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Quote from: free_electron on March 12, 2018, 04:52:51 pmthat being said. The response of the iron is actually good. The hako reacts way too fast.Here is the problem : Flux takes time to activate and it should be (almost) completely gone by the time you enter the liquid phase of the solder. Heat it too fast and not only will it evaporate too fast , it will spatter , flinging blobs of unactivated flux, and possibly tin , everywhere on the board.Careful, the Metcal fanboys will be livid. Instant heat is their lord and savior
that being said. The response of the iron is actually good. The hako reacts way too fast.Here is the problem : Flux takes time to activate and it should be (almost) completely gone by the time you enter the liquid phase of the solder. Heat it too fast and not only will it evaporate too fast , it will spatter , flinging blobs of unactivated flux, and possibly tin , everywhere on the board.
You don't even have to pay $100 for a 951 clone.These china soldering stations take the same T12 tips that the hakko 951 use. With heater and tip in one.https://www.aliexpress.com/item/138x88x38mm-Digital-Soldering-Iron-Station-Temperature-Controller-EU-Plug-Temperature-180-435-Degrees-T12-Handle/32692999653.htmlSo you can get one for $38 and slap a genuine Hakko T12 tip on it.but TBH the tip that comes with it is actually not that bad, so you don't even need to do that.(It's a large chisel tip though, so no good for ultra small SMT, fine for 0805 though)
Rossmann's video response and rant on the price if Made in USA Pace soldering equipment. Note: The word Metcal is not mentioned.https://youtu.be/kmq769_ed9w
Rossmann's video response and rant on the price if Made in USA Pace soldering equipment. Note: The word Metcal is not mentioned.
It was a livestream.
Rossman's advice is very short-sighted and only makes sense to hobbycist and mom/pop shops like his... You quickly realise that you do not want additional problems generated by your shitty tools and to have no manufacturers support. Did Rossman performed failure analysis for either the base stations or tips? Guess not because cheap was everything he was able to see.
He would pick this over any new "old technology"
I remember scouring through this vid in disbelief that this was the entirety of the substance. In addition to the lack of information in the video, I also did not get the impression that he tried it out or kicked the tires beyond what was shown here.
^ Are you defending him?This IS the "review/comparison" I was talking about. If you can provide a timestamp which suggests he did anything but compare markings/housings, critique the quality of solder joints, do a single comparison with polar opposite tip types, and repeatedly call this knockoff crap with nothing to back that up, I will be glad to have it. I remember scouring through this vid in disbelief that this was the entirety of the substance. In addition to the lack of information in the video, I also did not get the impression that he tried it out or kicked the tires beyond what was shown here. You could easily show why it's crap if it is so. Maybe scope the power output waveform. Show the problems with response algorithm. Maybe put a thermocouple on it. Check that the psu has enough output relative to the genuine. Or... use it for awhile?QuoteHe would pick this over any new "old technology"And his experience with any of this "new old technology" is what, exactly? I watched several of his early vids, and I'm pretty sure he used a cheap 936 knockoff before upgrading to the 951. Perhaps he is over-generalizing his experience with this cheap Chinese knockoff to the top hakko, weller, ersa, and pace irons which use passive tips? In this vid, he does nothing but bash the knockoff with no objective reasoning other than penis-shaped soldering joints and a connector that doesn't snap-fit as nicely. And now he says this POS he has hardly used is obviously better than an Ersa Pico or 888 or Weller 1010 which he has maybe never used?
I'm not going to rewatch to hunt down timestamps for you, but you're overdoing the rant for something you actually admit you only skimmed through rather than watched.
Later, he used one of his genuine tips in the knockoff iron and deemed the iron reasonably powerful and the performance acceptable.
Yes, the tip he used initially was the wrong tip for the job, and he said as much.
Hi, I just purchased a Weller WE1010, but I can't seem to activate the backlight shown in all your marketing ads. Without the backlight working, it's really hard to see the display from most angles at my bench. I cannot find how to activate the backlight in the manual. Please advise how to switch it on? or have I got a faulty unit?