I for one am not at all interested in soldering "tests" on copper chunks. I have a 300W soldering gun for chassis work.
What would be illuminating is to test performance on 16-layer PCBs with small components connected to large planes. A board could be designed for this type of test.
I've just received a couple of test PCBs which will hopefully test exactly this. Not 16 layers, but 4 with many of the SMT pads tied through with thermal vias. It's likely to be a tough test for any soldering station.
The PCB I had assembled by PCBWay was clearly hand soldered, looked terrible and was of similar construction.
I look forward to seeing the result!
Btw, which Ersa station were you planning to test? It’s a shame that Ersa is so obtuse about giving review units, so their products never end up in the comparisons, even though they’re a major player in Europe. (Dave said they would only do so if given editorial veto power, so he rightly told them to pound sand.)
(I have the i-Con nano at home, and it’s been a great tool. Clearly not as powerful as the JBC at work, but just as good in everyday soldering. The tips don’t oxidize nearly as badly as JBC. And the i-Con series has configurable heating profiles — aggressive (lots of overshoot), medium (a bit of overshoot), and gentle (no overshoot) — so you can choose how much performance to give up in exchange for adhering to tight temperature maxima.)
I was planning to get the i-Con 2V (0IC2200V), however I don't know much about the Ersa range, so I'm not sure if this is the best one to test. If you have a better suggestion, please let me know as I've not bought it yet. I still have an old RDS80 at the office, but I think it's quite outdated by today's standards.
The RDS80 is indeed very outdated. I think it’s maybe comparable to a Hakko FX-888, but I’ve never used either of those so it’s just a guesstimate.
The only members of the i-Con family with reduced power (68W nominal/80W peak) are the pico and nano, so I wouldn’t recommend that. The 2V (120W nom/150W peak) is great if you want two channels and don’t need integrated air. If you want to keep open the possibility of the air or vacuum attachments later, get a Vario 2 (200W peak). If you just need one flexible channel, then get the 1V (80W nom/150W peak). (The current i-Con 1 without V works only with the standard handle, while the 1V and 2V work with the tweezers, etc and with air and vacuum with an external pump module.)
Ersa’s specification of power ratings continues to be an unbridled mess, with some places showing peak power, others nominal, some per channel, some total… All of the i-Con series except the nano/pico are 150W peak per channel on the standard 150W i-Tool handle. The nominal rating seems to be for the station in total. (That info is what I cobbled together over the years from studying their datasheets, catalogs, website, etc. But it’s so convoluted that I make no guarantees. For example, the Vario stations originally all had air and vacuum pumps in them, but now they also make versions with one or the other or neither…)
There exists the i-Tool HP handle that’s a 250W handle for high-mass joints; it works only with the Vario stations, and I guess maybe it’s limited to 200W on the Vario 2, and only gets 250W on the Vario 4 (500W peak).
If you just want the absolute basic full-power 150W standard iron for the comparison, just get an i-Con 1 (0IC1100A).