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Polls What tool or technology do you reach for most often as an engineer?
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  • Author Author: bluescreen
  • Date Created: 29 Apr 2014 5:45 PM Date Created
  • Last Updated Last Updated: 11 Oct 2021 3:01 PM
  • Views 4168 views
  • Likes 1 like
  • Comments 83 comments
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What tool or technology do you reach for most often as an engineer?

Tell us what tool, technology, or instrument you reach for most often in your engineering work.

 

(And don't forget to click the Vote button at the bottom to make it count!)

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Top Comments

  • johnbeetem
    johnbeetem over 11 years ago +2
    The notebook. I use those granite composition books which you can buy for US$1 or so during annual back-to-school sales. Ideas get sketched in the notebook long before they're typed in, and it's a great…
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 11 years ago in reply to jw0752 +2
    Hello John, Go for the temperature controlled iron for anything/everything. The Ersa one I mentioned is very nice but a bit pricey - I've used a few cheapo ones and they have been OK. I prototype on pcbs…
  • michaelwylie
    michaelwylie over 11 years ago +1
    Multimeter hands down. Most frequent problem is no power, and the multimeter is key for troubleshooting power issues.
Parents
  • xarlyx
    xarlyx over 11 years ago

    Soldering Iron, a pity i don't do well and i allways have to throw to the trash all the things i tried to repare

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  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 11 years ago in reply to xarlyx

    Hi Xarly,

    Here are some soldering tips.

    Use an iron that is 20 or 25 watts max. The tip must be tended to continuously. I tin the tip and brush it with a clean steel brush every 10 to 15 minutes. Some techs like to brush the tip with a wet sponge. if you get excess solder on the tip brush or shake it off. If you shake it off be careful not to hit your skin or clothing. If your tip has dark spots or black spots keep cleaning it and retinning it. If you can't get it to the point where you can tin all of it, buy a new tip. Make sure you do not have dirt or grease on the brush that you use to clean the tip. Never use the tip to burn wood or melt plastic. Use a good quality multi core solder. The care and preparation of the tip is the most important part of soldering. The next step is the preparation of the spot to be soldered. Wires should be clean. Many parts nowdays come in strips with masking tape. All foreign glue, tape, material must be removed from the wire. I sometimes use a 600 grit wet/dry paper to clean the wires. If I am soldering to a pad or connector I make sure it is clean. In some cases I will tin the wire and the connector before I solder them together.If I am soldering two wires together I will tin both wires, position them next to each other and heat them to melt the tinning together. When I was originally taught to solder they said to always make a good mechanical connection before soldering. This is incorect. The best procedure is to seldom make good mechanical connection first. If the solder is properly heated and allowed to cool it will have a smooth shiney surface and will make as good a connection alone as having made a good mechanical connection first. When you make a solder joint you place the two things to be soldered in close proximity. Place your clean tinned soldering tip against the joint. Do not try to heat the joint itself. Slide the solder between the tip and the joint. It will melt when it touches the solder tip. The melted solder will heat the joint and as the joint comes up to temp the solder will flow by adhesion into the joint. As soon as the solder flows remove the tip as we do nort want to over heat the junction. The longer your tip has a solder bridge between it and the joint the longer heat will have to travel up wires to potentially damage your parts. The shape of your solder tip is specific to different jobs. A long skinny tip is good for small tight connections but it will not conduct enough heat to the soldering site if the joint is too large. On the other hand a chisel or blunt tip will conduct enough heat to solder a larger joint but might not fit into a tight space or a small site. These are the techniques that I have found to work well and give good results. Now all you have to do is practice. If you want to unsolder things send me a note and I will give you some tips on this too.

    John

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  • xarlyx
    xarlyx over 11 years ago in reply to jw0752

    Hi John,

     

    First of all thanks for all the tips, i have a 30W soldering iron, an friend of mine helped me a few years ago with my iron, he sanded my iron tip because the tip was so bulky and the solder don't flowed propertly, i usually clean the tip with a sponge (that comes with my soldering kit also with a support for iron and two claws like a helping hand), the base of my problem is for example, trying to joint two wires, first i place every wire into my soldering iron support then i tin everything, the iron and all the wires, when all is tinned, i try to place a wire on top of the other and when is placed what i think is correct pick up the iron and heat it up, but when the solder appears to be melted and the junction maked, i retreat the iron and the wires pops out and i get like "aw, man" after 5 or 6 retries i get so tired that i gets in rage and trow everything to the trash so that's all my problems

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  • vsluiter
    vsluiter over 11 years ago in reply to jw0752

    Use an iron of 20-25 Watts max? Maybe for budget irons, but I'm using an 80Watt Weller both at work and at home (down to 0402 SMD's),  and that works perfectly. Most important part of a soldering iron is the temperature control. With a good 80 Watt station, the termperature is very constant. With a crappy 25 Watt iron the temperature drops immediately when you touch a large surface.

    To met, the most important for soldering is:

    - pre-tinning leads of what you want to solder

    - keep your tip clean (lower the temperature of your iron when you're not using it for a while)

    - Do NOT grind the tip if you have a decent one. You'll be ruining its surface

    - solder is also working as a heat guide; if your soldering work is getting 'lumpy' , just add some solder so heat is transferred better to the component. Use Litze to remove excess afterwards.

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  • vsluiter
    vsluiter over 11 years ago in reply to jw0752

    Use an iron of 20-25 Watts max? Maybe for budget irons, but I'm using an 80Watt Weller both at work and at home (down to 0402 SMD's),  and that works perfectly. Most important part of a soldering iron is the temperature control. With a good 80 Watt station, the termperature is very constant. With a crappy 25 Watt iron the temperature drops immediately when you touch a large surface.

    To met, the most important for soldering is:

    - pre-tinning leads of what you want to solder

    - keep your tip clean (lower the temperature of your iron when you're not using it for a while)

    - Do NOT grind the tip if you have a decent one. You'll be ruining its surface

    - solder is also working as a heat guide; if your soldering work is getting 'lumpy' , just add some solder so heat is transferred better to the component. Use Litze to remove excess afterwards.

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  • Problemchild
    Problemchild over 11 years ago in reply to vsluiter

    Obviously the point to make here that with a temperature controlled iron more power is good since we only use what is required.

    "Power is nothing with out control" ....according to a certain tire advert ...good line BTW!!

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