Pinecil Guides to Soldering
Revision as of 10:38, 24 February 2023 by River (talk | contribs) (→What temperature should I use?: add link)
This article contains guides regarding soldering with the Pinecil.
Guides for Soldering & Maintenance
General soldering guides
- Why have different tips?
- Easier method to solder SMD, and a clever Cleaning method
- How to Solder SMD & Small Components - Mr. Solder
- Pace Basic Soldering lesson 1-9
- How to Desolder/Correct mistakes
- Mr. Solderfix - Remove Components
- Ultimate soldering guide
- Should I switch to Lead-free solder?
- Beginner's Guide to Soldering - Mr. Solder
- Fine SMD Soldering
- Comic book - Soldering
Does solder type and flux matter?
How to keep the tip clean?
What temperature should I use?
1. General Formula: add 120°C to the melting point
listed on the solder label, and adjust up/down as needed for different tasks.
- Example: the solder says 220°C melt point, then
220 + 120 = 340 °C
- One could also try these common working temperatures below, start lower and increment by 5 °C until you get a comfortable working temperature (thicker wires & situations dictate more or less).
Common working temperatures: - For Lead solder: 300°C - 320°C - For No-lead solder: 350°C - 365°C
2. If there is no listed melting point on the solder label, refer to google or a chart like below for your specific type of solder alloy:
3. Adding a small amount of solder to your tip before starting increases the thermal mass of the tip and could help. See the soldering guides above for demonstrations of this.
Using the Conical tip
How do I use the conical tip that comes default with Pinecil to get enough heat transfer?
<https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/learn_tutorials/5/8/4/SolderingAdvice_1edit.png> |
Conical tip, hold it to the side of the item and not vertically like a pen. |
<https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/learn_tutorials/5/8/4/SolderingAdvice_2.png> |
Correct amount of solder and solder flow. |
Go back to Pinecil article
Go back to Pinecil article.