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Soldering Irons
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HKSblade1
at HC has their SMD rework station
( Aaron SS also recommends)
Holland and Headfi also likes, with the caveat that they are so cheap if they break they'd just toss em and buy another!
headfi links
Csi Solder - Search
marku52 here has one! and Defaced sounded like he might get one.
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostMy workhorse soldering pencil is a generic 60W one with a switchable 1N4007 diode in series (which is permanently mounted on the dedicated "soldering" outlet in my bench.
So any 60W one I plug there becomes instant 30/60W with the added advantage of having the heavier thicker (more thermal mass) 60W tip (typically 6mm) instead of the typical 4 or 5mm tip found on 30W ones.
Originally posted by dai h. View Postre: "large ground pads", if this is something like a multi-layer PCB, I doubt any regular iron will do the job (basically all the metal sinks away the heat so while the PCB will get hot, it will have great difficulty ramping up to solder melting temperature--I think you need specialized equipment such as a localized wave soldering type thing or a preheat of the board by baking, a hot plate type device, or perhaps hot air).
Originally posted by big_teee View PostI agree, I think the W60P would be perfect, and would fit in my Soldering Iron Cage.
BTW the big chisel tips for most irons and soldering stations last a long time; it is the smaller tips for fine PCB work that burn out like matches.
Steve Ahola
P.S. I was just looking at a Hakko clone 937D+ solder station at eBay with this important note:
When the heating light twinkle ceaselessly, it means the temperature is raising;
When the heating light twinkle regularly, it means the temperature is stabilized.
I thought that was very poetic, almost like haiku!Last edited by Steve A.; 04-06-2012, 04:13 AM.The Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
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I'm not good at babying Soldering irons, or Tools for that matter.
I would think the 60 Watt would be fairly heavy duty.
I try to keep the power off when not in use.
I'm use to using industrial grade tools and equipment.
T"If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a favourable reference of the Devil in the House of Commons." Winston Churchill
Terry
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Originally posted by Steve A. View PostIt was suggested that the W60P is not thermostatically controlled but it definitely is (although you can't adjust the temperature as you can with the "real" solder stations.)
In the tip there is a small magnet which moves back and forth which activates something a reed switch (?) which maintains the temperature accurately.
The larger tips might have more of a temperature swing because it takes longer for the mass to heat up or cool off. (BTW if you use a file on the tip it can affect the internal magnet and screw up the temperature regulation.)
Filing does destroy the iron plating, allowing the tip to quickly erode. One re-tins tips with acid flux, and when that fails, one replaces the tip.
After replacing the heater once and the switch a few times I can see how it would have been much better if I had used a switchable diode to cut the power in half. That will work with the W60P because it is not electronically controlled. Mine was a real workhorse and I bought it to reward myself when I got my first big income tax refund check after becoming a homeowner (that would have been 1985.)
By the way, transformer irons (like my 24-volt TCP, now WTCP) will burn out if run through a diode, even though there is nothing electronic present. It's the transformer that dies.
Right now I have the W60P in my Amazon cart for $68.05 (free shipping and no sales tax for CA residents!) but I still need to decide between that and the Xytronic 168-3C 60w solder station recommended here for roughly the same price although the shipping charge is around $15 from the only source I could find, Palco Electronics.Last edited by Joe Gwinn; 04-06-2012, 08:53 PM.
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I've always used Weber, because they are well built, and the parts are available decades later. I can still get parts for my original TCP iron, bought in 1972 or so.
Joe is WCPCT hot enough to solder a nickel cover on a humbucker?
I have a whole bag of tips to fit that Iron.
I have different shapes and sizes, but they are all 700 degree tips.
Years ago we were cleaner out an old work center, they were going in the dumpster, so I stuck them in my truck.
I considered a WCPCT Iron but more than I wanted to spend.
Here's about the best price I've seen.
Weller WTCPT Professional Soldering Station
T"If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a favourable reference of the Devil in the House of Commons." Winston Churchill
Terry
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Originally posted by Joe Gwinn View PostI have no opinion on Xytronics, so haunting the electronics groups may be useful. I've always used Weber, because they are well built, and the parts are available decades later. I can still get parts for my original TCP iron, bought in 1972 or so.
As for filing the tips if the file has become magnetized I suspect that it could impart some magnetism to the tip and/or iron which would affect the operation. In any case I appreciate your explanation of how it regulates the temperature, and for posting the patent numbers so that I can read more about it. (I hate to disseminate misinformation!)
I still have my old Xytronic solder station but when the local electronics parts house dropped the line my source of replacement tips was gone. (Back then I did not deal with mail orders except for a few companies like Mouser which had reasonable rates for shipping.)
Steve Ahola
*** With my old W60P after replacing all of the internal parts it would no longer cycle on and off properly (I'd usually have to touch the tip to the wet sponge to get it to cycle back on.) I wonder if the barrel might have acquired a magnetic charge which could keep the switch from operating properly...
T: I had trouble desoldering humbucker covers even with my W60P so I don't think that the WTCPT would handle that (I think it is a combination of wattage and tip mass.) For me the Hakko 80 watt iron does the job and it only costs about $30. Bruce Collins picked up a 125W iron for stained glass at a flea market for a ridiculously low price so that might be another option.The Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
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Originally posted by Steve A. View PostI went ahead and ordered the W60P for bigger stuff and the WLC100 for smaller stuff from Amazon last night which is currently running a sale on many of soldering items that they stock. My old W60P was a real workhorse and I think that my new one would last longer using the diode switch. Or maybe not. At half power it would take longer to reach the set-point temperature so it would be on longer when "idling," although at half power. The internals of my old one were totally cooked after 15+ years*** and I hate to subject anything to that kind of abuse.
As for filing the tips if the file has become magnetized I suspect that it could impart some magnetism to the tip and/or iron which would affect the operation. In any case I appreciate your explanation of how it regulates the temperature, and for posting the patent numbers so that I can read more about it. (I hate to disseminate misinformation!)
I still have my old Xytronic solder station but when the local electronics parts house dropped the line my source of replacement tips was gone. (Back then I did not deal with mail orders except for a few companies like Mouser which had reasonable rates for shipping.)
Steve Ahola
*** With my old W60P after replacing all of the internal parts it would no longer cycle on and off properly (I'd usually have to touch the tip to the wet sponge to get it to cycle back on.) I wonder if the barrel might have acquired a magnetic charge which could keep the switch from operating properly...
None of us are going to live forever!
At my age if I could 15 to 20 years, fork me I'm probably done!
Let us know how you like the 60P
Sounds like a great product.
T"If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a favourable reference of the Devil in the House of Commons." Winston Churchill
Terry
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Originally posted by big_teee View PostI've always used Weller, because they are well built, and the parts are available decades later. I can still get parts for my original TCP iron, bought in 1972 or so.
Joe is WCPCT hot enough to solder a nickel cover on a humbucker?
I have a whole bag of tips to fit that Iron.
I have different shapes and sizes, but they are all 700 degree tips.
Years ago we were cleaning out an old work center, they were going in the dumpster, so I stuck them in my truck.
I considered a WTCPT Iron but more than I wanted to spend.
Here's about the best price I've seen.
Weller WTCPT Professional Soldering Station
T
I bought my TCP (same pencil iron, different transformer that WTCP) in the early 1970s (or was it 1968?) for about $70, which was real money back then. The reason I bought the TCP was that I had a summer job at RCA, and that's what they used to solder electronics for NASA - this stuff literally went to the moon. So it has to be good enough for me. I have used it ever since, and it always worked well.
The TCP retired when I bought a WES51, which was on sale for $100, in 2007. The knob-controlled temperature was the attraction. The pen power is 50 watts. Skipping the digital control and temp display sharply reduced the price, with no obvious loss of functionality.
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Originally posted by Steve A. View PostI have had pretty good luck setting my Hakko to 800 degrees and putting some solder right where the iron touches the copper pad to help it conduct the heat.
P.S. I was just looking at a Hakko clone 937D+ solder station at eBay with this important note:
When the heating light twinkle ceaselessly, it means the temperature is raising;
When the heating light twinkle regularly, it means the temperature is stabilized.
I thought that was very poetic, almost like haiku!
LED is flashing = temp. rising
LED is constant = temp. stable
I'd say it looks more like a lazy reliance on machine translation (or maybe that the consumer won't find it that important compared to the low price).
re: the (mainly) Chinese made tips, something I remember reading on a Japanese site was that the attempt on some of them to increase life through increased iron plating (or iron plating + machining? or grinding to try to control the plating thickness) to try to counteract the reduced lifetimes due to the usage of lead-free solder wasn't something that worked well. The argument illustrated was this:
http://livedoor.blogimg.jp/gahaku15/...2.gif?b6a05b2f
(If I understand this correctly) the core of the tip is Cu (copper), the plating on the outside is Fe (iron). (Iron plating ends up being thicker on points and edges, so additional plating means extra thickness on points and edges.) The heat coming from the copper core tends to escape from the portions where the iron plating is thinnest. So, apparently the argument is that there is unwanted heat loss at the sides (where the iron plating is thinner), as well as decreased heat transfer at edges and points (the portions that will be used for soldering where you need the heat from the core to travel and transfer to). Additionally there are attempts on some of these tips to grind(?) away some of the plating (I think this must be on the tip/edge portions) but the effectiveness was suspect due to the difficulty of controlling the exact thickness of the plating. Being no expert I don't know how true all this is. (Possibly the clone tips are indeed the same and they are unhappy with the competition?)
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Originally posted by Steve A. View PostI went ahead and ordered the W60P for bigger stuff and the WLC100 for smaller stuff from Amazon last night which is currently running a sale on many of soldering items that they stock. My old W60P was a real workhorse and I think that my new one would last longer using the diode switch. Or maybe not. At half power it would take longer to reach the set-point temperature so it would be on longer when "idling," although at half power. The internals of my old one were totally cooked after 15+ years*** and I hate to subject anything to that kind of abuse.
As for filing the tips if the file has become magnetized I suspect that it could impart some magnetism to the tip and/or iron which would affect the operation. In any case I appreciate your explanation of how it regulates the temperature, and for posting the patent numbers so that I can read more about it. (I hate to disseminate misinformation!)
Nor can you magnetize the other components of the iron enough to matter. The alnico magnet in the switch is pretty strong. The test is to see if anything other than the alnico magnet in the switch will stick to piece of mild steel, or even be attracted.
*** With my old W60P after replacing all of the internal parts it would no longer cycle on and off properly (I'd usually have to touch the tip to the wet sponge to get it to cycle back on.) I wonder if the barrel might have acquired a magnetic charge which could keep the switch from operating properly.
I had trouble desoldering humbucker covers even with my W60P so I don't think that the WTCPT would handle that (I think it is a combination of wattage and tip mass.)
For me the Hakko 80 watt iron does the job and it only costs about $30. Bruce Collins picked up a 125W iron for stained glass at a flea market for a ridiculously low price so that might be another option.
A iron for stained-glass work should work because it can bring the metal up to temperature quite fast, limiting cooking of the pickup innards. The problem is that many irons idle at 900 F. The optimum is a temperature-controlled iron for stained glass, such as the Weller W100PG, which costs about $50 new and runs at 700 F, with 100 watts behind a big tip.
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Originally posted by Tonestack View PostThe Hexacon iron makes short work of chassis ground connections.It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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Originally posted by Joe Gwinn View PostHow many watts? And pounds?
I can't find elements for them.
I have one that is 110Watts, and another that is 90 Watts.
They use threaded tips that are, I think 3/8" threads.
T"If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a favourable reference of the Devil in the House of Commons." Winston Churchill
Terry
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Originally posted by big_teee View PostSteve:
None of us are going to live forever!
At my age if I could 15 to 20 years, fork me I'm probably done!
Let us know how you like the 60P
Sounds like a great product.
T
Steve AholaThe Blue Guitar
www.blueguitar.org
Some recordings:
https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
.
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