My T12 ownership story.
So I bought a DC one after all the hype. I wanted to run off a 12V SLA so I could go and futz around with soldering stuff outside like antennas. Absolutely sucked on 12V. Not enough grunt to get the element in any useful state. So I got a bought a full size mains unit power supply case and put a cheap Chinese boost converter in it to boost to 24V. That gave it the heating wumph back that was lost running it on 12V.
Happy days. Worked nicely, for a bit. End station:
So I dig it out of the cupboard a few weeks back to go and fix my antenna which got trashed when that numpty hit my fence. Plugged it in, BEEEEP, then fuse goes inline with the SLA. Hmm something up. Popped it on the PL154 with current limit on, BEEEP, current hits limit. Shut it down. Inspect it, find nothing wrong. Measured the tip resistance in case that was short. Absolutely fine. Reassembled, works on power supply fine then.
So I put a new fuse in the SLA feed lead and plug it in and head outside. Turn it on, BEEEP ....... BZZZZZZZT POP! .... MOSFET explodes on the back of the control board followed by the fuse about 5 seconds later (ffs!)
Well it turns out after some investigation and a second MOSFET tacked in which also exploded, that the root cause was a dead short in the handle receptable because the plastic had melted at the base of the element
. 30 seconds of thought suggested that it would require a new control board and handle and I honestly couldn't be arsed so I grabbed the trecherous fucker and swung it like an olympic hammer and it now resides on my neighbour's garage roof.
I bought a replacement Weller TCP12 12V iron NIB from ebay, put powerpoles on the lead and it's sterling in comparison and was cheaper than a replacement T12 after you get mugged for import duty.
Conclusions:
1. Handle design is crap.
2. Doesn't survive edge cases of operation at all.
3. Difficult to swap that MOSFET out.
4. MOSFET is the world's fastest fuse
Edit: honestly during the time it worked it was pretty good. But I rather want to use a soldering iron rather than spend all the time fixing it