A cheapo heat gun is intended mostly for heatshrinks, not for soldering/desoldering work.
And the nozzles you've mentioned on the 2nd post are for use with a hot air station that uses the 850 style handle, such as this one:
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/4000112389232.html
A hot air station would give you far more precision (temperature/air flow) as well as support for various nozzle types (provided you get one with a 850 handle, such as the above^) Another useful product (only for 2 point components) is the YIHUA 938D (SMD soldering tweezers). Anyways, when working with hot air, you'd wanna first apply kapton tape around the area you're working on (to minimize the odds of damaging/moving near-by components). Also, having a decent microscope is a must (G1200 at minimum)
Thanks and roger on all that.
I am getting close to going for an official hot air gun.... maybe a Quick 957DW+ .... but I figured I'd try some nozzles with my existing heat shrink gun. It's a pretty big hot air gun and probably not well optimized (or intended) for desoldering. The specs are 1800 watts with two modes: i) 50-450C, 190-210L/min, and ii) 50-650C, 250-500L/min. I think the second mode at full-on temp is way more air and heat than the 3mm nozzle can accommodate (or that SMDs need for removal).
I've practiced on lots of components on a few PCBs and at about 2/3s the temp on the lesser air setting it works reasonably well. The 4mm nozzle worked for removing 2 point SMDs and the 10mm nozzle worked for some small/mid size ICs. When the Quick shows up I'll be curious to see how much more useful/effective it is, and I think the same bent nozzles might work with the Quick.
I have tried some Kapton tape; so far I've managed to remove things without the Kapton tape but I'm sure if it wasn't just a practice board and something that needed to work when it was all done the Kapton tape would be useful in helping to protect nearby components and the board.
The whole hot air process seems to be part science and part art/technique that I'm sure like everything else takes some time and experience to develop.
Thanks for the recommendation on the Yihua 938D. I was keen on a soldering tweezer awhile back but got talked out of that around here.
It looks like it operates standalone (without being part of a multi-function station) which would be ideal. Not sure if it's available for 110-120V.*
Some of the comments on the following link below this video weren't too stellar but maybe those folks got defective units or just didn't quite understand how to use the tool?
The conclusion of this second review seems to be that it is good for removing components but not so much for putting them on. I can believe that using a soldering iron for installation is a better approach but it seems like a tweezers could potentially be a more focused method of removing 2 point SMDs vs blowing hot air from a nozzle. Thoughts?
On the microscope I'm 100% onboard. After adding one of those a few months ago all of my soldering experience has improved an entire level if not a couple levels. It makes a huge difference when you can see clearly what's happening.
*Edit: Looks like the Yihua 938D is available for 110V from Amazon