French Garden
Colin Ferris (399) 1809 posts |
Ref Rick’s world – he has a go at stripping down a Battery soldering iron. Do these devices run at a temperature to use non leaded solder – or can you use old solder – these days. |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
I think it runs at around 400°C. |
Alan Adams (2486) 1147 posts |
400C is fine with “real” solder too. |
Dave Higton (1515) 3497 posts |
I gave up using poisonous solder for hobby stuff many years ago. I bought a temperature controlled iron from Maplin. Its usual setting is 425 Celsius, but the required setting in general does vary – using a thin bit to solder over a ground plane can require a significantly higher setting. Solder with lead doesn’t need nearly such a high temperature – reckon on a difference of 50 degrees ish. |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
I stand corrected. It is lead solder. It’s thicker than the stuff I got from Maplin a long time ago, being about 1mm thick. But it works well for what I need. It says on the spool that the melting point is 219°C.
I don’t lose sleep over it. I don’t go out of my way to breathe the fumes (isn’t most of the smoke from the flux, anyway?) and I spent a childhood taking apart old transistors with stuff like GaAs inside, not to mention pinging blobs of mercury around the desk (it’s weird playing with a liquid metal). Not to mention many years of breathing the lead spewed out of the arse end of vehicles… It’s a wonder we even survived the 80s… but then mom tells me that when she was young, they used to keep the beaches pristine by driving little tractor thingies across the sand that would spray DDT, including when people were around. Example picture from near New York in 1945. Oh, and at work I have a lot of (unwanted) exposure to sodium hydroxide. So, on the balance of things, I doubt worrying about the formulation of the solder I use infrequently will any sort of change to my life.
Not just a higher setting, but the ability to crank out more heat. To put this into context, my 25W iron struggled with the BNC connector on my little STM32 oscilloscope. |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
My attitude exactly. I’m not poor Courtney (not her real name) soldering stuff eight hours a day, five days a week, year after year. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8155 posts |
Ah, but look at the effect on brain-cell development in Republicans – there’s no way back from this level of degeneration. |
Alan Adams (2486) 1147 posts |
On the other hand lead solder with Ersin flux (the originals) wets out more easily than the replacements. Fortunately I still have a reel of it left when the electronics department closed down, and I switched to computer management. |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
I’ve still not run out of a reel of solder I bought in the late 1960s…with, indeed Ersin flux. |
Dave Higton (1515) 3497 posts |
Molten solder, containing lead, does give off lead fumes. The vapour pressure of molten lead is not zero. Where I used to work, there was a wave soldering machine. It had to be kept in a room that could not exchange air with the rest of the building and had to have its own extraction system. No-one was allowed to be in the room except for the briefest of periods when it was hot. I think many sighs of relief were to be heard when lead free solder was introduced and wave soldering was decommissioned. |
David J. Ruck (33) 1629 posts |
I loved the smell of real solder in the morning. |
Paolo Fabio Zaino (28) 1854 posts |
I’m not an expert (my soldering is always limited to fix stuff more than build stuff), but AFAIK yes both lead fumes and flux fumes are both toxic and can cause all sorts of respiratory issues (asthma can be caused by flux fumes). Be careful guys! Now, where was I fixing my Electron… looool :D |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8155 posts |
There’s a technique with a smooth flowing motion – how it was described at college by observers. Theoretically we were all going to “have a go” and then learn the proper way from a demo by our lecturer. Problems with flux fumes, I feel I should point out that if you breathe out in the right way the fumes go somewhere else. 1 I have a solder splash scar on my upper thigh – the perils of small children, short trousers and molten metal. |
Paolo Fabio Zaino (28) 1854 posts |
Yup, I have learned few tricks when I worked in computer shops fixing micros and Amstrad PCs back in my teen age… Then went to Uni for Software Engineering and it has been mostly coding since then, so defo cannot claim any expertise. But I remember the old techs from Amstrad and Olivetti teaching me few tricks and those still serve me well… I brought back to life few micros and a bunch of Podules for old Acorns, a Pegasus 400 for my Electron. And “the master piece” is I even managed the “sacrilege” of adding an ARMv7 to an Electron via a 2nd hand Tube that was a bit wobbly (so needed some love) and replaced stuff on my Plus 1 (to allow CoProc selection) and now the little best runs at 1.4Ghz and can use ARM BBC BASIC V from which I can code in ARM Assembly on the Electron!!!! as well as running CP/M, PDP 11, bunch of crazy powerful 6502 (different versions) and my beloved 6809!!!! (This is a little step for a man and a big step for an Electron user!!!!) XD
So far I have avoided injuries and setting the house on fire, I think this is a pretty good achievement lol |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
There was a wave soldering machine at Microvitec, where I did several short contracts in the late ‘70s and early ’80s. It did have its own extraction system, but it didn’t (then) have its own room – it was in the same room as almost the whole of the operation – apart from a few relatively small offices. (That was where the aforementioned “Courtney” worked.) |
Alan Adams (2486) 1147 posts |
Just remember if the soldering iron falls, DO NOT try to catch it. |
Grahame Parish (436) 480 posts |
Unless perhaps, it is falling into your lap… :-@ |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Don’t. A friend of mine used to use solder pots at Baird’s TV – one got knocked off her bench into her lap. Her company-provided “protective” lab coat was nylon… I have not seen her scars, but they’re apparently Rather Impressive. I was too far away at the time – several miles – to hear her screams, but they were apparently Rather Impressive, too. |
Paolo Fabio Zaino (28) 1854 posts |
…fear…. O_o
…even more fear… :O Thanks guys! Just in time for this weekend where I was planning to mod my Spectrum +3… damn loool XD Let’s hope for the best |
David J. Ruck (33) 1629 posts |
Talking of hot lead, how is the coup d’état going France, Rick? |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Just don’t use a solder pot, Paolo, and wear cotton overalls not nylon, and you’ll be all right! |
Paolo Fabio Zaino (28) 1854 posts |
Thanks Clive! If you do not hear from me on Monday then you know I may have done something wrong! :D Joking! |