And I respectfully concur. Clearly your knowledge of solder trumps my own and I was being too picky and grabbing a number out of thin air.
My point was essentially that people can use an iron which is insufficiently hot for the job at hand. That can be affected by the solder composition but it may just as easily be that they're attempting to flow solder on a joint that dissipates heat so efficiently you can never get it hot enough unless you have a big jump in wattage. People will look at me askance for even broaching the idea of a solder gun, but YOU try getting something other than a cold joint with a 35W Weller on a ceramic tube socket. I suppose one could just as easily think it has something to do with the solder as the iron used to flow it.
My point was essentially that people can use an iron which is insufficiently hot for the job at hand. That can be affected by the solder composition but it may just as easily be that they're attempting to flow solder on a joint that dissipates heat so efficiently you can never get it hot enough unless you have a big jump in wattage. People will look at me askance for even broaching the idea of a solder gun, but YOU try getting something other than a cold joint with a 35W Weller on a ceramic tube socket. I suppose one could just as easily think it has something to do with the solder as the iron used to flow it.
Comment