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I use a Weller 35watt iron that is about 20 years old still with the original tip.
I also have a Weller Pyropen (about 2 years old) that I use as my primary. Runs off of butane and gets about 1 hour per refill. More than plenty of heat to solder 8-10ga. wire not even on full power. Heats up in about 1 minute, uses electric ignition and is completely portable - and it's a Weller. I don't have experience with some of the other hig-end units people are mentioning here, but I can say DON'T get the cheapo Radio Shack version as they never work right and the solder just doesn't melt right or stick to the tip. |
use a weller Soldering station, got it for free when company closed..
and a weller 110 Watt solder gun with wood engraving tip.... my favourite for soldering big fat wires.. |
I got my Hakko 936 in last night and used it to fix a couple of wires on one of my daughter's toys. It makes my weller 40W station look pathetic. It also heats up stupid quick! I wish I had bought one of these years ago.
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I recently bought a Radio shack Soldering station from radio shack. It was originally around $80 and i got it for $40. I couldnt be happier with it. The sale is still going to.
http://www.radioshack.com/product/in...entPage=search |
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I can highly recommend this soldering station as the best bang for the buck I have used. |
I have used a Weller 40 watt and at times wouldnt get hot enough and when I got my MMM I knew it wouldnt be enough for the 6.5mm conectors so I got the Weller 100/140 and havnt looked back
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I have three - a Weller SP40l iron that burn tips like crazy, and then othertimes wouldnt burn its way through toilet paper. I also have a Weller Universal 140/100 gun that I've used quite often in the last year. But it too has recently started operating erratically. Sometimes it heats, sometimes it doesnt. The handle itself has started to warm up after being plugged in too long.
Why do they say not to use a gun for soldering batteries? Is it because they typically put out too much heat? Second question: Is that Hako sold anywhere outside the RC hobby world (ie. without the flame job?). |
Hakko 936 here,also with the large iron. What a difference from the cheapo's would also recommend. Best tool I've bought for RC
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I use 2 - 80watt Weller and a 100/140 Weller gun. 90% of what I need to do can be done with the gun. But for batts and bullet conns 5mm and up, 80watt iron gets the nodd. Much faster and just does the better job.
Check the nuts that hold the tip (if they are still made this way - my gun is ~40yr old) - they will loosen over time getting hot/cold and heat transfter goes way down if they are even a little loose. For batteries, you don't want heat conducted into the cell to possibly damage and weaken the batt. A gun takes too long to melt solder on the end of the batt and the batt bar mainly cause tip is small and heat is conducted away too quickly. What used to take me 5 or 6sec with a gun to do on a batt, now takes just about 1sec with the 80watt iron. I would have to redo some of the gun joints too cause I could pop the bar off. That doesn't happen with the iron. Hakko is available lots of places outside RC world. You can find it without the decaling if you want. |
Hakko is a pretty big manufacturer of soldering/desoldering equipment and the 936 is about the cheapest they make. They have a lot of high end professional equipment used outside the rc world. It is night and day soldering with the Hakko versus anything else I have tried including weller and other known brands.
I was also impressed with bulldawgrc where I got mine. Excellent service and communication along with extremely quick shipping. The decals are just stickers that come with it. You apply them if you want to otherwise it's just plain black. |
i just bought a hobbico 80w, anyone ever use them?
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I bought the 60watt version and if the 80 is like the 60, buy some extra tips. They tend to disappear.
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I have a hobbico iron I bought in a pinch one day. It works okay but burns through tips left and right.
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