Author Topic: Solder Iron tips types - per Job requirements - what does the forum say?  (Read 6698 times)

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Offline roli_barkTopic starter

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What type of tip will suit the best for
Thru Hole / Smd work - pointed, chisel,  chisel knife, slotted?

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Offline nukie

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What type of iron do you have?
 

Offline ElektroQuark

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I collect them; yes, i'm a solder tip collector. Soooo, take them all if you can afford, you will find a use for them in the future.

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Offline Psi

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Chisel tip in 3 sizes, like 4mm 2.4mm 1.5mm plus one small conical(pointed)

~4mm chisel for heavy soldering like heavy gauge wire or chips with large metal heasinks attached.
~2.0-2.4mm chisel for general use SMD/TH
~1.5mm chisel for general SMD use when above tip is too big
Small conical for special SMD use

Don't get any chisel tips so small you cant easy tell which orientation the chisel is pointing.
1.5mm is probably the smallest you'd want to go, however it does depend how sharp the chisel is.
The 900M 0.8mm hakko chisel tip is about as tall as it is wide so it's more like a conical and totally useless since you can't see which is the flat side.
« Last Edit: July 15, 2013, 11:57:45 pm by Psi »
Greek letter 'Psi' (not Pounds per Square Inch)
 

Offline ben_r_

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OP what iron do you have?
If at first you don't succeed, redefine success!
 

Offline roli_barkTopic starter

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Thanks psi.
For what it worths, I have an old Hakko 936. Why does it matter?
 

Offline John Coloccia

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I tend to keep a chisel tip just about the same size as the solder pads in my iron 99% of the time.  A good solder station will dump plenty of energy into the tip for some larger soldering jobs, and on even larger jobs a little gob of solder on the tip will effectively make heat transfer even better.  I do use a large tip for truly large jobs, like soldering to the back of a pot, but that's pretty rare.

It helps to feed the solder somewhat slowly, or in short jabs.  That keeps the joint supplied with a constant supply of flux.  That's how you get those beautiful, shiny, flowed out joints on solder tabs and things like that.  That's also why it's pretty important to use a separate flux if you're going to drag solder something....all the flux is gone from the solder on the tip in the first couple of seconds.
 

Offline ben_r_

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Thanks psi.
For what it worths, I have an old Hakko 936. Why does it matter?
Got one of those myself and use it all the time. Matters because then we can recommend to you even specific model numbers for tips, give further personal experiences and know whats out there for your model.
If at first you don't succeed, redefine success!
 

Offline Chet T16

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I had a 2.4mm chisel tip for my Atten (936 type clone) and it was used for everything, i have the same for my JBC but rarely use it as the conical tip is so good at transferring heat.
Chet
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Offline nukie

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Thanks psi.
For what it worths, I have an old Hakko 936. Why does it matter?
Got one of those myself and use it all the time. Matters because then we can recommend to you even specific model numbers for tips, give further personal experiences and know whats out there for your model.

Your right sir.
« Last Edit: June 29, 2013, 09:53:07 am by nukie »
 

Offline poodyp

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I've found a bent conical tip to be my keep-in-my-iron-most-of-the-time tip.
 

Offline free_electron

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i hope not all your posts are going to end in 'what does the forum say'...

depends on the job at hand. i have a bunch of soldering irons
smd tweezers , wrs3000 with hot air , big flat tip , medium flat tip. mt1500 with all kinds of tips from needles to plcc and tqfp removal heads
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Any comments, or points of view expressed, are my own and not endorsed , induced or compensated by my employer(s).
 

Offline roli_barkTopic starter

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i hope not all your posts are going to end in 'what does the forum say'...
Why not? isn' t this what the "forum says" is all about?
 

Offline cthree

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Because its redundant and obvious?

I use a 2.5mm screwdriver tip mostly and a fine pencil tip for really fine work.
 

Offline nukie

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Exactly, most people end up sticking to what they are comfy with, theres no single tip for a specific type of job for everyone. Unless of course you are talking about those square special tips for ICs pins.
 

Offline Spunky

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Years ago I used to have a sewing needle as a tip to solder the heads back onto hard drives, all in the interest of data recovery. Usually the old quantum bigfoot drives if you remember them, the heads used to swing far enough to get thrown off.

I think my eyesight and patience were a lot better then though.
 


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