Soldering temperature

Mikael Hansson EMAIL HIDDEN
Tue Dec 7 07:17:38 CET 2010


Thanks Jay!

I managed to repair the dishwasher!
Not perfect soldering, but good enough :)

Save 500 euro...check! :)

/Micke

-----Original Message-----
From: music-bar-bounces at lists.music-bar.org
[mailto:music-bar-bounces at lists.music-bar.org] On Behalf Of Jay Vaughan
Sent: den 6 december 2010 22:21
To: Music-bar
Subject: Re: Soldering temperature

> 
> Any recommendation of which temperature to use?
> 

Here is a complete answer to the question:

http://www.elexp.com/t_solder.htm


If you want my music-bar, advice, it goes like this:

'Wetting' is what you're doing when you're getting the two solder units to
join, so the optimum temperature can be gauged in realtime, as you're doing
it, by observing the wetting factor for clean joints.  If its too cold,
you'll wet slowly and fluid heat coverage won't expand fast enough for the
solder chemistry, but - if its too hot, probably you'll see smoke and start
to smell the solder complaining. :)

you can add and remove heat, always remember, so even a too-hot iron can be
.. in stable hands .. useful for the job.  you can remove heat by moving the
ironing tip, true, but you can also remove heat by adding a touch of solder
to the hottest parts, too, ever so slightly so that it also wets and joins
the main unit .. and btw, the 'two solder units' means the solder on one
wire, and the solder on the other.  prepare both wires with a bit of solder,
each, first, to get the wetting action happening quicker when you do the
final join.





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