Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sal Ammoniac Bar

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sal Ammoniac Bar

    Hi Anyone use this to clean and tin their soldering iron tip?

    Here's a link to little vid using it:

    What Is Tip Tinning? | Soldering - YouTube
    Bobby, www.TysonTone.com

  • #2
    Originally posted by Beef Coon View Post
    Hi Anyone use this to clean and tin their soldering iron tip?

    Here's a link to little vid using it:

    What Is Tip Tinning? | Soldering - YouTube
    Yes, I've done it, and it works. This is in fact the traditional approach, going back to the Romans.

    Sal ammoniac - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    But one thing - don't breathe the smoke.

    Comment


    • #3
      It works, but forms corrosive products that are no good for electronics. I do a test with anything that stands a chance of being carried over to the actual joint; clean a piece of sheet copper or bare PCB and run a nice fluid pool over a small area. I then leave it in the bathroom for a week or so to get some humidity and warmth. If there's a reaction a green ring will form around the solder. This tells me that a fine-gauge wire could eventually get eaten through.

      Cleaning a tip with sal-ammoniac risks transferring the material (and the decomposed products) into your finished work. It belongs with 'killed spirits' (zinc chloride) for bench-soldering of non-electronic work.

      Comment


      • #4
        Hakko brass-turnings pad works best for me. Looks like a gold pot-scrubber. Picked up a few for cheap at Akahibara but if you're not in Tokyo you can get 'em thru good parts distributors, not cheap.

        Wet sponge too. There's a special sponge - of course it costs more than your typical sink scrubber - meant for soldering tips. I cut mine in half, and half a one lasts me a good year. I wet it with distilled water so it won't harden up with calcium/magnesium salts from tap water.

        Sal ammoniac - if you're soldering copper gutter & flashing. Yes, don't breathe the smoke. That's what caused the downfall of the Roman Empire. The smoke attracts Vandals & Visigoths & Huns & Mongrels. What's in your wallet?
        This isn't the future I signed up for.

        Comment


        • #5
          In a tight, water or coffee on a paper towel or coffee napkin will do.
          "If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a favourable reference of the Devil in the House of Commons." Winston Churchill
          Terry

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Leo_Gnardo View Post
            Hakko brass-turnings pad works best for me. Looks like a gold pot-scrubber.
            I bought a few of those and really like the way they clean, especially that they don't cool off your iron too much. But Last summer I went back to the wet sponge (I use the cellulose decorators sponges that don't burn). I'd relocated my bench next to a window and noticed when I pulled my iron out of the brass tip cleaner a little shower of super-fine metal particles launched into the air and formed a shimmering cloud when caught in a shaft of sunlight. As recommended by the manufacturer, I plunge rather than wipe. It's still enough to disturb those little springy brass turnings and as I use a fair bit of leaded solder I didn't want to breathe that in.

            Comment


            • #7
              Thanks everyone.
              Bobby, www.TysonTone.com

              Comment

              Working...
              X