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92% of people apply the soldering iron incorrectly. That's why it doesn't Solder !

In this video I show you the 5 most common mistakes that beginners usually make when soldering with tin and how to avoid them. I will also give you tips about how to solder with a soldering iron and what you should not do with your soldering iron and how to take care of your soldering iron.
On the Repairman 101 channel, you can learn many inventions, repair projects, crafts and DIY techniques, plus how to reuse or recycle.
We focus on carpentry, metal work, welding, plastic repairs, electrical repairs, plumbing techniques, we also teach how to use DIY tools for the home or workshop.

Пікірлер: 492

  • @Repairman10169
    @Repairman10169Ай бұрын

    👉 Please enable subtitles in your language 👈 Thanks for watching 👍 After you watch this video ALSO SEE 👉kzread.info/dash/bejne/g4Glu7qkfLLMZZM.html 👈 You will Enjoy ! Stay Safe !!

  • @CreativeHop

    @CreativeHop

    Ай бұрын

    This video provides useful information on how to properly use a soldering kit. This reduces the number of people misusing and causing damage to the product. Videos can help viewers better understand the process and techniques for using the correct soldering kit to avoid common mistakes

  • @CreatorTips.007

    @CreatorTips.007

    Ай бұрын

    He gave very precise and clear instructions, gave him 1 like

  • @kurt1391

    @kurt1391

    15 күн бұрын

    This is a good video, but I always find videos where the presenter remains mute to be kind of creepy. Still, I learned a couple things, so thumbs up.

  • @OldJoe212
    @OldJoe21221 күн бұрын

    47 years as a phone guy in a central office. I went through pounds of solder. When tinning a wire end or soldering a splice, always heat from the bottom and apply solder from the top if possible. Also, apply a coating of fresh solder to your iron's tip just before unplugging it. This way, your tip is nicely tinned when you heat it up and you'll be ready to solder right away.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    20 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the feedback !!

  • @stereodreamer23

    @stereodreamer23

    19 күн бұрын

    My father worked for C&P/Bell Atlantic his whole life, and this is exactly how he taught me to solder! Iron under the wire, solder on top. I was soldering hobbyist circuit boards before I was in Middle School!

  • @craig7083

    @craig7083

    18 күн бұрын

    40 years in the CO here too!

  • @fastone371

    @fastone371

    17 күн бұрын

    @@stereodreamer23 I was going to ask why not hold the solder iron under the wire and add solder to the top. I have not soldered nearly as much as you I'm sure but that's how I do it. I also like to use a wider tip for larger wire as in the video.

  • @TheCommo81

    @TheCommo81

    17 күн бұрын

    My father was one too. He taught me to solder. He retired in 2005 as a COT.

  • @johncoenraads9681
    @johncoenraads968126 күн бұрын

    Generally good advice but may I suggest that a small chisel tip is much more versatile and better suited to this type of soldering in terms of heat transfer. Secondly, apply the flat side of the tip to the underside of the wire (hot air rises) briefly touch the solder to the contact point between the wire and the tip to establish a thermal bridge, wait two seconds for the wire to heat up and then, and only then, apply solder to the top of the wire and let gravity pull it down. Also I like to work with a fairly hot iron which allows one to get in and out fast before melting the insulation.

  • @geoffmorgan6059

    @geoffmorgan6059

    25 күн бұрын

    Yes!, and use a small amount of electrical grade flux (rosin based, never acid) to the joint. The flux in the core is often not that effective. The old "Oatey" brand was great, not sure about today's products since the EPA and California are always "finding" a new carcinogen. I use dry Scotchbrite to clean the tip.

  • @user-vp1sc7tt4m

    @user-vp1sc7tt4m

    25 күн бұрын

    In my experience, the method he is using is perfect for small wire gauges and consider, when soldering electronic components, you must be sure you don't overheat the connectors or you fry the circuit in the chip or transistor. Wetting the tip with solder increases heat transfer and if you apply the solder to the other side of the heated wire or component, the solder will suck in toward the heat filling all gaps and you get a nice non-oxidized solder joint very rapidly so you can pull the heat away. I appreciate your experience with heavier wire and larger components requiring chisel tips and note that sometimes I sure should consider using one. I have not done much work with heavier gauge wire or components.

  • @wvincus5522

    @wvincus5522

    25 күн бұрын

    Correct!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes i agree with your tips ! Thanks for commenting!

  • @johncoenraads9681

    @johncoenraads9681

    22 күн бұрын

    Let me add one more detail that I think is important and that is to use a small diameter solder. I use 0.8 mm diameter solder with 2.0 % flux for all my soldering. The smaller diameter gives you greater control over the amount of solder being deposited and also reduces the amount of heat being sucked away while the joint is being made. I've also never felt the need to add additional flux. It's a light hearted bone of contention between me and my organ builder friend whom I accuse of using "plumbing" solder. (He's actually very skilled and our record of making cold solder joints is just about the same.)

  • @gsegallis
    @gsegallis19 күн бұрын

    News flash... Modern soldering irons regulate the temperature so they don't overheat. Resting it on a heatsink just makes it use more power

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    And if someone tries the heatsink "trick" shown here with a non temperature-regulated soldering iron, when you pick up the iron you'll have to wait longer for the tip to heat fully so that it can melt solder effectively.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    18 күн бұрын

    Yes that´s true, thx for commenting !

  • @frankdemarest2790

    @frankdemarest2790

    18 күн бұрын

    Agreed. Also aluminum can contaminate solder resulting in a poor joint, another reason not to rest iron on aluminum.

  • @EdWeibe

    @EdWeibe

    14 күн бұрын

    just use a stand.

  • @shadeofthenightttv3052

    @shadeofthenightttv3052

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@EdWeibe never seen a stand with a heat sink like shown in this Video though. With my stand, the tip of the soldering iron just floats in the air. Same for every other srna die saw in my life.

  • @txkflier
    @txkflier26 күн бұрын

    I wouldn’t have used the green side of the sponge. Alligator clips can damage the insulation. Don’t use a pointed tip when soldering larger components. Pull the iron back when you quit applying solder. Don’t continue to heat the solder. I give this video a rating of 3 on a scale of 5.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    26 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the feedback !! I give your tips a rating 0f 3 out of 6.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@Repairman10169, I've been soldering electronics for over 50 years and the person who begn this comment thread is correct. You can see the teeth marks in the insulation of the wire from the alligator clip and they only get worse when you solder the copper and the heat travels up the copper to soften the insulation. Also, The use of a heat sink to cool the tip down when you're not soldering means that you will have to hold the iron in your hand and let the tip come back up to temperature when you lift it out of the holder in order to solder something. It's better to use a solder station with adjustable temperature and you can just turn it down a little bit when you're not using the iron and then turn it back up to use it again.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    20 күн бұрын

    ​​@@Repairman10169, ps, I see steam come off of the sponge the first time you touch the tip to it which means that the sponge is too wet. Sponges designed specifically for cleaning sottering tips are supposed to be made with materials that don't contain corrosive compounds such as sulfur or chlorine although if you buy soldering accessories from Amazon or directly from China you get what you get and it may not be high quality. I switched to using the brass wool tip cleaners a decade ago and I find them more effective than the sponge, and I've also seen manufacturers claim that the use of the sponge creates stress fractures in the plating on the tip and shortens tip life. I have also found that buying soldering tips from Amazon or flea Bay or China typically gets you tips that are made of iron or steel throughout from one end to the other and these will provide poor heat transfer. High quality tips should be made from copper that is plated at the pointy end with iron because iron will resist the dissolving effects of solder and flux much better than bare copper which is quickly oxidized and eaten away. If your tips are strongly magnetic throughout from one end to the other then they are likely made of iron or steel, not copper and will give poor performance. ( There's a video on my channel about using a magnet to separate good tips from bad tips). The rest of the tip body might be plated with Chrome or something similar that resists the application of solder. Finally I generally dislike the conical tips that are provided as "standard" with most soldering irons and usually upgrade them to a so-called "chisel" tip which is a bit of a misnomer because they're rounded and blunt.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    Heatshrink tubing placed over the toothed jaws of alligator clips will make it safer for holding wires that you are soldering together. Silicone tubing, or the woven fabric tubing that looks sort of like asbestos (it used to be known as Cambric tubing) is even better.

  • @composimmonite3918

    @composimmonite3918

    16 күн бұрын

    Don't use any of the cheap, makeshift equipment in this video. Buy the proper tools!

  • @tanglediver
    @tanglediver25 күн бұрын

    There MAY be flux inside the core of solder wire, BUT, you need to apply flux paste to the joint for BEST results, AND, always clean burnt flux OFF OF the solder joint once it has cooled. This has been a NASA Spec trained solderer, soldering tip PSA.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Thanks for your feedback !

  • @r6u356une56ney

    @r6u356une56ney

    17 күн бұрын

    Not when soldering electronics.

  • @KitLaughlin
    @KitLaughlin23 күн бұрын

    I learned more about soldering in this short video than all of the other ones that I have watched. Thank you - the principles are now clear.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Glad it was useful and thx for watching !

  • @kydelastra

    @kydelastra

    12 күн бұрын

    Watch more, this video gives terrible advice.

  • @KitLaughlin

    @KitLaughlin

    12 күн бұрын

    @@kydelastra I watched the whole video. Please point out the poor advice, in your experience.

  • @sdc8547
    @sdc854713 күн бұрын

    News flash: the word is solder, not sodder. 😢

  • @farkelrysunhope6339

    @farkelrysunhope6339

    3 күн бұрын

    Fantastic. I get so sick of them saying Soddering. IPC videos do the same.

  • @farkelrysunhope6339

    @farkelrysunhope6339

    3 күн бұрын

    And why no flux ?

  • @lhunt480

    @lhunt480

    Күн бұрын

    @@farkelrysunhope6339 It’s within the solder itself..

  • @user-hi8ih2mh9f
    @user-hi8ih2mh9f28 күн бұрын

    コテを上から当てるのではなく、横から当てるイメージの方が熱が伝わり易いよ。固体でも熱は「上から下へ」よりも「下から上へ」の方が伝わり易い。それに、フラックスは酸化銅も清浄してくれる可能性が有る。フラックスを塗って置くのも事前処理の一つ。酸化してても撚線はちゃんと撚り直してからはんだ付けする(ハンダ量フラックス量を減らす意味も有る)。線材と線材をはんだ付けする時は、解して一緒に寄り直してから作業する事もある。コテ先にハンダを盛ってピンセットの先でハンダを馴染ませるように擦る(こする)と、コテ先の酸化物が取れ易いよ。後は温度設定・実温度は作業前に確認するのをお勧めします。コテ先が酸化して熱が伝わりにくいのも判る。

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    27 күн бұрын

    👌🙏👋

  • @happysawfish

    @happysawfish

    23 күн бұрын

    Oil from fingers does not help adhesion either. NASA standard soldering requires 99% alcohol cleaning wipe down I believe. Or similar. Sure does not hurt if the connection is super important. Also abrasion of the wires for adhesion helps a stronger bond, right?

  • @achernarscardozo69

    @achernarscardozo69

    21 күн бұрын

    Lo importante es la limpieza previa de los cables a soldar. Luego es muy importante usar fundente antes de aplicar estaño. NO se debe confundir la convección del calor en el aire con el calentamiento por contacto de dos metales que están en contacto. Aquí NO importa lo que es arriba o abajo.

  • @umashikurumisawa4057

    @umashikurumisawa4057

    19 күн бұрын

    チョー気持ちいい‪👍🏻 昔、ラジコンカーやってたから”モーターの配線(メッキハンダ)”しまくってました(*^^*)

  • @AR-ey1ur
    @AR-ey1urАй бұрын

    Not sure about the last one... generally the advice out there is that you should heat up the elements you want to join together and then apply solder, not the other way around.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, thats correct. Thanks for watching 👍👋

  • @Mike40M

    @Mike40M

    Ай бұрын

    @@Repairman10169 Done fairly correct. Tip must be wet with tin to get heat transfer to the joint. Then solder applied to joint, not to tip. Maybe a little too much tin on the tip.

  • @michaelpeterson3354
    @michaelpeterson335414 күн бұрын

    Very informative yet concise. Soldering has always been hit and miss for me, but I expect you video will improve my success. Also, I have to add that one of the best things about your video that sets it apart from nearly any other instructional video (regardless of the subject matter) is your format. Big plus is NO TALKING! Nice light music, clear close-up demonstration of Dos and Don'ts, backed up with just the right amount of text. Completely avoids the mistakes most KZreadrs make in instructional videos....which are: way much talking, too little instructing, bad camera work, and bad editing. THANK YOU and WELL DONE!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    13 күн бұрын

    Glad you liked ! thx

  • @andyowens5494
    @andyowens549428 күн бұрын

    One thing you did, but didn't say; wet the bit, but apply the solder to the workpiece, not the bit. A wet bit has a surface that allows heat transfer to the workpiece, but you want the solder (and flux) on the workpiece, not the bit - otherwise the flux erodes the bit faster (rather than eroding oxides on the workpiece, ensuring a strong bond between solder and workpiece(s))

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    27 күн бұрын

    👌🙏👋

  • @ya472

    @ya472

    26 күн бұрын

    Wet the bit? With solder, or water? Ambiguous statement. As this person showed, hang solder on the bit to boil the paste on the workpiece, then apply more solder to the heat transfer point. Do this even when using rosin core.

  • @topcatandgang

    @topcatandgang

    24 күн бұрын

    the best tips have a silver coating to keep the tip from oxidizing.

  • @ya472

    @ya472

    24 күн бұрын

    @@topcatandgang That is something I never encountered, but since silver has a higher melting point, this sounds awesome.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@topcatandgang, soldering iron tips are most definitely not plated with silver; they're plated with *iron*. Silver would quickly dissolve off of the tip and into the solder; iron will alloy with and "wet" to the solder sufficiently to enable a good heat transfer, but iron resists the dissolving effect of tin and flux. Good soldering iron tips are made of plated copper for efficient heat transfer, with iron plating at the pointy end and perhaps chrome or similar plating on the body of the tip so that solder will only wet to the business end of the tip. If your soldering tips are strongly magnetic from one end to the other then they're made of iron or steel and are of poor quality; there's a video on my channel about this.

  • @AmazingSmart-ngth
    @AmazingSmart-ngth22 күн бұрын

    Every time I watch your videos, I'm inspired to scale new creative summits. Grateful for your inspiring productions!

  • @BummedSupraDude
    @BummedSupraDude20 күн бұрын

    Love the video, a lot of good info. Please correct me if I'm wrong, the use of a wet natural sponge with slots sliced in it for the tip to dip down into is the safest way to clean a soldering tip. The tip is coated with various metals, the sponge only removes the burned flux and solder. The pad shown is basically ScotchBrite not much different than sandpaper.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    Proper soldering-tip cleaning sponges from back in the day were made with materials that didn't contain sulfur or chlorine compounds which would hasten oxidation of the tip; but nowadays when people buy soldering accessories on the internet direct from China or who knows where, they're probably just ordinary kitchen sponges, and although damp kitchen sponges will "work" for cleaning soldering iron tips, they may not be ideal. I suppose you could clean the tip while it's cold with a dry scotch-brite pad, but if you keep the tip clean and tinned while you're using it it really shouldn't ever need to have anything even mildly abrasive used on it. I don't even remember this video telling people to *wet* the kitchen scrub-sponge first! I've also seen videos where people saturate the sponge with so much water that it emits puffs of steam when they touch the solar and iron to it which can create stress fractures in the iron plating on the tip, damaging it and shortening it's life. I rarely use the wet sponge anymore, preferring the brass wool tip cleaner. I have some videos on my channel about cleaning connections before soldering, separating good quality tips from poor quality or counterfeit tips (which are all too common on the internet), and a review/teardown of a $45 Harbor Freight soldering station and accessories (it's surprisingly good, way better than what I had to work with as an electronics-nerd teenager in the 1970s).

  • @oantech4252
    @oantech425213 күн бұрын

    Some more tips... Use distilled water instead of tap water for your sponge to keep out minerals, chlorine and other contaminants. Use a chisel tip for joining wires instead of a pencil tip for better heat transfer and solder flow. Pencil tips are mainly for soldering pins on circuit boards. Pre-Tin each wire before joining the two wires in a splice for better penetration into the core of the solder joint. Use no clean flux core solder. For best results in avoiding long-term corrosion, wash the joint of residual flux with alcohol afterward. Keep alcohol and flammable liquids AWAY from the hot soldering iron. Cover the finished splice with shrink tube, add a toothpick or a q-tip core as a splint under the shrink tube to protect it from bending/breaking.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    12 күн бұрын

    Great tips ! Thanks

  • @thomasbarrett3175
    @thomasbarrett317519 күн бұрын

    Thanķs to your video, i am no longer part of the 92% who do it wrong! Thank you!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    19 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching !

  • @kurt1391

    @kurt1391

    15 күн бұрын

    That brings up my question: How do we know the number is 92%?

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano239121 күн бұрын

    Now i see all my errors! This helped a whole lot. Now i can solder with a bit more confidence

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    20 күн бұрын

    Thanks 👍

  • @transientaardvark6231
    @transientaardvark623120 күн бұрын

    #6 you don't need over a cm of bared wire to make a joint. #7 don't hold the wire in a croc clip near to the joint, the insulation will melt and get damaged by the clip teeth (use something that grips less hard, or put paper in the clip jaws. #8 it makes life easier if you tin each part itself before joining as there is less to heat up "raw". #9 probably best not to let cut-off bits ping off, they might end up somewhere unfortunate (the vent of some mains equipment, your coffee, someone's nose)

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    17 күн бұрын

    👌🙏👋👋

  • @hidekikurihara2023
    @hidekikurihara202323 күн бұрын

    いい動画です。がひとつだけ。ワニ口で挟むのはいただけません。大事な被覆を傷つけかねません。安全第一です。

  • @davidl6041
    @davidl604119 күн бұрын

    You still make the common mistake of moving the Iron during the process, with clean tip and a little bit of fresh solder on the end, hold the iron on the centre of the joint/wire , keep everything DEAD STILL, give it a 3-10 seconds to heat the copper, then "paint" on the solder, starting near the iron working away from it .. without moving the iron at all, once you've "painted" the entire joint carefully remove the iron without disturbing the wires A key factor is to have the correct size tip and heat in the iron to transfer enough heat to the job so you can do the whole process quick

  • @JAY-fq7sb
    @JAY-fq7sb20 күн бұрын

    Great tips. My dad taught me years ago how to use an iron correctly. He used flux paste to get the solder to "move in" faster to the wire. I still have it today it works still. Also, another tip. When using heat shrink. No since in using a flame or torch to shrink it. Use the soldering iron shaft to heat the shrink tube. No more blistering or melted insulation. Just a nicely heat shrink tube over your fresh solder job. 😊👍

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    20 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    A hairdryer or heatgun is the best choice for shrinking the tubing because it shrinks it evenly all the way around. Using your soldering iron for this will work but the heat can't be applied as evenly, not as evenly, and it's possible to melt the heat shrink tubing in places. It should also be clarified to never use the *tip* of the soldering iron to shrink the tubing because even a smidgen of plastic residue left on the tip will be difficult to remove and make it harder for you to solder with it.

  • @JAY-fq7sb

    @JAY-fq7sb

    18 күн бұрын

    @@goodun2974 I did say to use the shaft. And on most applications, using a heat gun would be ok. Though on what I do with small wires for remote LED light switches in 3d prints the heat gun would heat the plastic too much. It could cause the item to warp or melt. Having direct heat in a small area would be better for delicate applications such as this. This is how I figured out this method. Because my butane torch was throwing out way too much heat to be used in these small plastic areas. I didn't want to risk damaging the item and having to 3d print another.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    @@JAY-fq7sb , All valid points, although now that you've provided details it's obvious you're doing specialty soldering that is very different from splicing a couple of wires here as shown in the video! I was an audio repair bench tech for 20 years and I frequently had to upgrade incandescent lamps and bulbs in vintage receivers to LED's which sometimes required me to splice and heat shrink wires very very close to the tuner's dial string ---- One wrong move and the soldering iron would melt through that string in a nanosecond and then I'd have to restring the tuner, which is not something you'd ever want to do unless you absolutely had to (I've restring a radio or receiver two or three times in 50 years of electronics). I used a hot air pencil to shrink the tubing because it gave me a nice tightly controlled hot air pattern.

  • @JAY-fq7sb

    @JAY-fq7sb

    18 күн бұрын

    @@goodun2974 Yep, those small hot air pencils are nice. I don't a lot of wiring, but if I did. I definitely may check into getting one. I can identify with the thin wires. 🙂👍 I just have a few things I 3d print that I have to wire and those are not huge sellers.

  • @Mike40M
    @Mike40MАй бұрын

    All as per textbook. Really good. Except the title. Though the 92% who should see it, don't know difference between soldering and welding A common mistake is to hold one wire with your hand. Hand vibrations creates larger crystals when tin solidifies.Weaker bond, prone to fail. Another common mistake is applying more solder and heating too long time. Making tin creeping out in the wire. Makes a stranded wire stiff. Vibrations will break it. From soldering course attended before allowed to work on military spec equipment. Long time ago.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    Ай бұрын

    Great 👍 thanks for your feedback,👍👋👋

  • @larsord9139

    @larsord9139

    26 күн бұрын

    Also some instructions come with something like this: "Hold one wire with one hand and the other wire with another hand and the solder with another hand and the soldering iron with another hand", I don't know about you, but I run out of hands.

  • @fasum3683
    @fasum3683Ай бұрын

    Un grand merci j' ai nettement amélioré mes soudures 🙏🙏

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    Ай бұрын

    Merci 🙏

  • @jimspc07
    @jimspc0714 күн бұрын

    Well done. one of the best soldering videos yet. KZreadrs must watch this most of you are mainly total rubbish when it comes to soldering, but they wont be watching as they think they are so good. They are not. If they were working for me on a bench they would not be. Dirty irons is the worst problem, old solder, incorrect temperature, heat soak, also. Some little things. Wipe the tip immediately before using. Not after, where it will sit and oxidise the tip. Oxidised tips do not transfer heat quickly. The heat should be applied quickly and not applied by a slow soak that a dirty or oxidised tip gives. Also put a little solder on the tip when turning the iron off. This will need a wipe off before the next job, but only when the iron is at working temperature. The flux is the bit that makes it work properly and flow, solder applied to the tip for to long prior to use will have the flux evaporated and will not flow leading to a soak heating and possible damage of the work as well as nasty stringing. Its all very simple once the routine is observed and followed and much quicker and cleaner solder jobs.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    10 күн бұрын

    🙏👋

  • @andrewmurphy9292
    @andrewmurphy929219 күн бұрын

    Fairly good tips. For high reliability joints the solder should not be allowed to wick up between the wire and insulation. A heat sink is not required on the tip for a good temperature regulated iron.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    18 күн бұрын

    Right ! thx for commenting !

  • @johnr625
    @johnr62518 күн бұрын

    As an ex Ministry of Defence (MOD) electrical engineer I watch in horror at the way some people on KZread solder. A blob here and a blob there it’s a joke 😂 Good to see it being done correctly for once

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    18 күн бұрын

    Glad you like ! thx for watching !

  • @RabidWombatz
    @RabidWombatz19 күн бұрын

    You don’t put the tip onto a heat absorbing device! Support it from the barrel or handgrip.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    18 күн бұрын

    Right ! Thx for commenting !

  • @topcatandgang
    @topcatandgang24 күн бұрын

    the best solder joint is one that you see every strand of wire joined together, not hidden under a mass supply of soldier.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes right ! Thanks for watching !

  • @markthompson9870
    @markthompson987020 күн бұрын

    I found this video informative and easy to follow. Top marks!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    19 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching !

  • @thelastgs-pian9965
    @thelastgs-pian996520 күн бұрын

    here iam a newbie always thinking why my 2 year old solder doesnt stick to my dull looking copper wire, thanks for clearing the doubts..

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    17 күн бұрын

    💪🙏👋👋

  • @achernarscardozo69
    @achernarscardozo6921 күн бұрын

    No se debe apoyar la punta del soldador en contacto con ningún disipador. Con eso estará fría en el momento de querer soldar. El soporte es sobre el cuerpo del soldador. Lo ideal es asegurar que los cables a soldar estén desoxidados (no con verdín del cobre humedecido) deben limpiarse con un paño y solvente (alcohol por ejemplo). La unión debe calentarse con el soldador y colocarle flux o resina a esta. Recién allí se aplicará estaño a la unión. Y sí, un poco de estaño en el soldador ayuda a transferir mejor el calor pero no debe fundir todo el estaño necesario para la unión sobre la punta.

  • @daleb5967
    @daleb596723 күн бұрын

    How old are you? 70ish? Its great to see you enjoying your hobby and active with a youtube channel. Good job!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Hi.. well.. not that old but yep i enjoy the hooby . thanks for watching!!

  • @SimpleInventor-k4i
    @SimpleInventor-k4iАй бұрын

    Your sharing is great, the soldering iron I used had a black tip, which made it impossible for me to use it anymore. I will apply your method

  • @LiuDienNuoc2024

    @LiuDienNuoc2024

    Ай бұрын

    🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @DJ-ic6mu
    @DJ-ic6mu18 күн бұрын

    And if you want to be picky, don't use alligator clips that damage the insulation and don't twist with your fingers that leave oily residue..

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    18 күн бұрын

    Yes ! Thanks for commenting !

  • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
    @DavidSmith-ss1cg20 күн бұрын

    Don't forget PASTE FLUX ! ! By dipping the twisted wire into paste flux, the wire can be tinned using less solder; too much solder can cause lesser quality solder joints. Paste flux is built into solder wire, and is useful in soldering copper pipes, too.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    You were doing great until your last sentence. Plumber's flux is highly corrosive and should *NEVER* be used to solder electronics or electrical connections. Rosin flux (from pine trees) is the traditional flux contained within leaded solder, and can be purchased separately in paste or liquid form (in an alcohol solution). Rosin flux has the advantage of being relatively inert electrically and under most operating conditions is neither corrosive nor conductive; and can be cleaned off with alcohol. The fluxes contained within or sold separately for use with lead-free solder , however, are actually fairly corrosive and conductive, designed to dissolve in distilled water, and must be thoroughly removed from circuit boards or they can cause further problems down the road. The worst of all is plumbing flux; great for copper pipes but not for electronics! Unfortunately, there are lots of unscrupulous online sellers who lie about the chemical contents and purpose of the flux they sell. Never buy flux, solder or tips for your soldering iron from faceless online sellers, only from reputable US based distributors. It's important to note that experienced electronics technicians can sometimes get by with inferior equipment or materials because they know how a good solder joint is supposed to look and they have the experience and technique necessary to get acceptable results with less than ideal gear; but the newbie doesn't have that kind of experience and is likely to quickly become frustrated or suffer premature failure of their repair attempts or kit-build projects.

  • @thermalreboot
    @thermalreboot22 күн бұрын

    Most of these tips are good, but you overlook an important one. Heat will draw the solder from the cold side to the hot side. Instead of putting the tip on top of the joint you should put it underneath the joint and deliver the solder from the top, this will do 2 things, it will draw the solder down towards the heat source, but it will also used gravity to help with that process. Most of your joints look colder than make me comfortable, I like to see better flow.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes i overlooked that one, camera focus, lights, noise, and soldering all at once 👍👋👋

  • @achernarscardozo69

    @achernarscardozo69

    21 күн бұрын

    Todo el metal debe estar a una temperatura suficiente. Si el estaño va a una superficie fría podrá pegarse pero no soldarse. La temperatura es fundamental. Hay que asegurarse que los conductores estén limpios y es fundamental aplicar antes que el estaño algo de flux o equivalente.

  • @bbcisrubbish
    @bbcisrubbish20 күн бұрын

    £ tips for soldering. Cleanliness, cleanliness, cleanliness.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    1000 % ! 👏👍 If the component lead, wire, terminal or circuit board pad is oxidized or greasy, you'll never get a good reliable connection. I have a video on my channel about using fiberglass-bristle "scratch brushes" and pencil erasers to clean metals before soldering to them, as well as a review/teardown of a $45 Harbor Freight soldering station and accessories, and a video about cheap, poor-quality and counterfeit soldering-iron tips.

  • @Cynthia_Cantrell
    @Cynthia_Cantrell19 күн бұрын

    A couple drops of flux on the wire before soldering really helps spread the heat out and wet the copper. Touch the iron to it for a few seconds and then add the solder and it will wick up in the wire beautifully, rather than balling up on the iron. It will happen quickly and reduce the chance of melting insulation. Clean off the flux with some alcohol or acetone afterwards.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    17 күн бұрын

    👌👍🙏👋

  • @nickhall5959
    @nickhall595918 күн бұрын

    When you strip back to find fresh wire, dont remove the plastic all the way. Twist the plastic before removing, that way you don't contaminate the wire with grease from your fingers.

  • @stevesmith756
    @stevesmith75622 күн бұрын

    Thank you. I’ve struggled to do this correctly

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    20 күн бұрын

    Thanks 👍

  • @erroneousbatch
    @erroneousbatch17 күн бұрын

    Anti-wicking tools are also available to prevent insulation damage. If using a wet sponge to clean the bit allow a few moments for the bit to reheat. As others have said hold the iron under the wire - much more efficient heat transfer. Removing old solder from the bit can be done without losing heat by tapping it fairly sharply under your bench. This is a big no-no, so forget I mentioned it - works great though, but... hey, never do it.

  • @ggfrt96
    @ggfrt9620 күн бұрын

    the part about oxidized copper explains so many poor joints I've had in the past... i fought with them until i "finally got it" (after i stripped more wire because i gooped it up too much)

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    20 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @warrenyoung173
    @warrenyoung17316 күн бұрын

    I was taught that a wet “sponge” is bad. Thermal shock for the tip, etc. Use a brass scourer. Cleans the tip, no thermals, never runs out of water, never goes scungy, prevents flying balls of solder.

  • @Txyxy1

    @Txyxy1

    10 күн бұрын

    It is true, sponge is bad for the tip. It significantly shortens its life.

  • @nicholasmason8302
    @nicholasmason830214 күн бұрын

    Thanks - I have some repair talents, but soldering has never been one of them - I've encountered most of the problems on here. I'll give these a try. 👍

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    12 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @RwP223
    @RwP22318 күн бұрын

    Get a real soldering iron or a quality butane iron (they heat up fast) and keep turning off the iron inbetween soldering. I have solder tips from 8 years ago now with quite a few solder joints. If you do this for a living high production, of course you have an iron that shuts off when you put it in the holder and they heat up quickly. I like using the brass cleaning nest, avoid dealing with water and sponges. I always have flux on hand too and always use leaded solder which meets my needs splicing wires. My preferred joint is to free hand a lap joint after tinning both ends of the wire, free hand baby.

  • @edxr6949
    @edxr694918 күн бұрын

    Great video! Soldering isn't as simple as people think. One thing, for bigger items to solder we need to make sure it's hot, then apply solder

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    17 күн бұрын

    👍🙏👋👋

  • @scottstedeford7575
    @scottstedeford757520 күн бұрын

    Should be tinning the wire prior to soldering.

  • @Schuetze90
    @Schuetze9018 күн бұрын

    Vielen Dank. 👍 Jetzt weiß ich, dass bei meinen Lötarbeiten in der Vergangenheit so einiges falsch war 😂

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    17 күн бұрын

    👌👋👋

  • @m_pyi
    @m_pyi2 күн бұрын

    1.Wipe the tip of the soldering iron with a well-wrung damp cloth. 2.Solder flows towards warmer areas, so use the solder to heat the metal you are joining, not the metal itself.

  • @neomatrix3612
    @neomatrix361210 күн бұрын

    thanks for the video. I'm an expert now.

  • @bebo5558
    @bebo555823 күн бұрын

    Cut and wet the pad, but turn the green part over, it's abrasive like sand paper!

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    Also, the sponge is supposed to be squeezed out so it's merely damp and not very wet; I've seen videos where the sponge is so wet that the tip of the iron emits puffs of steam!

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    The brass wool is still a better tip cleaning choice and you can even buy them at harbor freight now. I did a review of an inexpensive Harbor Freight soldering station and related accessories on my channel recently ( It's surprisingly good and a hell of a value, way better than what I had to work with as an electronics nerd teenager back in the 1970s).

  • @lordphullautosear

    @lordphullautosear

    14 күн бұрын

    That green wannabe scotchbrite on dish scrubbers isn't very abrasive at all.

  • @bebo5558

    @bebo5558

    14 күн бұрын

    @lordphullautosear Yeah, neither is the gravel road I live on! It's the quenching of the moisture/temperature change that cleans the tip, not the abrasive!

  • @dinf8940

    @dinf8940

    Күн бұрын

    yea, its not. nickel modern tips are plated which has mohs hardness of 4, copper 3, tin (pure) 1.5, eutectic solder slightly less, whilst hard nylon on such scrubber will be something like 2~2.5, about the hardness of fingernail. you will never ever damage even old type raw copper tip with it, not to mention modern plated one

  • @rickschlosser6793
    @rickschlosser679326 күн бұрын

    #5, I’m not sure how many understood what you did. You will never get the wire hot enough to bond with the solder with the tip alone. He put a ball of fresh solder on the tip then used the more flexible ball of solder to transfer the heat to the wire. Once the wire is hot enough the solder bonds easily.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    26 күн бұрын

    Yes 100% correct. Thanks for the explanation !!

  • @achernarscardozo69

    @achernarscardozo69

    21 күн бұрын

    La potencia del soldador debe ser acorde a los conductores a soldar.

  • @Papa_Kemsu
    @Papa_Kemsu3 күн бұрын

    Tuy nhìn thấy đơn giản nhưng lại có giá trị cao. Cảm ơn bạn nhiều❤

  • @MrKobyp7
    @MrKobyp721 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much this video very helped me

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    20 күн бұрын

    Thanks 👍

  • @phbrinsden
    @phbrinsdenАй бұрын

    Nicely presented tutorial.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you liked !

  • @Mprikiman
    @Mprikiman14 күн бұрын

    Thank you old timer! The only part I disagree with is the wet sponge. I use preferably brass or copper wool :D

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    14 күн бұрын

    Yes brass wool is preferable.. thanks for watching !

  • @jkz0807
    @jkz080714 күн бұрын

    Very good

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    10 күн бұрын

    🙏👋

  • @TheCarlhungness
    @TheCarlhungness25 күн бұрын

    Use a tinning block to clean the tip and it works perfectly. Have used the same block for over 20 years.

  • @topcatandgang

    @topcatandgang

    24 күн бұрын

    i use a wet sponge to clean off a flat tip, not a round tip. and i clean both sides at the same time otherwise one side will get black and ruin the connection. spending too much time heating the wire will in most cases melt the insulation also. i use a 50 watt iron for wires and a 40 watt iron for pc board hookups.

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    20 күн бұрын

    If one practices good tip hygiene overall, and never lets the iron sit there hot for hours without a protective coating of solder on the tip, use of the tinning block will be far and few between. I've been soldering electronics for 55 years; even as a full-time audio-equipment bench tech I only used the tinning block a couple times a week, and that thing will probably still be useable long after I'm dead and gone. From what I have read the tinning blocks are made with ammonium chloride, which is a strong alkali, and over-use of it will actually shorten the life of the tips. (PS, I posted some videos on my channel about prior preparations for soldering, the importance of using high quality soldering tips and how to weed out the cheapos and counterfeits (which are everywhere on line nowadays), and a review/tear down of a $45 Harbor Freight soldering station that is a surprisingly good value for the money. )

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    20 күн бұрын

    ​​@@topcatandgang , I used the wet sponge technique for some 40 years but switched over to the brass wool over a decade ago and I prefer it to the sponge. The cooling effect of the sponge may create stress microfractures according to some manufacturers. The sponge in the video is emitting steam when the iron touches it,, indicating that it is definitely too wet!

  • @take5th
    @take5th14 күн бұрын

    The few times i tried to solder was in 1968. I didn’t know how to do it, no one was around to show me, and I failed by simply dripping the solder onto the connect wires. I haven’t tried since, but still watched this video to scratch that old itch.

  • @satyapermaculture
    @satyapermaculture8 күн бұрын

    Merci j'ai appris des choses, ça va me servir !

  • @steve1374
    @steve137420 күн бұрын

    BIG MISTAKE! Never touch the inner cores with your bare fingers, your skin will transfer oil which could prevent the solder flowing correctly.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    19 күн бұрын

    Great tip ! thanks

  • @rizab660
    @rizab660Ай бұрын

    Ich habe gelernt, den frisch abisolierten Draht nicht mit den Fingern zu berühren, sondern diesen gleich verzinnen.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    29 күн бұрын

    👌👍👋

  • @jamescapodanno1861
    @jamescapodanno186129 күн бұрын

    shouldn't you use soldering paste when soldering wires???

  • @rickschlosser6793

    @rickschlosser6793

    26 күн бұрын

    The solder has a flux core. So there is paste being used, it is in the solder.

  • @ya472

    @ya472

    26 күн бұрын

    I use paste, even when using rosin core. Copper oxidizes too easy, especially if it overheats

  • @user-kj1od5ed7p
    @user-kj1od5ed7p20 күн бұрын

    I would not rest my soldering iron tip on a heatsink I think I have many more years of soldering experience than you do my soldering irons have temperature-controlled tips the last thing I would want to do is rest one on a heat sink I worked at a company called tektronix for over 30 years

  • @user-kj1od5ed7p

    @user-kj1od5ed7p

    20 күн бұрын

    Rank amateur soldering skills

  • @StevenAtkinson666
    @StevenAtkinson6664 күн бұрын

    The flow is a thing of beauty 😍

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    2 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @windyrotorblast
    @windyrotorblast16 күн бұрын

    It is as if you have watched me try to solder. Those are my hands in each scene that shows a red X. Thank you for posting this. I'm gonna go try some of those examples on my bench today.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    16 күн бұрын

    😊😊👌👋

  • @paulpugh2480
    @paulpugh248022 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the video.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching 👍👋

  • @jorgfellinger8004
    @jorgfellinger8004Ай бұрын

    Klar schweßt es nicht, wenn man lötet!😅

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    Ай бұрын

    👌👋👋

  • @markkennard861
    @markkennard86120 күн бұрын

    Make sure you pick it up by the handle and not the hot end. :)

  • @EdWeibe

    @EdWeibe

    14 күн бұрын

    like the ad does.

  • @robballering3908
    @robballering390829 күн бұрын

    Informatieve en duidelijke video met simpele middelen.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    27 күн бұрын

    🙏👋

  • @kazimierzg2896
    @kazimierzg289620 күн бұрын

    Durne porady. A skąd ja wezmę starą chłodnicę procesora ???

  • @The144Kth
    @The144Kth7 күн бұрын

    Tip # 0: Place the tip _below_ the thing being soldered, that way the heat will rise through it for quicker heating.

  • @kaneworsnop1007
    @kaneworsnop100715 күн бұрын

    There were a few issues with this video. Before soldering anything, you must first tin the wire, pins, ect. As it sounds you literally coat the wire ect in the layer of solder first, this helps to prevent dry joints and make soldering a lot easier. at 2:50 you twisted the strands of wire before tinning, never do this. It was a nice home made method for the cleaning sponge, although I can imagine it won't last long before melting, I don't know what the cost of the purpose designed ones are, but even if they're a little pricey the average person soldering at home won't wear them out in a few weeks like I do at work, so it would be worth the investment.

  • @Fabimartin1
    @Fabimartin12 күн бұрын

    Sehr informatives Video. Vielen Dank.👍Weisst Du warum der Lötkolben von Parkside(Lidl) nicht funktioniert? Habe mir jetzt einen anderen geholt.

  • @altamirsantos786
    @altamirsantos7868 күн бұрын

    Bom trabalho e boas ideias. Good Idea.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    6 күн бұрын

    Obrigado !

  • @robertobotelho9222
    @robertobotelho922224 күн бұрын

    É preciso cuidado nas traduções : “Não deixe sua dica ficar sem lata “???? O certo seria: não deixe a ponta ficar sem solda.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Certo. obrigado !

  • @geoffreydebrito2653
    @geoffreydebrito265324 күн бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @raymondsanderson3768
    @raymondsanderson3768Ай бұрын

    A lot of people seem to treat it like hot glue, to be wiped onto the wires!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    Ай бұрын

    Right, thanks for watching 👍👍

  • @topcatandgang
    @topcatandgang24 күн бұрын

    you are doing it all wrong, the department of defence trains it's personell to hold the soldering iron under the wire so the heat rises, and the solder on top so it will whick down through the wire. doing it your way gives a hot joint on top and a cold joint on the bottom.

  • @larrystuder6378

    @larrystuder6378

    22 күн бұрын

    That's the way I was taught in the mid 1960's- heat from the bottom.

  • @H0Fidelity-rq4ry

    @H0Fidelity-rq4ry

    19 күн бұрын

    Maybe they are filming it on rhe other side of the planet? Then it is right from your persoective.

  • @manifold1476

    @manifold1476

    2 күн бұрын

    "Heat" doesn't rise - Hot AIR rises. More specifically, hot FLUIDS rise (due to buoyancy). Hot air rises when surrounded by cooler (MORE DENSE) air. Heat MOVES, and in only three ways: Conduction, Convection and/or Radiation.

  • @jackfarrell4727
    @jackfarrell472726 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the information

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    25 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching 👍👍

  • @pullupterraine199
    @pullupterraine19915 күн бұрын

    Nice video. I just don't understand how my mobile phone and KZread can predict these videos for me. I haven't soldered for a year, today I did. I just mentioned this once for my children. And voilà, Yt offers a video about it.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    14 күн бұрын

    🙏🙏👋👋

  • @Thrunabulax10
    @Thrunabulax1014 күн бұрын

    these are actually decent tips! the solder tip is usually a nickel plated steel, so aggressively wire brushing it or sanding it WILL remove the thin nickel layer, and make solder no longer stick to it!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    12 күн бұрын

    👍

  • @michaeljoncour4903
    @michaeljoncour490318 күн бұрын

    i have on good authority it is actually 93.6 % of people can't solder properly !

  • @fido139
    @fido13913 күн бұрын

    I've been soldering nice shiny joints for over 50 years. Sometimes conditions do not allow certain practices to be used. Get your soldering device to proper temperature, use only 60/40 solder. All will be fine. AND, flux flux flux!!!

  • @jamescandelaria4840
    @jamescandelaria484019 күн бұрын

    there was no mention of the use of flux, can you explain how and when to use it?

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    19 күн бұрын

    Using good quality solder wire no needs to use extra flux, it is inside solder wire.

  • @terrance_huang
    @terrance_huang12 күн бұрын

    using wet sponge to clean iron tip is really a big bad idea.

  • @rogermcgaw7776
    @rogermcgaw777624 күн бұрын

    Another method is do everything the same and hold solder tip under work, this heats work efficiently

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes that´s right ! ths for comenting !

  • @chucksmith1133
    @chucksmith113315 күн бұрын

    may want to add a video about how to completely recondition a tip

  • @ximodeuxesmachina6398
    @ximodeuxesmachina639814 күн бұрын

    muchas gracias .

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    14 күн бұрын

    Gracias por comentar

  • @daleb5967
    @daleb596723 күн бұрын

    U can use old tin if you use paste...

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes !

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    It's not "tin", it's solder *alloy*, alloyed with lead or other metals because pure tin is unstable. Lead is still the best stabilizing agent to add to tin in order to stabilize it for use as solder. (Church Organ pipes in northern Germany that had been soldered with pure tin hundreds of years ago suffered failures because the tin crystallized in cold weather; Google "tin pest").

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    It's preferable just to use fresh solder because the flux inside of old solder does sometimes degrade with age. It's important to use ONLY rosin flux for leaded electronics-rated solder, and not plumbers flux which is highly acidic and corrosive---- great for copper water pipes, but not for electronics use. Unscrupulous online sellers are known to sell corrosive plumbing flux to electronics hobbyists 😖😠.

  • @jessstuart7495
    @jessstuart749518 күн бұрын

    Putting rubber hose over your alligator clips will prevent the teeth from damaging the insulation.

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    18 күн бұрын

    Grat tip ! Thanks

  • @PaulMansfield
    @PaulMansfield14 күн бұрын

    Don't leave the tip of the iron bare, so don't clean before putting it down. It's fine to leave dirty solder on it. Clean it just before you're able to use it and melt on some fresh solder.

  • @Fish-ub3wn
    @Fish-ub3wn21 күн бұрын

    don't ever use a washing sponge as shown. always use high temp sponge. this is dangerous to your health and a fire hazard.

  • @Imintune...
    @Imintune...27 күн бұрын

    Didn't add solder flux ensures proper soldering

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    26 күн бұрын

    If you use good quality tin no need to add extra flux !

  • @goodun2974

    @goodun2974

    18 күн бұрын

    ​Solder isn't "tin", it's tin alloyed with lead. Pure tin makes a very poor soldering material because it has a tendency to turn granular and crystalline and the joints break down in extremes of heat and, surprisingly, extreme cold. The lead mixed with tin makes the solder stable, and it melts, flows and "wets" onto other metals easily at a relatively low temperature, requiring only non-toxic, gentle rosin flux ( made from pine trees) to remove oxidation from the metals being soldered (the flux is contained within the wire solder, and only rarely is application of additional separate flux necessary ). Lead free solder is a whole other thing, where the tin is alloyed with other metals that unfortunately do not make it particularly stable and require higher heat and more aggressive fluxes in order to solder with it, which is one reason why I don't recommended leadfree solder for hobbyists. Electronic solder of either variety will have a core of flux inside the solder wire, but if you're working with lead-free solder you'll have to take great pains to clean the boards and connections afterwards with distilled water to remove all traces of the corrosive, conductive flux. By comparison, Rosin flux ised with leaded solder is relatively inert, non conductive and non corrosive, and can be easily removed with alcohol. Anyway,, although perhaps English is your second language, please stop referring to solder as "Tin" ! ( BTW, For an interesting historical detail about using pure tin to solder metals, Google the term "tin pest"; Organ pipes in northern Germany were once soldier with tin and the solar eventually broke down, turning grainy and crystalline, because of cold northern temperatures. There was also an Antarctic expedition that failed because of metal fuel can's that all leaked from their soldered seams, and I suspect this was probably a failure caused by having been soldered with pure tin).

  • @LuciTulcea
    @LuciTulcea17 күн бұрын

    I did solder with 25 years old tin. It was kinda difficult but I did it eventually.

  • @karolyllh1242
    @karolyllh124224 күн бұрын

    A pákának nem adunk vizes szivaccsal hösokkot Szárazon is tökéletes vagy akár pípír zsebkendövel is simán tisztítható.

  • @Apismeliffera
    @Apismeliffera7 күн бұрын

    Use a soldering iron sponge that's made for cleaning the tip. Not a scotch brite pad. I can see the surface of the pad in the video is partly melted after tip cleaning. The sponge needs to be somewhat damp not water logged. The idea is to clean the tip not cool it off. If you press on the sponge with your finger and you can see water on the surface, then it is too wet. Also the soldering iron stand should let the tip rest in free air not on a heat sink. In general you clean the tip just before you sue it and let the soldering iron rest with a little bit of solder on it. If you wipe all the solder off the let the iron rest in that dry state the tip will oxidize. That will accelerate tip wear. Leave a little bit of solder on it to protect the tip surface while it's resting. When you're ready to solder again the tip will clean up much easier.

  • @aliyasar9713
    @aliyasar971323 күн бұрын

    Teşekkür... Thankyou

  • @editthis2
    @editthis223 күн бұрын

    "heat the work, not the solder"

  • @happysawfish

    @happysawfish

    23 күн бұрын

    Achtung!

  • @Repairman10169

    @Repairman10169

    22 күн бұрын

    Right !!

  • @JosBergervoet
    @JosBergervoet16 күн бұрын

    And use solder with LEAD in it! (That also helps against tin whiskers.)