Ryobi has GOT to be joking with this soldering iron

2024 ж. 20 Мам.
1 292 185 Рет қаралды

I have opened up a fair number of Objects before and almost never found another Whole Object inside like this. Ryobi! What are you doing!
The title of this video describes the primary punchline, but it's also just an overview of the whole tool's build quality, which I think is worth your time! Ryobi did some wild stuff here! If you just wanna see the Big Reveal it's at 29:17.
Since posting this to Patreon I've been informed that the iron body is made of PBT (don't see that too often in tools) and the part I thought was fiber reinforced nylon is actually something called "liquid crystal polymer," a high-spec engineering plastic that I think I recognize from some little SCSI connector bodies. I'm sure neither of these materials are THAT special, but in a consumer tool they seem pretty exotic.
Additionally, I thought it was interesting that the lamp chassis is PC+ABS+FR(40), so it contains flame retardant. It feels weird that the iron, which is meant to get very hot, does not have this, while the lamp, which produces no mentionable heat, does. One suggestion I've received is that lamps are regulated by law to require FR. It's also possible that they don't expect the iron to ever be used near tools like grinders or torches, so it's not about what the tool itself does, but the environment it'll be in.
I've also learned that Hakko irons have exposed ceramic elements, and it sure looks like they use PVC cords. To which I respond: that's why I bought a Weller.
Support me on Patreon: / cathoderaydude
Tip me: ko-fi.com/cathoderaydude
Chapters:
00:00 The problem
01:46 Existing solutions
05:57 Ryobi options
10:20 Station overview
21:21 The first issue
26:13 Taking it apart
29:17 The insides (The Big Reveal)
34:36 Other quality issues
39:33 Chassis quality
41:34 Conclusions
42:28 Second Ryobi product
46:05 Outro

Пікірлер
  • I'm an EE who has designed several commercial products that use open fram power supplies. Even if you use a ul listed open frame power supply you still had to get ul cert ($10000-$20000) due to the use of assembled AC wires in your product. By using the built on cable it saved alot of time and cost. Ps actually have one of these that I use all the time. I love the thing. Thanks for the info on the replacement tips.

    @rjj102@rjj1022 жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for this input! That really explains it and now that you put it that way it makes perfect sense. Also, good to hear that it was a solid purchase, hah!

      @CathodeRayDude@CathodeRayDude2 жыл бұрын
    • Right, we always had to do FCC and UL certification for the product, even FCC or UL certified parts were used. As the setup changes parameters. It is also the reason why many stuff from here do not consider cert as they at first thought it would be OK and then found out the cost of this process. A lot of smaller companies from here won't ship from China to the US anymore. Super quality but budget got spend on that or looks instead... And that is why you see a lot of crap: as these don't care as they can flood and be profitable. Another ecample of FCC parameters changing is that Lenovo disallowed mini pcie to be used internally in the Tiny Thinkcentres like M93 (besides certified and tested combination) so they locked this in the bios with a white list for support.

      @gbraadnl@gbraadnl2 жыл бұрын
    • @@gbraadnl Lenovo aren't the only ones to do that. Certification is a nice cover story but I think their real motivation for the whitelist is to force customers into buying upgraded parts from them. As long as they sell a configuration that meets current local emissions regulations then they are off the hook -- it's on the consumer to maintain compliance. It's also worth noting that the WiFi cards themselves are certified. It doesn't make sense to restrict what is installed after purchase since the manufacturer is no longer responsible for it, the laws could have changed, and/or the laptop may have been relocated to a new region with different laws that require changing the card. The antenna's radiation pattern isn't going to change depending on the card it is connected to, even more so since the WiFi cards will have met strict standards for characteristic impedance and transmitted power. It's really quite a BS excuse that the whitelist has anything to do with certification or ERP. There's plenty of other RF equipment that is sold without antennas or with no provisions for preventing the user from changing the antenna.

      @rickr530@rickr5302 жыл бұрын
    • @@CathodeRayDude Ts100 can run through 18650s and is amazing.

      @CocoaEm@CocoaEm2 жыл бұрын
    • That doesn't seem like a lot of money. How much of these things do they make? Hundreds of thousands? With those numbers, the money you save by going with an open frame power supply makes up. It's also a waste of material to have an encased power brick inside of the thing. Plastic doesn't grow on trees!

      @kv4302@kv43022 жыл бұрын
  • "I hate using bad tools even if I'm gonna do a bad job with them anyway." Man, I felt that one too hard.

    @gazehound@gazehound2 жыл бұрын
    • Once you start appreciating good tools, not necessarily expensive, but quality ones, you can never use cheap stuff again.

      @qwertpoiuy430@qwertpoiuy4302 жыл бұрын
    • Bad tools are really annoying, they feel wrong when you pick them up.

      @haoye2413@haoye24132 жыл бұрын
    • a good tool in amateur hands will do worse than a bad tool in professional hands in many circumstances but a bad tool is a bad tool and will cause more damage to the product than a good tool in anyone's hands

      @frogz@frogz2 жыл бұрын
    • @@frogz Sometimes you work with what you have. As a kid, I had a 35w pencil soldering iron, but it did work for wiring, but not so good at ICs.

      @the_kombinator@the_kombinator Жыл бұрын
    • @@the_kombinator i use a weller gun for qfps, use what ya got

      @frogz@frogz Жыл бұрын
  • That is fantastic, ha! At least the thing was manufactured with bare wires on the end. Imagining a barrel jack hidden away inside of a soldering iron is quite the amusing thought though.

    @LGR@LGR2 жыл бұрын
    • I guess the last bit of the wire is bare, but given that rest of the cord is insulated I feel "unterminated" would be aa better description.

      @ignatgrz@ignatgrz2 жыл бұрын
    • Hi Clint, always nice to see you using your work account for private viewing

      @LillyP-xs5qe@LillyP-xs5qe2 жыл бұрын
    • I love that you're seemingly a big fan of Cathode Ray Dude. It shouldn't be surprising, as you both share quite a few similar interests. But still, it's heartwarming to know that someone who works so hard to provide fun & fascination for the world also gets to relax and appreciate great videos, because there are others who create equally fantastic content that you can enjoy! Long live the New Media! I can't get over how grateful I am that independent creators such as yourselves are now able to reach an audience who appreciates you. I shudder to think of all the great talent and wonder that the world was deprived of when ruled under the old networks and production companies. Together, we should all fight to ensure that creativity stays independent, lest the dinosaurs of old rise and seize back control once again ('cause they damned sure are trying)!

      @brandonb3279@brandonb32792 жыл бұрын
    • It's time to investigate 🔎🤔🔮🗿🚬

      @fontende@fontende2 жыл бұрын
    • Where I used to work, we dealt with these all the time

      @thatguyontheright1@thatguyontheright12 жыл бұрын
  • If you struggle to solder connectors and regularly melt the pins, make sure you are connecting the connector to its mate. It prevents the pins from walking from the heat and keeps them straight while soldering. It also and gives the pins more metal to dissipate the heat and prevent melting the plastic

    @goddess_randi@goddess_randi11 ай бұрын
    • Great tip! I was melting XT60 connectors til I upgraded from a pathetic 30w iron with junk solder to a 65w with decent solder. The solder was the biggest issue.

      @AaronHendu@AaronHendu6 ай бұрын
    • There are a lot of very badly made connectors around today. Instead of the insulation being made of decent thermoset plastic it is made of something easy to mold and super cheap like polypropylene. That, combined with poor quality plating in pins, makes some of them almost impossible to solder well no matter your level of expertise. That said, there _is_ considerable art in soldering wires to connectors. One of the most common errors I see is improper feeding of cored solder. It must be fed so that the flux flows over the joint before the molten solder does. I've seen videos that supposedly are teaching soldering where the solder is touched to the iron tip and allowed to flow onto the work. That is just wrong. A lot of people seem to want to slop extra flux all over everything. In the vast majority of cases that is completely unnecessary if your technique is good. I _do_ like to use a tiny amount of low-solids liquid flux for tinning small stranded wires to be soldered to certain types of very small connectors and sometimes use rosin paste flux for tinning large stranded wires, but other than that I very rarely use extra flux. I'd be extremely surprised if the number of joints I've soldered is less than a hundred thousand.

      @d614gakadoug9@d614gakadoug96 ай бұрын
    • @@d614gakadoug9 Is that all 100K? I've done millions.

      @bobsmith3983@bobsmith39836 ай бұрын
    • ​@@d614gakadoug9any videos or channels you recommend where I could pick up knowledge and tips from? Preferably with DC, stranded wire type stuff I have enough knowledge to know when I'm watching someone who doesn't really have a understanding of the fundamentals, or why they're doing something a particular way. I often hear the statement "been doing it this way for so and so years, never had an issue" or similar, which is fine but when their intention is to help viewers it doesn't exactly provide much meaningful value. Combine that with poor video or audio and you've got A LOT of video to sift through and waste time on lol

      @cpzmelbs@cpzmelbs6 ай бұрын
    • another tip, instead of plugging the male connector you are soldering, push its pins into potato or an apple or such. This method worked wonders for me =)

      @nukester.@nukester.5 ай бұрын
  • I have both versions of soldering iron. I’m not an electronics professional, I’m a field service mechanic and the cheap version has fixed everything from a stranded boat on the water to a forestry mulcher stuck deep in the bush. They both work really well I’ve never burned the cable feeding the iron just as I’ve never burned through my hoses on my acetylene torch. Maybe not for the electronics professionals but for the rest of us it sure beats the old butane butchery of yesterday.

    @russjones45@russjones453 ай бұрын
    • Thank you. that was the idea i had while watching. hes acting like this product is a full electronics professional kit and not just a here you go for the occasional solder when needed. it works fine. ive got one and ive never burned the wires, nor had any issues with it. though i already suspected the way the 120 volt supply was just by looking at mine and going... heeeeeeeyyyyy wait a minute that looks like a totally normal bi pin plug sand witched in place im gonna bet that they just shoved a power supply into the unit and called it a day. honestly i think they missed a good little trick they could have added and sold as a feature. move the plug somewhere else and add the ability to charge a battery. i know its not the most useful idea, but the power supply outputs 18 volts. same as the battery so all they would really need is the same logic that their chargers have which after taking apart a tiny ryobi charger i have... the charging circutry. is really pretty basic. seems like the batteries themselves handle quite a lot of the aspects of the charging and discharging as well as the over and under voltage stuff.

      @compzac@compzacАй бұрын
  • I’m a retired engineer. You spoke about the build quality of the internal PCB and the fact that they had not cleaned it. In recent years manufacturers have developed what is known as “no clean flux.” It contains no corrosive or conductive chemicals, dries hard so it does not attract dust, and does not need to be cleaned. The items you pointed out as rework on the PCB are more likely through hole components that can not be soldered in the same oven as the SMD parts. I also don’t think wire length has anything to do with cost, it has more to do with fitting everything into the box. You see this with many electronic products, even very high-end ones. About the only build issue that I think is a real problem is the PVC cable. I’m not sure why they made that choice, probably a cost thing. But it is a deal killer for me as well.

    @marklewus5468@marklewus5468 Жыл бұрын
    • As far as not needing to clean flux off products... pure rosin core flux without a corrosive ingredients has been available for 50 years , and is not expensive. also a few seconds in an isopropanol alcohol bath is not difficult.

      @Geopholus@Geopholus5 ай бұрын
    • @@Geopholus Except you can't really bath a board that has wires soldered on it. Your bath content will creep into the wires, denature the flame retardant (if any) and lower their lifetime. I'm quite sure the boards have been cleaned after the SMD process, but not after the wires and TH soldering.

      @MrPureBasic@MrPureBasic5 ай бұрын
    • Ahem. Rosin core is corrosive, that's what flux IS. Some are just more active than others, but rosin is mildly hygroscopic so can cause problems in humid areas. Also, merely dunking it into an alcohol bath for a few seconds will not remove it. It needs abrasion/scrubbing or a much longer agitating bath for removal, which isn't really needed if they simply use no-clean flux/solder instead. There are many steps in design and manufacturing that could be idealized but in the end it has to be weighed what the benefit is vs all the extra costs. That does not mean that I feel a few cents more spent here or there, wouldn't be worthwhile but remember what Ryobi is, TTI's consumer grade brand for tools rather than contractor or pro grade. @@Geopholus

      @stinkycheese804@stinkycheese8045 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Geopholuslol

      @Hawk7886@Hawk78864 ай бұрын
    • With determination, one can fabricate a silicon-jacketed cable for this beast.

      @johnnyveng4014@johnnyveng40143 ай бұрын
  • One advantage of those "internal" power supplies is that they can replace these with supplies for different regions without redesigning the whole tool.

    @EvilErwin23@EvilErwin232 жыл бұрын
    • I considered that, but I'm pretty sure the opening in the chassis is sized for a US plug and would not fit any others, and from what I've been told (and what research I've been able to do) the "hybrid" feature is US-specific, likely for that reason. In the UK, ostensibly, these just run off of battery only.

      @CathodeRayDude@CathodeRayDude2 жыл бұрын
    • Unless they are really cheapest out on psu it should handle 100-240v 50-60hz easily

      @virtualtools_3021@virtualtools_30212 жыл бұрын
    • I was wondering this as well however I have a Bixolon Thermal Printer here where they also put a power brick in the case. It doesn't have a cable on it though, just a socket for a C13 plug (I hope that's what it's called), which would make it even easier to ship it around the world I guess

      @kaligura666@kaligura6662 жыл бұрын
    • @@virtualtools_3021 I actually says that right on the case of the supply.

      @TechGorilla1987@TechGorilla19872 жыл бұрын
    • @@CathodeRayDude we dont have these type of extension cables in the uk, where you can just connect them to a male plug like that. They would have to use an IEC type inlet for here.

      @AeroplaneJamie@AeroplaneJamie2 жыл бұрын
  • I've pulled apart tonnes of electronics, and i have to say the design of this thing is actually quite elegant. The fact that the power supply is fully contained in a closed frame pack is awesome. Imagine you go to add some water to your sponge and you mess up and dump water on the unit. That pack inside that houses all the high voltage is completely water tight. I know, not a super likely scenario, but if that plus the other things like not cleaning of flux (which would be an utter waste of time) help to keep the costs down then I'm all for it.

    @edsgarage001@edsgarage0014 ай бұрын
    • A lot of products now leave the flux on the PCB. It's some form of newer flux that doesn't become corrosive, so cleaning it off is a waste of time and money for the factory.

      @AstrosElectronicsLab@AstrosElectronicsLab3 ай бұрын
    • This guy is full of 💩💩💩. He obviously has a biased opinion of Ryobi tools. He cried and cried through this whole video. I don't take my tools apart for no reason. I prefer to work with them not purposely destroy them like this🤡

      @Mark-pu4gh@Mark-pu4gh16 күн бұрын
  • Those inverters are life savers! When the power was out during freezing temps, I had one and was able to store electricity in my batteries, recharge them in the garage so no door needs to be cracked to use the generator.

    @rustythefoxcoon5143@rustythefoxcoon51433 ай бұрын
  • For soldering DIN plugs, just use the potato trick: Ram the plug into a raw potato, it will hold the plug for you and the wet inside of the potato helps cooling the pins so the plastic won't melt.

    @kpanic23@kpanic232 жыл бұрын
    • At least some one on this channel knows what his talking about, used the same trick myself, I manufactured 4 ply boards for computers in the 80s, with a non temp controlled weller soldier iron, never had a problem I did 1,000s over my time, and you don't need to apply any pressure to the tip of Iron, those people that talk about soldier Irons need to know what there taking about first.

      @videomentaryproductionschannel@videomentaryproductionschannel2 жыл бұрын
    • or just plug it into a mating connector/cable in case there's no potato at hand ^^

      @infi84@infi842 жыл бұрын
    • @@videomentaryproductionschannel Exactly. Unless you're being lazy and using the soldering iron tip to scrape through the oxide layer on some solder blobs, you really shouldn't need to apply much pressure at all to the tip of the soldering iron. The trick is lots of flux and flowing new leaded solder into the existing solder to make it more workable. Also, using the right size of tip and soldering iron for the job. If you have to apply a lot of pressure on a wire junction to get it to soldering temp, it's likely because your iron is too small or it's unable to output enough heat to soak the wires.

      @mndlessdrwer@mndlessdrwer2 жыл бұрын
    • And you get a baked potato at the end!

      @endymallorn@endymallorn2 жыл бұрын
    • This Pace instruction video on cup terminals is invaluable: kzhead.info/sun/kquFlaeslqdpiHA/bejne.html If you haven't already try Kester #186 liquid flux, the stuff is great. You can get it off ebay in little syringe bottles. I was disappointed that they stopped making the Kester flux paste but once I tried the #186 liquid now I see why. If you absolutely must have paste Caig / Deoxit flux paste is a decent alternative to the out of production Kester. MG Chemicals RA is very powerful flux, but too good in some cases. It promotes too much wicking in stranded wire and it also needs to be cleaned. But it has it's uses in difficult soldering jobs.

      @atomicskull6405@atomicskull64052 жыл бұрын
  • I took a broken blue-bosch 18V charger, and removed the internals, put in a 5-20V to 60W USB-PD PCB, 3d printed a little attachment piece, and soldered the wires from the battery terminals to it. So now I can power my Pinecil from my batteries that I use with my other tools that I keep in the van. Plus it doubles as a huge powerbank for my laptop, and other devices.

    @Ivanzrer@Ivanzrer4 ай бұрын
  • Keeping the plug on the power supply is a stroke of genius. I love Ryobi. It works for me as a home owner/rancher.

    @dhansel4835@dhansel483511 ай бұрын
  • Stumbled across your channel via the algorithm. At first glance I was like "who is watching a 47m video on a soldering station?". But here I am, 37m in, and I'm genuinely impressed. Youve dug into this at the level I like to see. Truly worthwhile content. Earned my sub.

    @NSFWHarold@NSFWHarold2 жыл бұрын
    • Like all KZheads up the playback speed. Use the double tap feature to the right of the screen and voila, a 40+ minute KZhead is done in 20 minutes, even with playback at slower speeds as the content demands.

      @oddjobbob8742@oddjobbob87422 жыл бұрын
    • Same! I've soldered exactly 5 joints, ever. Still watched the whole video lol

      @jonpearson6279@jonpearson62792 жыл бұрын
    • @@jonpearson6279 I've soldered 0 joints ever but I've smoked countless joints 😉😂

      @DrewWalton@DrewWalton2 жыл бұрын
    • meeee tooooo!!!!!

      @supportiranianfreedom4982@supportiranianfreedom49822 жыл бұрын
    • Same thoughts here, and now it has over a million views… for a soldering vid! Who knew?

      @simontillson482@simontillson4827 ай бұрын
  • I think using external power supplies encased in plastic housings is actually a step up for cheap products. Having one power supply design used in lots of products will most likely have a better average reliability than random cheap internal designs that are not standardized. Plus replacement is infinitely easier if the power supply does die!

    @letthetunesflow@letthetunesflow2 жыл бұрын
    • Can't argue with that!

      @CathodeRayDude@CathodeRayDude2 жыл бұрын
    • Plus, (assuming you know it's in there if it does) you can at least salvage a nice, safe supply before recycling the rest of it. I've gotten a few from laser printers I've salvaged recently, way more reusable than power supplies on pcb only.

      @NVRMTmotion@NVRMTmotion2 жыл бұрын
    • @@NVRMTmotion good point

      @letthetunesflow@letthetunesflow2 жыл бұрын
    • @@NVRMTmotion Very good point. I lately became a horder of all sorts of chargers. I keep all chargers before binning devices. Some of the chargers that come with some devices are cheaply made and they break or get faulty easily. So having spares is a bonus. Plus some mobile phones stoped supplying the chargers with the phone. So better keep the spare ones we already have just in case.

      @ruinunes8251@ruinunes82512 жыл бұрын
    • @@CathodeRayDude With a bit of research and some work, you could make a killer station out of that thing. By "a bit", I mean "a helluva lot."

      @ozzymandius666@ozzymandius6662 жыл бұрын
  • this ryobi has become my daily use solder station. it gets hot nice and quick and holds temp better than any of my other rigs. the extra thick cord is a pain once in a while but im not really bothered. thank you for the video 🤘🦊💜

    @foxhazhax4845@foxhazhax4845 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for letting people know about those cheapo irons at hardware stores. When I was younger and didn't know better i thought soldering was so difficult cause all I had experience with was those crappy non temp control ones. Recently I got a simple one with digital control and man it makes such a difference

    @bok..@bok.. Жыл бұрын
    • My uncle, a long, long time ago, assembled kit radios in his mother's kitchen table, for a soldering iron he used a copper nail held with pliers and heated on the butane range. He sold and repaired radios as a side hustle. I made a solering iron out of a pencil, a small scrap of copper wire snd sone thinner wire strands to hold it together., which worked well enough until I bought a replacement. Both of those options worked better than the shitty irons at the corner shops and hardware stores.

      @Fridelain@Fridelain5 ай бұрын
    • Has nothing to do with temp control, rather it is the type of tip the iron uses. The cheap, screw in type that is nickel plated copper, is difficult to use if you don't constantly file the tip down to clean copper and tin it again, often.

      @stinkycheese804@stinkycheese8045 ай бұрын
    • The radio shack pistol grip soldering iron is how I learned to solder, I think if you learn with bad tools at a young age you're really good with proper ones once you graduate to them. Brings back good memories.

      @sugarbooty@sugarbooty5 ай бұрын
  • "I never felt like using fire in my domicile, or even my subicile" This had me dyinf

    @loganmacgyver2625@loganmacgyver26252 жыл бұрын
    • I bet you could use the Cold Heat in a subicile.

      @GP1138@GP11382 жыл бұрын
    • Makes you think twice about that e stim device video 👀 lol

      @drasco61084@drasco610842 жыл бұрын
    • Is this like a dominant submissive joke?

      @peterw1534@peterw15342 жыл бұрын
    • @@peterw1534 yes

      @loganmacgyver2625@loganmacgyver26252 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks, I didn't have closed caption on, and didn't catch the subicile part. LOL.

      @mitch3064@mitch30642 жыл бұрын
  • Caught this on my 5th re-watch of this video: Last year I bought a no-name Chinese “probably won’t set your place on fire” soldering station from Amazon and it also had the ceramic pencil style heating element. I can confirm that they’re super fragile and, despite the “engineering” steps taken to protect the element from taking the force as you described, it did, in fact come conveniently pre-broken from the factory. The manufacturer must have known that this was a likely situation to happen so they actually included a spare element in the box. The kicker is that replacing the element involves having to solder the new leads. 🙄

    @NageebTheAverage@NageebTheAverage2 жыл бұрын
    • Reminds me of a joke discussion I had a while ago of "how did we solder together the first soldering iron?"

      @joshm264@joshm264 Жыл бұрын
    • @@joshm264 very carefully

      @SelectKiko@SelectKiko Жыл бұрын
    • @@joshm264: The first soldering irons were heated in a fire or on top of a stove.

      @edwatts9890@edwatts9890 Жыл бұрын
    • @@joshm264 lol i made a soldering iron for that, it's basically a resistance waterheater wire heating a thick copper wire, no solder.

      @fss1704@fss1704 Жыл бұрын
    • @@edwatts9890 i did that too, it's best if you have a bigass piece of copper

      @fss1704@fss1704 Жыл бұрын
  • Ryobi had a wallwart in it's hybrid fan too if I remember right. I'm surprised they didn't use silicone wire being a soldering iron.

    @bwselectronic@bwselectronic5 ай бұрын
  • About the tapering screw holes: yes that's draft angle. Without it, the part would be very difficult to get it out of the mold

    @hananas2@hananas2 Жыл бұрын
  • This is actually remarkably well made to use the bear minimum of parts and have the least assembly required. Some modeller did a great job to let others be lazy.

    @euclideanspace2573@euclideanspace25732 жыл бұрын
    • Actually sums up every ryobi product ive ever had to use.

      @kiryu11111@kiryu111112 жыл бұрын
    • That thing is going to get hot very easily.

      @mickalinjezerx7104@mickalinjezerx71042 жыл бұрын
    • @@mickalinjezerx7104 That all depends on how efficient the circuitry is. The power supply's won't get any hotter then the one on your lap top so there's no worry there and that control board doesn't look like it was designed to pass much current through it so I doubt it will get very hot. Designers know better then to design products that trap heat because heat is the number one killer of electronics and that means products get returned and manufacturers loss money.

      @iamjackalope@iamjackalope2 жыл бұрын
    • @@iamjackalope You describe literally thousands of products. It doesn't matter how good the is. As far as I know where there is energy carries Heat.

      @mickalinjezerx7104@mickalinjezerx71042 жыл бұрын
    • @@iamjackalope well I never had a laptop but I have had a hot phone before.

      @mickalinjezerx7104@mickalinjezerx71042 жыл бұрын
  • I’ve owned the smaller version of this for several years. It has handled everything I could throw at it and even surviving a rollover collision when some chucklehead ran a red light and rolled me over. It ended up underneath one of my toolboxes and submerged in oil. 18 months later it still works, and only occasionally reeks of burning oil.

    @BD-xz6te@BD-xz6te2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, he's ripping on it but they work great.

      @xephael3485@xephael34852 жыл бұрын
    • That last sentence. 🤣

      @deusexaethera@deusexaethera2 жыл бұрын
    • @@deusexaethera To be fair the soldering iron part was completely submerged in oil when I found it 2 days after the wreck. I cleaned it up and flushed it out with some solvent but I never could get all of it. The first time I powered it up it reeked of burnt oil but I kept it running and the smell went away. If I used it often there is no smell but if it sits for a few weeks I guess some more oil wicks it's way in from wherever it's hiding and it smells like burning oil for a few minutes. I've just learned to power it up before I use it inside a hospital or somewhere else where people might object. It's getting fainter. It's still the best portable soldering iron I've ever used. If it died today I'd go buy another one without hesitating. Rattling around in a service truck for years, getting rained on, dropped, smashed by a toolbox and submerged in oil hasn't exactly been an easy life for it, but the thing still works great. It's already lasted longer than my last 3 corded irons and at least two butane ones that were kept in the same environment.

      @BD-xz6te@BD-xz6te2 жыл бұрын
  • Omg I lost it when you revealed the power supply! Was NOT expecting to see that. I've taken apart a lot of electronics in my life and this is a new one.

    @TheBrianhj@TheBrianhj23 күн бұрын
  • Having previously worked at a couple of electronic assembly jobs, my favorite iron was Metcal, but cost $800 around 1995. To hand solder well, I learned two tricks. 1) I prefer a hot iron around 800 F. It allows you to heat the joint quickly and then get off before the heat can travel too far. With a cooler iron you have to keep the iron on it longer melting or destroying what it is touching. 2) Flux is your friend. If attaching a wire I tin the wire first before making the joint. I trim the insulation and expose the wire extra long. With the end of the wire pointed down, I touch the iron on it and the solder allowing the solder to melt. I raise the wire up as I drag the soldering tip down and the flux allow the excess solder to pool at the end of the wire. I then trim the wire to the needed length. To solder your DIN plug, pre-tin your wires and cut the exposed portion 1/8”-1/4” long, or the depth of the solder cup. Touch the soldering tip to the plug’s cup with the solder in the hole. Once the solder melts and coats the pin’s cup, stick the tinned wire in the cup and remove the heat. The pin’s cup has good solder and so does the wire so your connection will be good.

    @scottmoore598@scottmoore598 Жыл бұрын
    • I liked the Weller but we all preferred the Hakko soldering stations in mfg. When doing big things it takes more power. I also have Weller soldering guns. I am skilled enough to do printed through hole boards with chips using a 100/140 :) but I also have units up to 260, 340, and more than 400. The bigger ones around 200-240 are great for doing power and headphone jack bodies and metal shields around RF circuits. That 425 unit I have is great for PL-259 connectors and I even soldered closed a freeze crack in one of my waterpipes. I use it to solder copper connections on antennas and other tough projects. All of which require precision but lots of power. Good tip on the Metcal. I will have to look it up.

      @KlodFather@KlodFather5 ай бұрын
    • your tips made a lot of sense ,and they actually worked to boot, most of what i need to solder is tiny , expensive guitar ,and recording gear stuff , with parts i can't tear out of my evil step-daughter's stereo or TV, ( i did steal stuff out of her PS2 ,lol ,,a momentary switch out of the controler, yes i was proud of myself), but anyway, it only seem to happen at like 2 AM or so, and you have to finish recording or you loose the vibe ,and i would always destroy most of what i was trying to solder ,but not now, so thanx

      @jakeqwaninne8502@jakeqwaninne85025 ай бұрын
    • 800F is much too hot, you either needed an iron tip with more thermal mass, or were not using a properly plated tip of the right shape to achieve good heat transfer. I agree with much of the rest of what you wrote, but would add that when soldering connectors, it is very helpful to have the mating other end plugged in, which both helps to pull heat away from the pin, and also holds the pin in the correct aligned position if the heat did begin to soften the plastic.

      @stinkycheese804@stinkycheese8045 ай бұрын
  • I work with PVC cabling all the time. Hang the base in place on a wall, then hit the jacket with a heat gun or blowdryer. Nice even heat, a bit of weight, and some patience, you will remove all of the natural curls. The jacket expands, then contracts to the new shape. It will behave much better after that. You can also wind it around a dowel to give it a tight curl like a phone cable. Handy.

    @KenJagers@KenJagers2 жыл бұрын
    • Completly agree, i do that to basically any new thing with a cable. But pvc cable is still not a good choice for soldering iron. Its much stiffer than it should be. Rubber is better but silicone is excellent

      @Boz1211111@Boz1211111 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Boz1211111 Far less than ideal yeah, but it can be worked with if you're on a budget and have some patience.

      @KenJagers@KenJagers Жыл бұрын
    • I often sort of nest the cable in a towel then blast it with a hot hair dryer. Once it is uniformly quite hot i'll work out the worst "kinks" by hand if necessary then hang it to cool, sometimes with another heating just before hanging. It is a horrible time waster but can make abominable cables into merely not-very-good ones.

      @d614gakadoug9@d614gakadoug96 ай бұрын
    • Replaced mine with a nice soft rubbery cord from Hakko 😅

      @rocketsalad@rocketsalad6 ай бұрын
    • Wow I'm stupid. You're a bloody genius, I know what I'm doing today!

      @cpzmelbs@cpzmelbs6 ай бұрын
  • I worked with a lot of strain reliefs at UL when i worked there. That strain relief is pretty solid looking. There would be so much friction that the narrow teeth biting into the cable are probably not likely to cause much, if any, damage over the life of the product.

    @markdelapaz5573@markdelapaz55732 жыл бұрын
    • I've already killed a cable in a ryobi soldering iron in less than a year of ownership. I just replaced the cable with some more heavy duty wire. Hasn't missed a beat since

      @jackass123455@jackass1234552 жыл бұрын
    • Dude side note your company blows my mind UL listings are everywhere and your field guys for recertification are super helpful.

      @TheFrostcave@TheFrostcave2 жыл бұрын
  • I have a cheap one from AliExpress. 120w digital readout, USB powered and it's slim and light. Works so well. I love the on off switch on it as well.

    @deancyrus1@deancyrus19 күн бұрын
  • Similar to the phone charger cords, I really like the woven cloth cords that we had in the 60's. Those are awesome and I am glad they brought them back in a modern form. I am sure someone with a soldering iron (pun intended) could replace the existing cord with a woven cloth cord. As for temp, there are many cloth like materials (not asbestos) that can handle the heat. We use them in gloves, etc.

    @sammcbride2464@sammcbride24645 ай бұрын
  • The butane-powered soldering iron were usefull when I was installing marine communications and navigational equipment in medium size sailboats and powerboats back in the 80's, where a boat at anchorage didnt have 120 VAC "shore power", or you might be working up on the mast, in the cockpit, or on the boat deck where there wasn't an outlet available (for obvious reasons!). The butane iron was great for soldering PL-259's and other large RF connectors.

    @goodun2974@goodun29742 жыл бұрын
    • Was just going to say this. Some of the mobile mechanics in the locale use these things too. Pretty much anywhere where you can expect to not have access to a outlet. They have their uses.

      @venge1894@venge18942 жыл бұрын
    • @@venge1894 , of course, ya' gotta be careful with an open flame around car and truck engines, marine engines, and bilges! I do wonder if any of the current crop if battery-powered cordless iron could solder the ground shield of a PL-259 connector; for that, you might need an invertor to provide 120VAC, and a BIG soldering iron, or a Weller 8200 gun.

      @goodun2974@goodun29742 жыл бұрын
    • butane-powered soldering iron one of my most used tool too, i keep one in my car if i somehow ruin my wires(i have alot of them going around), i could get one that works on 12v outlet or make my own one but its easier to use butane one.

      @dandeson9723@dandeson97232 жыл бұрын
    • I use my butane powered iron for soldering and, recreational use

      @dannymiller6245@dannymiller62452 жыл бұрын
    • @@dannymiller6245 I have one of the butane irons for doing the electrical connectors on farm equipment. they also work really well for melting a perfect hole in a plastic sheet to pass cables through without leaving rough edges that will wear the cable over time.

      @vampricloki@vampricloki2 жыл бұрын
  • I don't know what I was expecting to be inside there, but it certainly wasn't that power supply 😱

    @cemmy410@cemmy4102 жыл бұрын
    • Honestly, I trust its reliability more after seeing them just cram an entire pre-built DC power brick into the thing. It means that it's a component that works regardless of their engineering and they haven't messed with it.

      @mndlessdrwer@mndlessdrwer2 жыл бұрын
    • I have a Caterpillar branded car jump starter that was built just like this.

      @operator8014@operator80142 жыл бұрын
    • I'm old school enough that I was expecting the thing I always used to find in cheap but 'sturdy feeling' items... a big chunk of cheap pig iron glued into the bottom of the case.

      @mfree80286@mfree802862 жыл бұрын
  • I hate the wire on the iron, too. Is there a replacement wire we can purchase, so the iron is more flexible and easier to work with? Thanks,

    @johnmalvasio3720@johnmalvasio37204 ай бұрын
  • I had to chuckle at This video a lot. My entire youth in the 1980s was spent doing electronics in the garage and in my room as a hobby. The only iron I could ever afford was at first a radio shack 15 w stand-alone iron like the ones you were ranking on, and a little bit later in high school. I was able to afford a new radio shack iron that was switchable between 10 w and 25 w. I still have that iron and it still works, though I now use a much better Hakko station. Projects I built 30 plus years ago with those cheap irons and basic solder Are still working fine. They were the standard for home hobbyists, including people building home computers. Temperature controlled irons were expensive and for people with money. The cheapo irons you pointed to on the shelf though that can be obtained today Seem to be nothing like those old radio shack irons we used to use back then. The new ones are absolutely garbage every time I've seen one and tried to use one.

    @Cherijo78@Cherijo7815 күн бұрын
  • Haha, loved that powerbrick! Actually a genius idea 😂 also I can't believe I just watched a 45 minute video on a soldering iron

    @UnjustifiedRecs@UnjustifiedRecs2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, this could have been a 15 minute video, I watched in 2x and still kept skipping ahead. Wow so much talking in this video.

      @z0rkmids@z0rkmids2 жыл бұрын
    • I didn't ever realize.... He talks very well!

      @AccordionGoose@AccordionGoose2 жыл бұрын
    • I did too! And I didn't even realize it 😂 Great video!

      @bishopp14@bishopp142 жыл бұрын
    • @@AccordionGoose Too much!!!

      @WesB1972@WesB19722 жыл бұрын
  • I have used a butane soldering iron a lot, probably close to 200 times. Working on ships masts. The temperature control is there, it gets to temp quickly and stays hot up in the breeze. You can also use heat shrink with it and don't have to fumble with a cord while climbing. We bring a plug in electric one, but I've never seen anyone use it. That said, if we can do the soldering at a proper station before climbing then we will, especially if it's a lot of soldering, or we need a vice or something.

    @TheAdventuresOfLeaf@TheAdventuresOfLeaf2 жыл бұрын
  • I have an iron with an element that's similar with the ceramic piece and the screw on tip. It also has a thermometer and it really does work pretty well, since I've used those stick soldering irons with a vague wattage, and really I havent had terrible results, but my little off brand russian iron works surprisingly well. This was quite informative though, so I am taking notes! :)

    @punishedexistence@punishedexistence Жыл бұрын
  • Just saw your video while looking for any info on the soldering irons' energy saving mode. I can't agree more with everything that's been stated here. The cable replacement to the iron is a future project for me to check out. My number one pet peeve is having the iron shut down while in the middle of a lengthy soldering session. Is there a way to defeat this "energy saving mode"?

    @hankus253@hankus253 Жыл бұрын
  • To me, the bare ceramic is what I think of as standard under the tip. I think every iron I've ever used is like that. No need to make the heat transfer less efficient. With the tip screwed down, you won't have any force being applied to it.

    @0xTJ@0xTJ2 жыл бұрын
    • Came here to say the same thing. My best station is a hakko and it's got the bare ceramic same as the cheap ones I've got from Chinese brands. They all work fine, I've never considered that a weakness.

      @xVolta@xVolta2 жыл бұрын
    • Ye. First time I saw it, I was concerned about how brittle it might be, but in practice never had it crack. It should be held in place and not rattle around - If it rattles it's not making contact and transferring heat.

      @UnitSe7en@UnitSe7en2 жыл бұрын
    • Hakkos do at least have a replaceable ceramic element from what I remember. Some of these are likely built in a way that you can't get it out without destroying the handle.

      @davidcoghill8612@davidcoghill86122 жыл бұрын
    • Arguably using the ceramic core is less efficient than integrating the heating element directly into the tip, downside of doing that makes the tips more expensive and potentially harder to swap out. TS100 uses such tips.

      @nsshurtz@nsshurtz2 жыл бұрын
    • It's been the standard for over 20 years, he needs to do more research when doing a video.

      @GoldSrc_@GoldSrc_2 жыл бұрын
  • I've been liking my TS80P for portable soldering. I chose it over the TS100 because it uses USB Power Delivery instead of flat pack/drone batteries. I have an 18W PD battery pack that works wonders, and it can also use my laptop PD charger. Gets hot enough for any of my little projects and has swappable tips.

    @kylejscheffler@kylejscheffler2 жыл бұрын
    • I have the same for the same reason. Love it.

      @IM_A_BEAR_LOL@IM_A_BEAR_LOL2 жыл бұрын
    • I was going to comment this same thing. The TS80p is absolutely tiny and heats up in seconds. Absolutely my favorite purchase.

      @OnlineWithRyanB@OnlineWithRyanB2 жыл бұрын
    • After going through two soldering stations, the TS80P is my new daily driver.

      @bobris@bobris2 жыл бұрын
    • The TS80p and TS100 are incredible the Pinecil is also really great as well.

      @Draxl2309@Draxl23092 жыл бұрын
    • TS100 is usb power compatible as well.

      @mooommo14@mooommo142 жыл бұрын
  • For about 8 years now, you can just get a TS80 and a powerbank or a TS100 with a USB-C fast charge to 12V adaptor. About a 80 bucks, open source, temperature controlled and modifiable. Also uses a great tip technology. Sure it's not a station but you can very easily make it into one.

    @camelpuncher95@camelpuncher952 ай бұрын
    • or a t12 kit for even cheaper.

      @PhobosTK@PhobosTK2 ай бұрын
  • Wow! I guess i was expecting a big surprising fail at the end but instead, just got the tool version of a great vacation. All about the journey, not the destination. Crazy discoveries all through an extremely thorough tear down w heaps of passionate opinions, all culminating in a confidently voiced judgement of "a product". Yep. You want a product? Well, this may just be what you're after! It is, in fact, produced! 🤣🤣

    @neepsmcfly4176@neepsmcfly417611 ай бұрын
  • 27:30 Personally I prefer Torx screws over Phillips (and god-forbid, flat-head) screws. Much easier to align and nearly impossible to strip, especially because manufacturers commonly use some kind of Loctite on the screws when assembling products. The Nintendo screws are like the worst of both worlds-- uncommon bit AND easy to strip. lol. I have a set of Wiha Torx drivers that are awesome for taking apart all kinds of electronics, all the way down to T1 size. Bonus is that they double as Allen/hex drivers.

    @yellowcrescent@yellowcrescent2 жыл бұрын
    • Allen screws are also pretty good PROVIDED you use a decent set of allen drivers (i.e. not those god awful L-keys). Wera also makes what are called "hex plus" drivers that have a modified shape which puts more of the driving surface in contact with the insude of the socket. But yeah Torx are the best especially that there are no "metric" or "standard" torx they all use the same drivers.

      @atomicskull6405@atomicskull64052 жыл бұрын
    • @@atomicskull6405 Yeah I have some Wera Hex Plus drivers in the L-key format which are pretty nice (probably some of the few L-key types that don't suck). Need to get a set of T-handle ones sometime... just need more desk/storage space first... lol

      @yellowcrescent@yellowcrescent2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah honestly I prefer torx as well. As someone who used to be a electronic repair technician torx was far better when I had to take things apart. Far less likely to break from my experience. Torx or Torx Plus is on a lot of insert tooling that I've used. It holds up really well there as well. Torx or Allen is way better than Philip or Flathead for anything that has to be used more than one or two times. Haven't come across hex plus before but it it seems pretty good as well. A bit into that repair technician job I bought a full precision ESD wiha set that comes with the metal holder and each different size/ type is a different full screwdriver. While expensive (350$ ish if I remember right) it was a great investment. That helped a lot on not breaking Phillips as well. Having the right size driver helps a lot on not breaking fasteners. Have it on my workbench at home now and it does have the right size to take that apart and would fit.

      @blindsniper35@blindsniper352 жыл бұрын
    • I was kinda baffled at the torx part as well. To me torx is a sign of quality and I never use any other head be it the small repairs around the house or building electronics. Philips or PZ is only for those situations when I can't get the correct size screw with a torx head for some reason.

      @armeli@armeli2 жыл бұрын
    • I like torx, hate security torx

      @REPOMAN24722@REPOMAN247222 жыл бұрын
  • 5:34 this has to be my favorite running joke on this channel, and possibly ever

    @johnstamos1542@johnstamos15422 жыл бұрын
    • im so happy he uses it as much as he does, as it's one of my favourite modern memes

      @eileenf7991@eileenf79912 жыл бұрын
  • I use those butane irons a lot for joining low voltage wires, they work really well for that because temp isn’t nearly so concerning on an 18g wire. I also used a simple pencil for years, they were fine for hobby through hole stuff (nothing huge or too small).

    @MultiPureEnergy@MultiPureEnergy9 ай бұрын
  • I find the design brilliant !

    @TheSolderingGuy007@TheSolderingGuy007 Жыл бұрын
  • I've been using a Hakko FX-901 for over a decade now for lightweight tasks, and it's worked very well for me. No, it doesn't have temperature control, but a set of 4 NiMH AA cells will give you over an hour of runtime, and you can put the cap back on it while still hot. Of course, it has relatively low thermal mass so it can't take the place of a proper soldering station, but for small parts (Game Boy mods, replacing capacitors, etc) it's very convenient.

    @ThisDoesNotCompute@ThisDoesNotCompute2 жыл бұрын
    • Huh! It looks so simple, but I guess if it does the job!

      @CathodeRayDude@CathodeRayDude2 жыл бұрын
    • I got the nice FX-1001 still 🤣

      @User_1795@User_17952 жыл бұрын
    • Who else read this comment in Colin’s voice?

      @brantisonfire@brantisonfire2 жыл бұрын
    • I've got one of those hakko ones, too. It's fine for emergency stuff.

      @ThalassTKynn@ThalassTKynn2 жыл бұрын
    • Can't be more than 20w iron if 4 aa nimh cells will run it for a hour.

      @randybobandy9828@randybobandy98282 жыл бұрын
  • The tapered screw holes was probably also a cost-saving measure. Very minimally more plastic, to reduce the chances workers will get stuck fumbling around with lining up the screw head to the hole down in there, the taper just makes it magically happen so they can hurry up cinch it down and ship it.

    @AToolWithTools@AToolWithTools2 жыл бұрын
    • I've opened some radios with such deep screw holes, If they don't have the tapering, I can't know if the screwdriver is really in the slot or is it between the screw and the plastic. I broke a lot of plastic because I thought I was turning the screw but I was actually using the tip of screwdriver as a lever against the screw to break the plastic...

      @phs125@phs1252 жыл бұрын
    • @@phs125 My own experiences with non-tapered holes is what gave me the thought that this was their purpose too lol

      @AToolWithTools@AToolWithTools2 жыл бұрын
    • My guess would be they're tapered for better release from the injection mould but that would definitely be an added benefit.

      @zachmiller9175@zachmiller91752 жыл бұрын
    • @@zachmiller9175 That's a good thought, that is possible, though if they're machined nice and tight to a 90-degree vertical it should theoretically yield the same results or even better results with releasing as there is less surface area contact with just a straight cylinder rather than a cone shape, but I wouldn't know as I'm not in the PIM industry. I just got to thinking about how tapers are used to *secure* things sometimes, even tooling and chucks.

      @AToolWithTools@AToolWithTools2 жыл бұрын
    • @@AToolWithTools this is the exact reason, anyone who watches AvE or another hacky tool-abuseing channel like this that has ever heard of the term Draft angle/relief, it is required for injection molding 0.5 degrees on all vertical faces is strongly advised. 1 to 2 degrees works very well in most situations. 3 degrees is minimum for a shutoff (metal sliding on metal). 3 degrees is required for light texture (PM-T1).(stolen from the web)

      @frogz@frogz2 жыл бұрын
  • I have an Ungar Imperial soldering iron that I bought in 1964. It went through a few tips until I bought one that was gold plated (expensive too) which is still in great shape after almost 60 years. In that time I had a couple small battery irons for quick small jobs.

    @gbinman@gbinman5 ай бұрын
  • "Heavy is good, heavy is reliable. If it doesn't work, you can always hit them with it." - Boris the Blade

    @theBlueFox2@theBlueFox24 ай бұрын
  • "Who has a non-hex-bit Torx driver sitting around?" I feel attacked...

    @rampagerick@rampagerick2 жыл бұрын
  • I definitely appreciate the use case larger, more "industrial-style" soldering iron stations. Honestly for me, I only do soldering on a small scale (hobby stuff type boards, microcontrollers and all that fun stuff), so the TS1000/Pinecil/etc is very convenient, since I'm surrounded by USB-C cables and chargers (but not really any large 18v power tool stuff) and it's nice and small (feels just like another electronic gadget lol). Totally fits my workflow, but I can see why it doesn't fit yours (and your concerns with the rigid connectors).

    @seshpenguin@seshpenguin2 жыл бұрын
    • I have begun using soldering tips that screw into vape mods. Its super convenient.

      @dustinsmith8341@dustinsmith83412 жыл бұрын
    • A laptop USB-C battery bank with a belt clip and a 2M long USB-C cable would make one of those little USB-C soldering pencils into a totally workable portable soldering solutions. Well, as long as you're willing to carry a small bag with you to hold a stand, sponge, brass scrub pot, and some flux and solder. Still, totally doable and no less convenient.

      @mndlessdrwer@mndlessdrwer2 жыл бұрын
    • @@christo930 I have trouble believing an iron that doesn't even quote power will be anywhere near as good as a TS100 clone at 65W powered by an RC battery or USB-C PD 20V with a much more massive tip. The only hint I can find is the replacement battery they sell is a 4Wh Ni-Cd which would seem to imply it would run out in a few minutes if it had similar power output (and Ni-Cd has a much lower specific power so likely can't even push that much current). Plus temperature control with a thermocouple close to the tip makes it far easier to get good results without burning things.

      @schroedingershat7912@schroedingershat79122 жыл бұрын
    • @@schroedingershat7912 BigClive did a video on the Iso-Tip iron and it does its job pretty well.

      @Ascania@Ascania2 жыл бұрын
    • a ts100/ts80p/pinecil/any fx951 clone/t12 compatible station would blow this ryobi/888/936 clone/907 compatible out of the water. why? thermal conductivity. the reason why cartridge based systems exist like with the ones i listed in the beginning is exactly that. the older 936/907 design has a removable tip and the heating element is in the handle. with cartridge based systems, the heating element is inside the cartridge and there is no gap or anything inbetween. it is far more efficient. really, if the form factor of the ts100/ts80p/pinecil isnt what youre looking for then just get one of those t12 compatible/fx951 clones. there are ones with an integrated psu.

      @n_3719@n_37192 жыл бұрын
  • I bought my own Weller temperature controlled soldering/desoldering station when I was working as an electronics technician for a local community college for the electronic engineering department. It was kept under lock and key when not in use. I retired after 20 years at the college and I still use it for my hobby projects. It is over 30 years old and Weller still makes the tips and heating elements.

    @mistermac56@mistermac565 ай бұрын
  • I inherited my kit from my grandfather, and I'm almost positive he bought it back in the mid-to-late 1960s. It's not portable unless wherever you're going has an open outlet to use, and the tips are quite old and have had to be cleaned and serviced by me several times, and you can even still get replacement tips that work in it. I've had to open her up and change a capacitor or two over the years I've had it, but it's super robust, it's what I learned how to solder with in the first place, and it's still very, very useable indeed. I know that the phrase "they don't build them like they used to," makes me sound like a clichéd old man who's out of touch with the rest of the world around him, but in some cases it's absolutely true.

    @DeathMetalDerf@DeathMetalDerfАй бұрын
  • Reminds me of when I worked with high current circuit breakers on a 130kV facility. Breakers like these uses 4 to 6 large pretensioned springs. Springs that are something like three inches in diameter and three feet (around a meter) long. Pretension in accomplished with electric motors. A particular norwegian made breaker that I had never seen before used... Bosch hand tool power drills with a strap around the button as tensioner motors.

    @jorgendnilsson@jorgendnilsson2 жыл бұрын
  • Wow look at KZhead actually recommending me a video as soon as it's uploaded! And just in time for lunch!

    @sp0ck1p@sp0ck1p2 жыл бұрын
  • "have you met me? Do I look like a person who doesn't have every available plug in this house already used?" Man that hits hard. I feel attacked lol The amount of power strips I have in my house being used is probably insanely dangerous.

    @BamaChad-W4CHD@BamaChad-W4CHD6 ай бұрын
    • Nothing wrong with a few power strips in use around the house provided they are UL listed or ETL approved.

      @emylrmm@emylrmm2 күн бұрын
  • I’ve been using this exact model for at least a year and it works great.

    @curtiswlkr@curtiswlkr3 ай бұрын
  • I brought one of these because of your video. I have been through so many irons and this has been the best I have had. The fact that it's hybrid is what sold it for me. I do a lot of RC racing of various genres and this has saved the day on so many occasions as of late. Thank you for the time in reviewing it.

    @MADmidway@MADmidway2 жыл бұрын
    • came for that reason as a fellow RC driver this is nice and i need to pick one up as soon as posible. tho the iron that conect directly to a 2S lipo is a good choice for emergencies to bring out to the tracks.

      @extec101@extec10111 ай бұрын
  • I used to work for TTI, and outside of upper management there's no Milwaukee crossover with Ridgid and Ryobi tools. Hart is basically rebranded Ryobi though. I might be able to get this video to the engineer that works on this tool, they may be able to make some improvements.

    @KnappstersaurusRex@KnappstersaurusRex2 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for the info about TTI - I suspected that was largely a myth. People like to look at company ownership and say "oh they're the same company" but that's kind of the *problem* with M&A business culture - businesses largely DON'T truly "merge", and often don't gain any benefits from being part of a larger organization, they operate exactly as they always did but just have to give a chunk of their profits to a parent company. It would probably make a lot of sense to share engineering resources, rather than having a bunch of distinct companies reinventing the wheel, but that's almost never how it plays out. If you're actually able to get some feedback in on this thing (that would be wild!), besides improving the cable, a better detent for the iron holder would be killer - and if they REALLY want to stand out, put high-temp silicone overmold on the barrel nut so you can change tips while hot without pliers. Nobody in the market does that, and it would be a *wildly* user-friendly feature, especially for the home-gamer set that Ryobi seems to target. Heck, overmold the whole barrel, it's not like it's useful for that part to be hot (might interfere with thermal control?)

      @CathodeRayDude@CathodeRayDude2 жыл бұрын
    • @@CathodeRayDude I'd also suggest a small fan inside to vent heat out. I don't know how likely it would be that the internals overheat, but this just seems to me a very practical thing that would only cost a few cents.

      @KevinFields777@KevinFields7772 жыл бұрын
    • It's actually likely that they shared manufacturing before the merge once Milwaukee started being made in china.

      @alexs7670@alexs76702 жыл бұрын
    • @@alexs7670 maybe some, but in day to day operations on the engineering side, there aren't shared resources between the Milwaukee engineering team and the Ridgid/Ryobi/Hart team.

      @KnappstersaurusRex@KnappstersaurusRex2 жыл бұрын
    • @@KevinFields777 it's only 45 watts. It's gunna be fine.

      @iwinrar5207@iwinrar52072 жыл бұрын
  • "I've never liked the idea of using fire for things inside my domicile, or my sub-" HOLD UP LMAO

    @riverjane1223@riverjane12233 ай бұрын
  • You managed to fascinate me for 46 minutes. About a damn soldering iron. Thank you sir!

    @penelopetiberti2637@penelopetiberti263711 ай бұрын
  • seeing that cable triggered me too. silicone insulation is the shit you want: it's super flexible, feels nice to the touch, and it simply does not melt, even when it's literally burning! (think of it being polymerised silicate, a.k.a. sand) PS: the perfect general purpose soldering tip, in my experience, is a single flat / beveled tip, of around 3-3.5mm, over those pencil points. the tip has a fine enough edge to work on PCBs, while the flat makes it super easy to feed solder into the joint, and gives you a big contact area, to easily heat up bigger parts.

    @Ucceah@Ucceah2 жыл бұрын
    • lol your comment got copied by a bot and is higher in the comments now

      @cheater00@cheater002 жыл бұрын
    • Yup, chisel tip for the win! It's a bit of a misnomer, however, because it's rounded, beveled and blunted, unlike an actual wood chisel.....

      @goodun2974@goodun29742 жыл бұрын
  • "its gonna overheat your joints, which is great if its after business hours, but not when you're tryna get something done" 😭😂

    @jitteryloki@jitteryloki2 жыл бұрын
  • OMG the reveal on the wall brick in the LED Light.. Fantastic!

    @user-pu9hw8xi3r@user-pu9hw8xi3r10 күн бұрын
  • I got the 'clamp fan' as bonus with a big bag with Ryobi tools, and thought 'well, I'm never gonna use that contraption.' It's actually one of my most used items at the cabin, ventilating hot air into other rooms, 'staring' the chimney when it's too cold to make a draft, and drying out a wet wall after a leak! Amazing product!

    @beernutsonline@beernutsonline2 ай бұрын
  • As far as burning the DIN connectors, you actually need a higher temperature. If the temperature is too low, it takes too long to heat the solder and gives the plastic enough time to melt. It shouldn't take more than a second for the solder to melt so that you can get in and out fast.

    @domdecosa@domdecosa2 жыл бұрын
    • Big tip and solder bridge 😎 I redid some GE proprietary connectors that were solder pots. They were so thick and the person before me cooked the 14g wire to the point there was no flex. 🙄

      @tnuarb@tnuarb2 жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely. When he said that and was then slagging off the simple mains powered irons, I was thinking that this guy doesn't know how to solder! The fancy controlled soldering stations are nice but the basic irons work OK too. Another clue is that he said the tip bend, well they do if you put far too much force into them, trying to get heat into the item, especially if your iron is too cold!

      @samk4128@samk41282 жыл бұрын
    • Also he probably doesn't clean the surfaces he wants to solder, nor use flux other than in the cored solder!

      @samk4128@samk41282 жыл бұрын
    • you need good thermal recovery, i can solder connectors fine using a JBC core

      @Slot1Gamer@Slot1Gamer2 жыл бұрын
  • Sounds like the PERFECT "first soldering station" - sufficient to solder your own internals of your own custom soldering station, then gut this one and fill the chassis with the newly made internals with your own, while keeping the soldering iron itself (but swapping the cable).

    @sharpfang@sharpfang2 жыл бұрын
    • You just described building 3D printers.

      @MiGujack3@MiGujack32 жыл бұрын
    • No 3D printed thing will feel that solid

      @aaaaea9268@aaaaea92682 жыл бұрын
    • @@aaaaea9268 I think he meant "buy a crap printer, print parts of good printer, gut the crap printer to make a good one."

      @sharpfang@sharpfang2 жыл бұрын
    • for 40 dollars just get zhaoxin

      @tubaeseries5705@tubaeseries5705 Жыл бұрын
    • @@aaaaea9268 as someone who prints in PETG, I beg to differ, if your willing to design it as such and put in the time to print something so overbuilt, you can make boarderline indestructible items (and it's kinda satisfying...)

      @UNSCPILOT@UNSCPILOT Жыл бұрын
  • Is there anything you can use to coat that area that you mangled with the tip of your iron.

    @DAVIDGREGORYKERR@DAVIDGREGORYKERR Жыл бұрын
  • When I was in high school auto shop, we had a nice butane iron and that thing was legit. Had temp control, got real hot, and the butane lasts a decently long time

    @gatsbysgarage8389@gatsbysgarage8389Ай бұрын
  • Having the brick inside is a fantastic combination of brilliant and cost effective engineering (They very likely saved a good amount of certification cost and time to do it that way). But that makes it no less silly looking, and that's OK, if it's stupid and it works etc. The hand feel of a Metcal is wonderful but I can only justify it to myself by doing dumb/intricate rework. Fantastic video!

    @andrewkowalczyk1156@andrewkowalczyk11562 жыл бұрын
    • This comment came really timely. I took apart my fume extractor yesterday and was beside myself with how overpowered the 12V external transformer was for what was effectively a PC fan connected to a potentiometer in a plastic housing. It seemed unreal that they didn’t simply build the power supply into the housing, but your remark about certification cost makes sense.

      @stephancasas@stephancasas2 жыл бұрын
  • While working as an intern one of the designs I was working on my boss actually had me research current available solutions for multiple things including retention and signaling which is a good design practice. If someone makes something you can just buy off the shelf then don't recreate the wheel just buy it and use it! I love your analysis here but I also would like to say that buying the AC adapters to put in doesn't surprise me because of how cheap those are and how good they are able to be made at those prices. The fact that some engineer took the time to measure an off the shelf component to buy and slot into place is actually time well spent because they didn't have to pay 3 other engineers to help with electronics and board layout. Also, about the tip, the heater cartridge and tip system looks a lot like my Tenma soldering iron (yeah, go ahead and make fun of me for being cheap) which takes the same tips as RadioShack digital stations so maybe this is actually a connection style that Hakko licenses or is just easy to copy without running into patents. Either way I loved the teardown. Also, my dad has one of those butane ones and actually uses it as a butane torch too which is great when working on large wires or when you need to quickly melt some shrinkwrap... Not very good on complex circuit boards from what I've seen though.

    @alleriodrone@alleriodrone2 жыл бұрын
    • Good for the company, bad for the customer still.

      @DeagleGamesTV@DeagleGamesTV2 жыл бұрын
    • @@DeagleGamesTV Nothing really wrong with using them if they are placed right. If this had more cooling vents and air channels it wouldn't be much of an issue at all for the customer. Also there's still a quality consideration there by the company. You can buy really good quality AC adapters for a higher price, and still come out under on overall product development costs. Or you just have more integrity as a company. Or they can buy the crappy ones that fail all the time. And it really does keep costs down for the consumer in competitive markets. Power tools is a low margin market overall. It's generally around 5-10%. It's highly competitive.

      @KaiserTom@KaiserTom2 жыл бұрын
  • The cable I noticed, BUT the power supply had me is laughing 😂.

    @chromosome1969@chromosome19692 ай бұрын
  • Amazing. I laughed so hard at the reveal. I was not expecting a power brick. The second one was a great payoff. 😂

    @WallHaxxx@WallHaxxx3 ай бұрын
  • While the iron itself would melt through, the rating is intended to give you an idea how hot the cable itself can actually get. The markings are intended to help you figure out what cable to use for a specific application. Essentially it's saying "Hey if you run enough current through here, it's going to melt and catch fire right about this temperature."

    @nosch43@nosch432 жыл бұрын
    • 24:17

      @gormster@gormster2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah I really didn't like that this was a significant section of the video. It's the wrong meaning as you said and if that's what he's worried about might as well spend 5 min telling people not to rub the iron on their fingers either. Seems like Ryobi considered this as well with the cool down warning light. But alas can't engineer for every single use case.

      @dirediredude@dirediredude Жыл бұрын
    • If you push enough current through a cable for it to reach 80c you've got way bigger problems than your cable melting and catching fire.

      @eddson11@eddson118 ай бұрын
    • No. If your wire is (self) heating up much at all, it is too small a gauge for the design current or the circuit has a fault. On the other hand I do agree that the specs are needed to determine cable compatibility in extreme environments, for example an engine harness or on the space shuttle, inside a toaster oven or curling iron, etc. Most of these applications are also those where you can't use solder, must crimp or weld/etc.

      @stinkycheese804@stinkycheese8045 ай бұрын
    • No, it has nothing to do with the current rating. It is to to with where the cord is expected to be. Some devices are made so their power cord will remain cool, and are fine with an 80C one. Some are made such that even the receptacle for the cord can be over 80C, and so need a better cord.

      @jeffreyblack666@jeffreyblack6665 ай бұрын
  • The butane irons are actual better than you think. I used them extensively to fix motorcycles for fun. I did it in a shed that had no power and it just made sense. I've redone a whole wiring harness with one and ridden that bike a few thousand miles. There is just a few weird quirks like you need to pay attention to where the exit hole is that the flame exhausts because it can melt plastic. There is also kinda temperature control with the gas regulator.

    @crexius1678@crexius16782 жыл бұрын
    • Worth noting also that you don't light a fire when using a butane iron. The fuel flows through the catalyst and oxidizes without a flame generating heat but with more control. Since there's no flame, you can control the heat just by reducing the amount of fuel hitting the catalyst. Considering you can get a serviceable butane iron for under $5, it's a pretty great cost/performance ratio.

      @cadikaorade828@cadikaorade8282 жыл бұрын
    • They're kinda scary and obviously have a learning curve but they are super duper neat.

      @stitchfinger7678@stitchfinger76782 жыл бұрын
  • I modified a 20 dollar radioshack battery powered soldering pencil to contain an 18650 cell and a usb charge port from an e-cig found on the ground outside. It works fairly well. Its super shaky looking but it gets hot fast and lasts long enough on one charge to get thru some decent repairs.

    @keithbradley6445@keithbradley64454 ай бұрын
  • Stumbled upon this video while scrolling through random KZhead stuff and stayed until the end. Oh man, I must say, besides such an insightful product review, you have a captivating storytelling flair that kept me spellbound throughout the length of the video. Withal, there were plenty of surprises that sequentially unfolded to keep it interesting and informative. Happily subscribed, shared, and liked the video. Keep the good stuff.

    @M3a9m@M3a9m6 ай бұрын
  • Honestly, respect to the engineers. It's a pretty elegant solution in terms of design. Sometimes the best engineering is doing the least of it!

    @MontegaB@MontegaB2 жыл бұрын
    • Other then the cord this is a nice product. For 20$ this would be worth it.

      @RhizometricReality@RhizometricReality2 жыл бұрын
    • @@RhizometricReality Yeah it almost seems worth it to replace the cable but looking at the tear down that doesn’t really seem feasible. That’s too bad. Hopefully Ryobi will get the message and improve the product

      @MontegaB@MontegaB2 жыл бұрын
  • I like the Ryobi tools specifically because everything uses the same battery. They haven't changed the battery in a way that affects compatibility for like 25 years, so I frequently find tools from their older dark blue line at thrift stores that work perfectly fine once I plug a newer battery in. I also gutted an old dead Ryobi Ni-Cd and instead of putting new cells in, I installed a barrel jack so that for lower power devices that aren't hybrid (but could be) such as the older lights, radios, soldering stations, etc, I can just power it from wall power and save discharge cycles on my batteries.

    @homestar92@homestar922 жыл бұрын
  • The fan you ragged on has helped keep me alive. 😆 Chose it as a freebie with a battery kit sale.

    @tompittman2115@tompittman21153 ай бұрын
  • Your Video always bring me joy, glad to see your local too.. keep ‘em coming.

    @unknownknown4574@unknownknown45748 ай бұрын
  • 8:50 - I used SO many of those cheap irons from Radio Shack,for like 30 years. Literally used them until the tip corroded away to an unusable nub,then bought a whole new iron. They worked fine. Temperature control is nice,but often not necessary.

    @PhattyMo@PhattyMo2 жыл бұрын
    • You are a madman then. I used them and for circuit boards they are a nightmare, especially compared to a 120$ Weller. Nothing crazy, but even a cheap intro soldering iron changed my whole game. As did a hot air station.

      @hi_tech_reptiles@hi_tech_reptiles2 жыл бұрын
    • Same, I have a "nice" iron that I almost never use because one of these is usually closer. Lol Also gotta love an iron you don't mind using to light your cigarette if you lost your lighter.

      @Zahgurym@Zahgurym2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Zahgurym a TS80/100 is decent for that. I never got one but have seen them used in uncomfortable situations and have considered it. It's annoying to have to disassemble things and get them to my bench to fix sometimes. But a 25$ single temp iron would just drive me nuts lol

      @hi_tech_reptiles@hi_tech_reptiles2 жыл бұрын
    • I tried to go for that too, but it just does not work nearly as well these days. I would assume that a) quality of these went down since and b) wretched lead free high-temp industrial solder. That stuff won't even get soft from many cheapo irons unless you bake the crap out of the joint. That being said, these are amazing for working with plastics.

      @DeadNoob451@DeadNoob4512 жыл бұрын
    • @@hi_tech_reptiles I have a Weller SP25L. It's the same type of those cheap ones but it's actually good quality, over 10 years and it still works fine. The tip has lasted all those years. I have a soldering station now though.

      @PunakiviAddikti@PunakiviAddikti2 жыл бұрын
  • As someone who runs a lab and does this type of work every day for a living, ……life is too short to have soldering iron‘s that don’t utilize soft and flexible silicon leads. Like with a nice high-end multimeter. Not only will you never burn through them, but the flexibility is absolutely mandatory when doing that stuff every day.

    @hullinstruments@hullinstruments2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, life is too short for that..... haha

      @sjuvanet@sjuvanet2 жыл бұрын
    • I was just thinking the cord would drive me nuts. My weller lead is just so nice and flexable and, i would probably get rid of the ryobi for that reason alone. Not to mention, tools like this may be useful for the hobbyists but no way would i use this or anything that i can buy at home depot or the like for certain stuff in production. They never hold up to the repeated use, i pack my weller in my electronic service case and it goes through TSA several times a week and works flawlessly every time. Try that with a ryobi. But I digress, my needs aren’t the next guy’s needs, that’s why I don’t mind when a regular joe buys junk tools because they don’t need them daily or abuse them like i do.

      @gregkrueger331@gregkrueger3312 жыл бұрын
  • love this, at work we solder a lot of wires 20 to 12 mostly, and this works great as portabilty is what I needed. Oh had this well over a year now still works great tips last really long obviously if you take care of them bought one for the garage at home

    @thomasmeisch5692@thomasmeisch56925 ай бұрын
  • I have that Hakko FX-901. It uses 4 AA batteries wired in series and does a decent job for smaller stuff. The cap makes no contact with the tip so you can pop it on after soldering and it will prevent the iron from burning anything as well as prevent it from being turned on. It does lack temp control but is nice to have for something simple and quick. If you want something portable and more sophisticated, I highly recommend the Miniware TS100/TS101.

    @nickdibart@nickdibartАй бұрын
  • The psu thing is actually really common and in my opinion, providing the units come from a reputable supplier and are of good quality (which seems to be the case given the one in the lamp) its a good thing. As I am sure you are aware a lot of old AV and computer equipment can literally destroy itself because poorly designed power supplies/systems that go bad, the most well known being the Commodore 64's infamous ”Brick of Death” but some early IBM and Apple machines have/had overheating PSU problems. Because these of the shelf units could be used for thousands of different applications the makers/designers have to try to cover all possible issues that could arise, including being in a confined space. Don't get me wrong I don't think for a second this is the real reason they do it, It is more likely they are avoiding some certification costs by having no AC wiring assembly in the case, and if they could do it in an even cheaper and inferior way they probably would.

    @chris1275cc@chris1275cc2 жыл бұрын
  • I use this iron on occasion, it has yet to fail me. I like that I can store it in a big toolbox and pull it out for a short project without connecting it to the wall. Love it.

    @Bynming@Bynming2 жыл бұрын
    • And now you know if you don't have access to an extention cable and your batteries are dead you can just take the shell off and pull unscrew the plug bit and plug it into a wall directly

      @acid3129@acid31292 жыл бұрын
  • I use a fairly cheap (80€, great for the features) yihua soldering station, its got a pretty basic lab supply, a temp controlled soldering iron, and a hot air gun. Its also a really neat package cause everything except the stand for the soldering iron is contained on one box, even the hot air gun has its holder mounted right to the case, and all you gotta do is plug it in and turn on whatever function youre using. The downside is that its a pretty large unit for a soldering iron and so slinging it in your bag depends on the size of your bag, though ive taken it on the go with me before (id consider it less portable, more luggable and easy to store). It also isn’t great quality, i had 2 units that were both broken before i kept the less broken one thinking id just swap the iron itself to fix it because it was reporting a temperature error, turns out one of the pins inside the station wasnt soldered on correctly so the thermistor was disconnected Ps, i need more of gravis making horny jokes in my life, you had me giggling like a schoolgirl for half an hour

    @Joshinken@Joshinken Жыл бұрын
  • The power supply kind of makes sense if you realise that Ryobi sell in a huge number of places such as here in the UK with our 240 supply. Just slot in a different supply with a different socket - good to go. Very little extra training for the people that put them together. The moulding is all the same.

    @timsbird1971@timsbird19713 ай бұрын
  • I know that shoving an off the shelf power supply must be a standard thing, I've taken apart a car starter/tire pumper/phone charger/LED lamp thing and the power supply was just a wall wart mounted inside with the prongs sticking out and the bare wires connected directly to a sealed lead acid battery

    @JessicaFEREM@JessicaFEREM2 жыл бұрын
    • It's a LOT cheaper than using an open frame one bc of UL listing and stuff.

      @CaptainApathetic@CaptainApathetic2 жыл бұрын
    • I wonder if all of their hybrid products are like that. I have a couple of those fans. One time I took a 600 mile trip to the middle of nowhere and forgot the charger to my laptop (but had one of those fans and the right size barrel jack from a different wall wart). If I had known there was one _inside_ the fan, I would have plucked it out and MacGuyver'd one together instead of driving 4 hours to find one! The laptop wants 19v but will take 18v I found. Those fans are a lot smaller though, going to crack one open! Much less amperage for a fan so I wouldn't be surprised just to see a wall wart like you said.

      @craigjensen6853@craigjensen68532 жыл бұрын
    • @@craigjensen6853 mine isn't even hybrid. It's just charging an internal lead acid battery.

      @JessicaFEREM@JessicaFEREM2 жыл бұрын
  • The closest thing to temperature control ive ever had was on my butane iron which you could set from blazing to literall hell on earth. Worked pretty great tough if it wasnt for the tip breaking after a couple of solder jobs

    @xxmountaindewxx7893@xxmountaindewxx78932 жыл бұрын
  • I got one of these and it works great, I use it all the time. I did turn the iron holder around backwards so it don't stick out so far though. The cord is a little stiff but works fine if it's unwrapped and stretched out!

    @stevec5000@stevec50006 ай бұрын
  • The Milwaukee iron breaking immediately is so real. I bought one from Home Depot and realized before I even drove away that the ceramic had snapped. Didn’t even open the package.

    @price.gaines@price.gaines2 ай бұрын
  • Having worked in amusement game repair for 42 years I have to say this is the first unit that would have made my life easier. I'm retired but have used mine several times and it's exactly what was always needed on the road. Teaming up with my Ryobi in-car charger means all my tools will work all day away from plug-in power. For what it is it's 10 out of 10 for me. And the eBay replacement batteries last just as well as Ryobi for half the price. And work in 20 year old Ryobi tools still. There is no better system.

    @MedicatedOMO@MedicatedOMO2 жыл бұрын
  • Another benefit of those off the shelf power supplies is they're probably fairly well sealed against moisture, using an open frame design would require some additional weatherproofing. In this case if a little moisture got in it wouldn't be a major safety issue, just a reliability issue. Not cleaning the flux is fairly common these days, modern fluxes are typically designed not to be cleaned off. Instead they're designed to form a protective surface when they cool down, which prevents it from being activated by normal humidity etc. Obviously cleaning it off is better but then you have a lot of components like potentiometers, microphones etc. that don't really like being cleaned and so they would need special handling like masking off, or a separate soldering step with no-clean anyway.

    @stuckinpants@stuckinpants2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly my thoughts. Also better shock-proofing and frost prevention. A power supply weighs a bunch and if the base is dropped (like it's supposed to withstand), a lesser power supply could self-destruct under its own weight when being decelerated, or it could knock off some of the housing plastic. Plus you can use this stuff in -30 C and it won't bat an eyelid.

      @cheater00@cheater002 жыл бұрын
  • Great video! I have recently been looking at that soldering station because I'm currently on the Ryobi system and looking for a portable soldering iron besides my current plug in Weller with no temperature control. I don't do that much soldering but when I do it's usually on a vehicle and I have to run a long extension cord. I think I might buy one, anyway the light that you brought out and took apart, I have the same light that I bought about 2 years ago and I actually forgot that it's hybrid I don't think I've ever plugged it in I just slap it down on the battery so thanks for the reminder, but I love that light. I keep it in my truck most of the time, but I live in a small town susceptible to power outages, so I use it for those and for gathering and chopping wood. It's held up very well I've dropped it a couple of times and it has a crack in the frame but still works just fine. Anyhow thanks for the great vid.

    @timrickard13@timrickard137 ай бұрын
  • When I was still in school I had a Weller that pugged in the wall outlet, it was okay. Later on I bought a number of soldering irons, some were good and some were not. At this moment I use a store brand rechargeable soldering iron and it is a pleasure to work with, I even bought a second one for when my first one will break down. It is low on heating capacity, but it is enough for IC's, LED's, resistors and small things. After using it I carefully wipe the tip with cardboard, never with a sponge or steel wool.

    @vanhetgoor@vanhetgoor4 ай бұрын
  • I have had my cordless Ryobi soldering iron for a while now and IMO it's amazing. It's always in my tool bag it has never failed me, so far has performed flawlessly. The cord might be a bit stiff but I can live with that. Since I have had mine I have yet to melt the cord.

    @johnro6659@johnro66592 жыл бұрын
    • I agree. I own both the Weller mentioned and this unit as well, and for on the go / lazy quick jobs, it's done me plenty well. I own a lot of different tools from different companies, and the most recent Ryobi tools aren't bad. They've made their reputation much better in the past few years, and I don't hate any of the ones that I own. The only complaint I've ever had with their products is the battery could last a hair longer.

      @caleblewis2700@caleblewis27002 жыл бұрын
    • Lol yeah I've been wondering if someone is careless enough to set a soldering iron on the cord wether or not they should be playing around with heat sources or circuit boards at all.

      @teddy5004@teddy50042 жыл бұрын
    • first thing i did was replace the cable sleeve, honestly can't complain outside of the cable.

      @JackPorter@JackPorter2 жыл бұрын
    • @@JackPorter good call

      @caleblewis2700@caleblewis27002 жыл бұрын
  • The rubberband snapping joke caught me way off guard, perfect delivery, I am going to laugh about that for weeks

    @deadlyquestion@deadlyquestion2 жыл бұрын
    • i dont get the salivating part

      @lowercasehandle@lowercasehandle Жыл бұрын
    • @@lowercasehandle It's a reference to Pavlov's experiments.

      @eekee6034@eekee60347 ай бұрын
  • The Iroda gas soldering irons are excellent for where you don’t have power, the flame is fully contained and isn’t any more of a hazard than the hot tip or the hot shaft on an iron with a resistive element. They have a reasonable amount of temperature control too, and whilst you don’t have a defined setting, if you’re experienced with soldering, you just know when it’s right. PS, I use a JBC in my workshop.

    @Si1983h@Si1983h Жыл бұрын
    • I had one of those Iroda gas irons it must have been a bit of a dudder the bloody thing exploded luckily I wasn't hurt that put me off using gas powered irons for life.

      @roberthorseman7432@roberthorseman743211 ай бұрын
    • @@roberthorseman7432 wow, I have several that I’ve used for years and I’ve never had an issue, I consider them an essential tool as a live sound technician, so much easier for repairing a lead in situ… things get snagged and with the iroda iron, it’s a 2 minute fix, often quicker than running a new cable.

      @Si1983h@Si1983h11 ай бұрын
    • @@Si1983h Yes I was quite disappointed when that happened quite frightening.

      @roberthorseman7432@roberthorseman743211 ай бұрын
  • wow the power supplies being still in there plastic case like a laptop charger or phone wall wart is amazing i never would have thought they were like that either very interesting man! im glad i subbed this is my new favorite youtube channel thank you for the informative high quality vids brother.

    @davidcrowder1202@davidcrowder1202 Жыл бұрын
    • It makes it easier to CE Mark or UL cert the design validating by similarity. This necessity can be a costly endeavor so much that I refer to it as a bribe or paying your protection money

      @grayhatguycompany1074@grayhatguycompany10744 ай бұрын
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