frase
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,387
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
Too funny you mention that. Listening to the radio while driving around yesterday and the DJ was talking about some poll that had been done about stupid things people do when drunk. Buying things on the Internet was up there on the list, something like 28% of people. I can personally attest you're not alone. LOL!!!Oh well who cares was a drunken ebay purchase
The hakko is probably overkill for the odd thing here and there If you are using it several times a week it is a great investment
Agreed. Especially when you can get a decent Aoyue that uses the same tips for 1/3 the price. Certainly not equivalent, but good enough for occasional soldering. To this day the iron I use most often is a $40 Radio Shack branded iron. Takes the same Hakko tips, and heats faster than any other iron I own. Wish I'd bought two of them when Radio Shack still existed.
The wattage doesn't directly determine the temperature; you need to take into account the size (and heat dissipation) of what you're soldering. A measly 30W iron will be ok for small items but if what you're soldering is thermally attached to a large ground-plane or a larger component that dissipates a lot of heat, you're gonna need a better iron. I would recommend 60W as a minimum, preferably one with temperature control. For portable use, I use an iron like this (or I use my Dremel gas iron if there's no power sockets nearby). Or, if you want a cheap-as-chips temperature controlled iron, there's this (haven't tried this one myself but the reviews seem to be largely positive). For serious bench work, however, I'd still recommend a solder station; good ones are really not that expensive.From what i've ready a 30W should be hot enough.
Gas irons have been around for as long as I can remember; I've personally used them for decades. Historically they weren't great and would typically be temperamental, unreliable and difficult to control with any precision. The Dremel gas iron seems well designed and well built. I've probably owned it for a couple of years and used it maybe a dozen times. So far it's worked very well. However, it still doesn't have the precision of a proper temperature controlled iron. I use it when it's convenient to but I wouldn't use it as a daily workbench iron. It's perfect if you need to go to site to solder some wires but, for frequent PCB work, it's too bulky and has no way to precisely control the temperature.I saw that dremel one yesterday but hadnt heard about gas powered ones until then. Is it any good for dc jack replacement?