Ok then, soldering irons done and dusted?
Back on track , has anyone ever come across anything quite this at all?
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/DAETRON-MULTIMETER-4IN1-DIGITAL-MULTI-METER-C-W-5-CABLES-AND-CASE/232397279179
EDIT;
Photo added
Ummm... since when are soldering gear not part of the affliction?
I can say with some conviction that I'm a shameless soldering gear addict.
I'll make myself unpopular with this one, but screw metcat! I found my love for soldering irons in ERSA.
ohhh ERSA... the holy ERSA... never got one... but from what I read it is the only one which can fight against the Metcal powerful kingdom.
I would like to give them a shot one day, just out of curiosity, it's like Lamborghini against Ferrari...
Weller are also very good don't get me wrong, but still behind in my eyes.
PS: Irons are like girls or religions: you don't have to try all of them to find the right one. You fall in love with one and spend the rest of your life with it.
ERSA, JBC, Weller and Hakko are all roughly equal footing as long as we're talking prehistoric tech temperature-controlled irons that create heat by making angry pixies beat their heads against a piece of iron wire; it's just like listening to folks argue over whether Lincoln or Miller welders are best. The difference is both of their top of the line weld like crap compared to a mid-range ESAB; and neither of them can even get close to ESAB's plasmarc gear. Their technology is just that much better.
Similarly, MetCal (and clone/spinoff company ThermalTronics) have better technology; it works completely differently than ANY conventional iron. Their irons use high-frequency current to inductively heat an alloy slug to it's curie point, which by its elemental nature then operates at a fixed temperature. But the high-tech doesn't end there; the way it senses and closes the loop temperature-wise is similarly unique.
Instead of using a closed-loop circuit monitoring wherein the control cycle is: Tip at temp, tip touches work and cools, thermo senses drop in temp & turns on heat, heater heats metal slug and work, thermo senses tip at temp again, etc... the SmartHeat system monitors the HF inductance of the tip, and as soon as the tip touches the work that inductance changes, so the increase in applied energy is instantaneous. The "tip touches work and cools, thermo senses drop in temp" part of the loop is effectively eliminated.
This is true of both MetCal and Thermaltronics SmartHeat systems.
The (un)Holy Trinity of ERSA, JBC, Weller and Hakko will ALWAYS have their loyal followers; especially among those with a "turn it up to 11" mentality who simply MUST HAVE a knob/button they can mess with. But those who solder to get the soldering DONE AND DONE RIGHT prefer MetCal and Thermaltronics, because they know their gear will always be at the RIGHT temperature for the job at hand, and they will always be able to get the exact right tip for that job. I learned that lesson long ago with my Weller GT7 soldering gun; when you need bigger, you simply need bigger, not higher temperature. It has 150W power, 6-second heat-up time and solid-state temperature control. It is old-school tech, but sometimes it simply is the right tool for the job.
The difference for me is a matter of cost-effectiveness; from
the parts I linked to earlier, I can build a 70W clone T12 cartridge system with multiple presets, motion-sense sleep mode and a dozen assorted tips for ~$50 that has proven reliability, flexible 12-30V input power requirements, and an OLED display with rotary-encoder GUI that is incredibly intuitive to use.
Bang/Buck wise, the clone T12 tips and OLED T12 based system beats all others by a wide margin.
mnem
Start 'em young.