Hi all,
I've owned a Hakko 888d at home for personal projects, repair and occasional rework about 4 or so years back, and I have gotten along great with it. I don't mind the funky interface and have gotten use to using my preset temp programs. Physically, I hate the power switch on the side, I might move it to the top or front, but that aside.. I don't mind the thing overall. I know this model has been reviewed at nauseum, however I haven't found a review that compares tip actual temp to displayed temp...(i might be wrong)? Iron/themocouple temps are in Fahrenheit for this yank.
Thermally, it has a bit to be desired with heat-up time, which I've found can be remedied with a pinch of graphite powder between the ceramic element and the tip. Not usually a problem for what I do. However, I got curious after a few cold ones and decided to whip out the thermocouple and probe the actual tip temperature for kicks. To my surprise, the tip (1.6mm Chisel Tip T18-D16 for anyone playing along) measured a very consistent +60-80°F (~15-26°C) difference in temperature from the thermocouple to the displayed temperature on the unit over several ranges. I was wondering if this is a known issue for these irons, I went back through Dave's 888D reviews and a few others and can't seem to find a mention of this. This is just a cheapy thermocouple but I've confirmed with another TC (Type K).
What prompted this thought? My company just paid for me and another fellow EE to become IPC-A-610/J-STD-001/IPC-7711 Hand Soldering certified last week through a full week course which got me thinking about all aspects of my soldering techniques and tools in my professional and personal areas. I would highly recommend you guys to convince your boss(s) to get paid to learn to become a certified soldering guru as well!! The course was taught using the newest and best JBC rework stations and now I am ruined forever lol....but got me thinking of auditing my own equipment. This temperature differential is quite a bit out and could be detrimental if doing something process-critical where lifting a pad or burning a component - by not realizing that you're a good 10% hotter than you thought you were. Just curious as to what other people's experiences are, or if my probing method/tools is/are flawed.
I'll leave some pictures here. Running 63/37 here, but sometimes use up old 60/40- not too important. Let me know your thoughts