of your plugs are like that?! Fack we only put those massive plugs on things like LAUNDRY DRYERS! We have three prong plugs that are far smaller than that, and most smaller items use a polarized two-prong plug with a GFI outlet.
euan wrote:
I'm running in monoscope right now. I can't read multiple dimensions of meta right now
I bought mesel' one of them cheap homebase efforts earlier in the week. Supremely useful weapon, the soldering iron, particularly for electronics an' that.
euan wrote:But you should also tin the iron really before doing any soldering. A damp sponge helps to wipe off/clean the tip before soldering.
What, so I should wipe the tip and then melt some solder on to the tip before I start soldering? Why? I understand the first part about cleaning it, but why should I "tin"?
hm... do i smell a 'how to' soldering tutorial ....meh..i guess you got google for that..but still,..a sticky in the fx section for the soldering noobs ...
seriously... i should learn this shit too, would save me a lot of money..i once had a class back in high school where you learned that..but it's al vague
When the hot thing touches the solder, the solder turns into a liquid. It's pretty simple. Best way to learn is to get some solder, an iron and some bits of wire and practice putting the wires together. A good idea is to try and make a cube out of 12 equal sized pieces of wire, that's how my dad taught me. It's a piece of cake after trying to do that.
PenPen wrote:All of your plugs are like that?! Fack we only put those massive plugs on things like LAUNDRY DRYERS!
no way dude, you're seeing it as much bigger than it is.
If you compare the relative size of the plug in that pic to the standard sizes for soldering irons, pliers, multimeter, or anything in that box, that plug is the size of a...well...220V plug we use here, like on dryers and such. I thought their 220V plugs were normal sized like our 110V plugs.
euan wrote:
I'm running in monoscope right now. I can't read multiple dimensions of meta right now