How to solder a through hole connection on a printed circuit board (PCB).
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Great tutorial - I have never soldered a circuit board before and have just followed this guide to replace a capacitor in an old amplifier (advice from another You Tube video). It is now working brilliantly!
@iant24384 жыл бұрын
Very helpful. Only video I could find that zoomed in, went step by step, and actually explained what was happening.
@SpencerFcp3 жыл бұрын
love the'' lets have another look at that'' lol i hate pausing rewinding. thanks good video
@viciouslyxdelicious6 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure but ,if anyone else is searching for computer monitor repair try Saankramer Electronic Magazine System (should be on google have a look ) ? Ive heard some super things about it and my partner got excellent results with it. 1:22
@carlosperez82833 жыл бұрын
Just wonderful, been searching for "how to repair electronics board in car" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Ever heard of - Giyathan Bewildering Gratification - (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? It is an awesome one off guide for discovering how to repair your electronic items like a wizard without the normal expense. Ive heard some incredible things about it and my partner got great success with it.
@dinukaravi9683 жыл бұрын
Nice simple tutorial. Now I see a lot of people adding extra notes already, but about cleaning your tip, if you have an abrasive brass sponge, I highly recommend using that instead of the wet sponge. It has better ease to remove corrosion formed on the tip of the iron and there's fewer risks of thermal shock
@caffeinatedinsanity23244 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. Looking forward to having a go with my new soldering kit! Thanks.
@Tube-bank4 жыл бұрын
Excellent - well explained - no unnecessary detail. Just what I needed - Thanks
@Federer9355 жыл бұрын
I got to a “mechatronic robotics” class in highschool and we are soldering and I’m trying to get learn some techniques to get a good solder joint, this video helped me thank you!
@IronsightErik4 жыл бұрын
Perfect video for helping me get an edge at work. I work with these exact type of boards. Thank you
@jiml86373 жыл бұрын
I soldered the spot that must have over loaded and lost connection. It was the same spot in the video. I didnt need to replace the control board. I just had to solder that spot. The dishwasher works like new now!!!!!! Thanks!
@joshr93583 жыл бұрын
great video! Thanks for the small details - very helpful information!
@jeffreysrnec38095 жыл бұрын
Very helpful, clear, concise and great camera work. Thanks!
@scottpreston61975 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting. This helped me fix my garage door opener board.
@jdcalame67143 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this tutorial!
@Begoodtothybrother7 жыл бұрын
Excellent demonstration non the basics of soldering. Thanks! T J (Tom) Vanderloop, Author, Consultant & AWS (Welding-Instructor)
@tjvanderloop16864 жыл бұрын
Now I think I have a grasp om how to solder, thank you!
@swigittyswooty69084 жыл бұрын
Excellent ! Thanks for sharing !
@martinjuarez41655 жыл бұрын
Great primer. Thank you
@theogist6 жыл бұрын
Great tutorial that what i was exactly looking for thank you.
@paveldorozkin1237 жыл бұрын
This helped a lot, thanks!
@HellRiderSpirit4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. It helped me make a home repair that saved my family a lot of money :-)
@ken11836 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this excellent tutorial.
@hosthere2477 жыл бұрын
This is a really nice tutorial. Thanks!
@roberthochberg95187 жыл бұрын
Best vid i seen online so far😁🖖 Im subbing thank you...
@youngyahboo90515 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this tutorial!
@ivannruiz80807 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the details.
@omerakram18174 жыл бұрын
Excellent, thanks!
@aycock1ofmanyindustries8287 жыл бұрын
All hail Manchester Uni, the best! Perfect video.
@robertjones95983 жыл бұрын
Very helpful thanks.
@petequintana26287 жыл бұрын
this helped thank you!
@vesoulful4 жыл бұрын
Great video 👍 thanks man.
@mikeruizxd55344 жыл бұрын
assuming your in an electronic assembly job, after aboard is all soldered. Who tests the board to make sure it works? I am assuming the solderer would like to know that his board all works and that he did a good job.
@s.u.52857 жыл бұрын
Very helpful!!!👌
@vipulvarghese43904 жыл бұрын
good stuff. thanks
@facefuckinbook7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the guide
@madmudkip14 жыл бұрын
that was fantastic. i really learned alot.
@RustyLive6666 жыл бұрын
Great video work
@heavyglassglass5 жыл бұрын
Great tutorial
@slavedriver3944 жыл бұрын
Thank you friend
@murugans-zu9ws6 жыл бұрын
doesn't trimming the excess lead after soldering have a RISK of fracturing the solder joint ?
@pointnozzleaway3 жыл бұрын
Good man👏👏👏👌🏻
@tagerhd83785 жыл бұрын
Thanks this helps
@unknownuser13576 жыл бұрын
Thats nice man
@diyakshit58434 жыл бұрын
Awesome thanks 👍
@dkprophett95315 жыл бұрын
Great video
@charlesvillanueva90854 жыл бұрын
Excellent tutorial. A further Q; will the iron shown on the left 0:19 make the 350 degrees needed for soldering? Again , thanks for sharing. Subbed no hesitation.
@davidmg19255 жыл бұрын
Semi Experienced solderer here -- It might, it varies from iron to iron though In my experience all fixed ones have worked fine.
@luca_richardzon4 жыл бұрын
Hello! Im a student and i am studying the cracks on middle of solder in pcb components. Can you say to me some solutions to solve this problem? Does it depends of the welding alloy? or the themperatures? Can i solve this problem? Best regards.
@goncalomartins50194 жыл бұрын
thks so much
@neilmitra46276 жыл бұрын
I find that after working for a little while, the solder no longer wants to stick. What's going on there?
@renakunisaki4 жыл бұрын
i always clean it with alcohol to make sure there is so flux making a connection
@Sage-vl3so3 жыл бұрын
Thanks alot
@mohdsaquib97787 жыл бұрын
mighty useful, I'm rigging a diy handbrake to my steering wheel for xbox
@quinnsmithy87783 жыл бұрын
Best for solding
@jahanzabe69595 жыл бұрын
hey, i bought a cheap $20 well from home depot seems the tips keep burning up is this me or is it due to the cheap solder iron,I know this is somewhat hard to answer but any help would be good cause im thinking about spending around $110 on a better iron. something with temp controls. One of the problems i keep running into is i keep getting bad joints i do a nice looking job but somewhere i always have to reflow a joint or 2 idk but it really becoming a problem.
@runrabbitrun43426 жыл бұрын
Tone Log Vintage Replica's 1966 Expensive iron won’t help you, sir. Now I would assume that you cleaned your soldering iron using a sponge right, sir? I used to have those problems when I started to learn how to solder.
@useditem_tk5 жыл бұрын
Do I need to use flux on the holes first?
@pofrani7 жыл бұрын
The solder contains a core of flux so you shouldn't need to - providing the solder hasn't been left on the iron so long that the flux vaporises.
@fseelearning6 жыл бұрын
3:23 I didn't quite understand this part. You want to remove the excess solder because you want the flux to evaporate so that there is none left. But later you say if you solder without any flux, it could lead to a bad connection. So are we trying to remove the flux or keep it?
@cryora4 жыл бұрын
cryora After you solder a joint, whatever flux is remaining in the solder will evaporate. So you will still have solder on the tip, but no flux. You want fresh solder that still has flux in it, for the next joint.
@hxhdfjifzirstc8944 жыл бұрын
Here’s how I explain it to novices: the solder “cooks” when hot (be it on the tip, or when heating a joint for too long), and overcooked solder makes for bad joints. So what you want to do is “clean” the tip of overcooked solder by wiping off as much as possible, and then “rinsing” with fresh solder right before making a joint. (The “overcooking” is the combination of a few factors: 1. all the flux burning off, 2. the solder itself oxidizing, and 3. the contamination of the hot solder with other metals (copper from PCB traces and wires, and silver and copper from component leads, mostly) from prolonged contact while hot, resulting in a sort of undefined alloy. Flux helps prevent and even reverse oxidation, so adding flux can help to an extent.)
@tookitogo4 жыл бұрын
Excellent
@KTHKUHNKK3 жыл бұрын
Is there water or flux on the sponge?
@sethjones40146 жыл бұрын
Seth Jones water
@DeathSensei5 жыл бұрын
hi, i have a doubt, After dip soldering, some of the areas is not soldering properly, again i need to make the manual solder in some area, solder forming as flat soldering. it not cone shape solder is not forming, what is the problem? how can i solve this? can you help me?
@dheeshmani14 жыл бұрын
VEERAMANIKANDAN P Buy a good rosin or no-clean electronics flux.
@tookitogo4 жыл бұрын
good one
@prakashkaradin99296 жыл бұрын
3:15 Beautiful.
@ThePreciseClimber6 жыл бұрын
Nice
@positiverules6 жыл бұрын
Whats wrong with having different cones? Its a great way to make them stand out from one another ;)
@ajiyantha67113 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a good video. However, there’s one thing to correct: lead-free solder is very toxic and it’s safe to use only with proper respirator and hand gloves.
@ChristerJokela13 жыл бұрын
this very nices
@ggnanavel90226 жыл бұрын
Back in my day we wouldn’t where earth bands on fummergatots machines
@benkletzing19684 жыл бұрын
nameable soldering teampeshier
@ggnanavel90226 жыл бұрын
Wait a second, so you can actually touch the soldering iron to the board and it won't damage the board?
@acidDJclay7 жыл бұрын
It's all about putting heat quickly into a small area - if the iron is at the right temperature the pad will heat up to the melting point of the solder quickly allowing you to make the connection and then dissipate into the surrounding board. If the iron is not hot enough the pad takes longer to heat to the required temperature and more heat dissipates into the surrounding board which is when damage occurs.
@fseelearning7 жыл бұрын
Clay Ford
@sanjeevkumar-zd7mt7 жыл бұрын
You cheat the melting point of the board a bit by using heat sinks around the work area usually on the same circuit. However the cheating is limited
@baptizedbyfire136 жыл бұрын
@@fseelearning usually what is right temperature for most things like this? Also, what usually is the right temperature for desoldering?
@Jonnynot1plate5 жыл бұрын
1 FOKU$!
@dennismiller954 жыл бұрын
Great video but as an American I have trouble hearing it as "solder" and not "sodder"
@travisjohnson66764 жыл бұрын
Travis Johnson as an American I think you should look it up, the L is not silent
@graxjpg4 жыл бұрын
What about the flux ?
@sukshithshetty48476 жыл бұрын
sukshith shetty it’s in the solder already.
@vladimirlopez78404 жыл бұрын
We had to use this as homework 😭😭😭
@mozzymozzameepmorp7818 Жыл бұрын
I want soldiering gun
@starmobile26906 жыл бұрын
Iron
@carabeck5 жыл бұрын
When you're poor and you have to use a fan and an n95 face mask lol
@ConvictJ964 жыл бұрын
good thing you have the n95 mask now. Stay safe my friend
@ARV19994 жыл бұрын
Them Pumps are useless. Personally id use desoldering wick
@illegalfreedom10554 жыл бұрын
Urban exploration Squad Totally disagree. A good pump works well for removing components. Wick is terrible for removing components, but is perfect for cleaning up the pads before installing a new component. Pro tip: buy some silicone tubing of a size that will tightly fit onto the tip of the pump. Cut a piece so that, once mounted, it extends about 1/4” past the hard tip. This lets you get in closer and make a better seal, even while touching the tip, since the silicone won’t burn or melt.
@tookitogo4 жыл бұрын
I ended up breaking my drone out of frustration because I could solder the power chord back on... yeeet
@MSFTSTRIO4 жыл бұрын
MSFTS TRIO First time I ever heard of a power chord being soldered.
@hxhdfjifzirstc8944 жыл бұрын
Do not solder then cut as it exposes copper, always cut then solder, I work in PCB assembly so I solder everyday.
@carabeck5 жыл бұрын
I don’t see the difference...if you cut and then solder, the copper is still exposed. Btw, every single professional I have seen on KZhead solder and then cut.
@nyprince59224 жыл бұрын
NY Prince Absolutely not. In the most demanding industries, like aerospace and defense, you always cut first and then solder, because then you pull the soldering iron up over the cut end, causing the solder to tin the cut end. Cutting first also ensures the solder joint isn’t mechanically stressed during cutting. Cutting afterwards is common in hobbyist and less demanding industries doing very small-run production, but cutting first is unquestionably the preferred method.
@tookitogo4 жыл бұрын
NY Prince The videos by Pace Worldwide, despite their age, remain the gold standard in soldering instruction. This is the one about through-hole component soldering, demonstrating how to tin over the cut end of the lead. I do recommend watching the whole series from the beginning, since they go into the foundations and terminology used in the later installments. kzhead.info/sun/dL1ufZGkfqqsrac/bejne.html
@tookitogo4 жыл бұрын
1:10
@yansong69233 жыл бұрын
I smoke 2 packs a day...really not worried about solder smoke
@Tater42004 жыл бұрын
i have friends with emphysema who cry that "nobody ever told them" there isn't any good way to die, and suffocating is no exception living each day with the feeling of being strangled if you have a desire to quit, bupropion has proven very effective
@hamidmazuji3 жыл бұрын
@@hamidmazuji or vape
@ziting57563 жыл бұрын
I still don«t get how you call this basic :)
@hortalica4 жыл бұрын
I don't know why you leave out using rubbing alcohol on your circuit board to remove any old oxidation that has built up and using flux on the board where your connectors are will give you a much cleaner soldering job result? I don't understand why so many people think that just because there is flux in my solder that I don't need to use any flux on my board, in my wires or on my connectors? That information is "bad" for the most part.
@kennystroner74315 жыл бұрын
im having trouble because i dont have 3 hands and so far you are not showing the "trick" to getting the soldered points stationary im in girl-tears here.... And ya thats mine at the end. but my prob is that my solders don't conduct electic current. im using a kit just for pc.....?....looks like i have to lift the mother{F%&*$#@}board....darnit,,,oh thx it solved 1/2 the prob im giving thumbsup
@greeneeyechilde55533 жыл бұрын
pov: ur here for ur work from covid
@clyxxy35103 жыл бұрын
first, you use the wrong tip for the through hole, and secondly, you should put the solder both pcb and components pin.. not to the iron tip...
@simonspeaker3 жыл бұрын
melting...
@sofabiru68523 жыл бұрын
So is the secret? To fixing most things is to re solder them?
@holyfreeholy23294 жыл бұрын
I was forced to watch this for school
@ahjuh85623 жыл бұрын
These tips are OK if you're working on consumer goods but both military and civilian aviation standards would consider these methods to be criminal, not to mention NASA and high component cost situations where excessive heat, cold solder joints, measleing, and crazing will get you fired. If you're not familiar with the afore mentioned terms then you are not a solder tech. If you can replace a burned resister...great. if you can't repair the damage done to a multi layer board because a component shorted and burned...well...you get the idea.
@feloniouscraphammer4 жыл бұрын
felonious craphammer Yup. I recommend the videos by Pace Worldwide, which definitely show military level soldering.
@tookitogo4 жыл бұрын
Oh- and it's lovely to hear -soldering - not sodering as the Americans say! cringe!
@Federer9355 жыл бұрын
Federer935 I'm American and have never heard anyone call it soder
@DeathSensei5 жыл бұрын
Miguel Angel In America we pronounce it as sodder. Sol-der is how the British pronounce it. The way we pronounce it the L is silent. If you are American and are pronouncing the L than you are not pronouncing it the American way you are using the British way.
@vladimirlopez78404 жыл бұрын
Federer935 Toe-MAY-toes, toe-MA-toes LOL
@nyprince59224 жыл бұрын
Wrong method, author has no clue about proper soldering. Do not put solder wire directly on soldering iron tip, and then on joint! Place end of the wire to component lead and PCB pad.
@vladimirstefanovic52544 жыл бұрын
Could this video be anymore drier... jeez. Informative I guess but dry. (Felt like i was trying to read through a textbook)
Great tutorial - I have never soldered a circuit board before and have just followed this guide to replace a capacitor in an old amplifier (advice from another You Tube video). It is now working brilliantly!
Very helpful. Only video I could find that zoomed in, went step by step, and actually explained what was happening.
love the'' lets have another look at that'' lol i hate pausing rewinding. thanks good video
I'm not sure but ,if anyone else is searching for computer monitor repair try Saankramer Electronic Magazine System (should be on google have a look ) ? Ive heard some super things about it and my partner got excellent results with it. 1:22
Just wonderful, been searching for "how to repair electronics board in car" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Ever heard of - Giyathan Bewildering Gratification - (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? It is an awesome one off guide for discovering how to repair your electronic items like a wizard without the normal expense. Ive heard some incredible things about it and my partner got great success with it.
Nice simple tutorial. Now I see a lot of people adding extra notes already, but about cleaning your tip, if you have an abrasive brass sponge, I highly recommend using that instead of the wet sponge. It has better ease to remove corrosion formed on the tip of the iron and there's fewer risks of thermal shock
Great stuff. Looking forward to having a go with my new soldering kit! Thanks.
Excellent - well explained - no unnecessary detail. Just what I needed - Thanks
I got to a “mechatronic robotics” class in highschool and we are soldering and I’m trying to get learn some techniques to get a good solder joint, this video helped me thank you!
Perfect video for helping me get an edge at work. I work with these exact type of boards. Thank you
I soldered the spot that must have over loaded and lost connection. It was the same spot in the video. I didnt need to replace the control board. I just had to solder that spot. The dishwasher works like new now!!!!!! Thanks!
great video! Thanks for the small details - very helpful information!
Very helpful, clear, concise and great camera work. Thanks!
Thank you for posting. This helped me fix my garage door opener board.
Thank you for this tutorial!
Excellent demonstration non the basics of soldering. Thanks! T J (Tom) Vanderloop, Author, Consultant & AWS (Welding-Instructor)
Now I think I have a grasp om how to solder, thank you!
Excellent ! Thanks for sharing !
Great primer. Thank you
Great tutorial that what i was exactly looking for thank you.
This helped a lot, thanks!
Thank you for sharing this. It helped me make a home repair that saved my family a lot of money :-)
Thank you for this excellent tutorial.
This is a really nice tutorial. Thanks!
Best vid i seen online so far😁🖖 Im subbing thank you...
Thanks for this tutorial!
Thank you for the details.
Excellent, thanks!
All hail Manchester Uni, the best! Perfect video.
Very helpful thanks.
this helped thank you!
Great video 👍 thanks man.
assuming your in an electronic assembly job, after aboard is all soldered. Who tests the board to make sure it works? I am assuming the solderer would like to know that his board all works and that he did a good job.
Very helpful!!!👌
good stuff. thanks
Thanks for the guide
that was fantastic. i really learned alot.
Great video work
Great tutorial
Thank you friend
doesn't trimming the excess lead after soldering have a RISK of fracturing the solder joint ?
Good man👏👏👏👌🏻
Thanks this helps
Thats nice man
Awesome thanks 👍
Great video
Excellent tutorial. A further Q; will the iron shown on the left 0:19 make the 350 degrees needed for soldering? Again , thanks for sharing. Subbed no hesitation.
Semi Experienced solderer here -- It might, it varies from iron to iron though In my experience all fixed ones have worked fine.
Hello! Im a student and i am studying the cracks on middle of solder in pcb components. Can you say to me some solutions to solve this problem? Does it depends of the welding alloy? or the themperatures? Can i solve this problem? Best regards.
thks so much
I find that after working for a little while, the solder no longer wants to stick. What's going on there?
i always clean it with alcohol to make sure there is so flux making a connection
Thanks alot
mighty useful, I'm rigging a diy handbrake to my steering wheel for xbox
Best for solding
hey, i bought a cheap $20 well from home depot seems the tips keep burning up is this me or is it due to the cheap solder iron,I know this is somewhat hard to answer but any help would be good cause im thinking about spending around $110 on a better iron. something with temp controls. One of the problems i keep running into is i keep getting bad joints i do a nice looking job but somewhere i always have to reflow a joint or 2 idk but it really becoming a problem.
Tone Log Vintage Replica's 1966 Expensive iron won’t help you, sir. Now I would assume that you cleaned your soldering iron using a sponge right, sir? I used to have those problems when I started to learn how to solder.
Do I need to use flux on the holes first?
The solder contains a core of flux so you shouldn't need to - providing the solder hasn't been left on the iron so long that the flux vaporises.
3:23 I didn't quite understand this part. You want to remove the excess solder because you want the flux to evaporate so that there is none left. But later you say if you solder without any flux, it could lead to a bad connection. So are we trying to remove the flux or keep it?
cryora After you solder a joint, whatever flux is remaining in the solder will evaporate. So you will still have solder on the tip, but no flux. You want fresh solder that still has flux in it, for the next joint.
Here’s how I explain it to novices: the solder “cooks” when hot (be it on the tip, or when heating a joint for too long), and overcooked solder makes for bad joints. So what you want to do is “clean” the tip of overcooked solder by wiping off as much as possible, and then “rinsing” with fresh solder right before making a joint. (The “overcooking” is the combination of a few factors: 1. all the flux burning off, 2. the solder itself oxidizing, and 3. the contamination of the hot solder with other metals (copper from PCB traces and wires, and silver and copper from component leads, mostly) from prolonged contact while hot, resulting in a sort of undefined alloy. Flux helps prevent and even reverse oxidation, so adding flux can help to an extent.)
Excellent
Is there water or flux on the sponge?
Seth Jones water
hi, i have a doubt, After dip soldering, some of the areas is not soldering properly, again i need to make the manual solder in some area, solder forming as flat soldering. it not cone shape solder is not forming, what is the problem? how can i solve this? can you help me?
VEERAMANIKANDAN P Buy a good rosin or no-clean electronics flux.
good one
3:15 Beautiful.
Nice
Whats wrong with having different cones? Its a great way to make them stand out from one another ;)
Thanks for a good video. However, there’s one thing to correct: lead-free solder is very toxic and it’s safe to use only with proper respirator and hand gloves.
this very nices
Back in my day we wouldn’t where earth bands on fummergatots machines
nameable soldering teampeshier
Wait a second, so you can actually touch the soldering iron to the board and it won't damage the board?
It's all about putting heat quickly into a small area - if the iron is at the right temperature the pad will heat up to the melting point of the solder quickly allowing you to make the connection and then dissipate into the surrounding board. If the iron is not hot enough the pad takes longer to heat to the required temperature and more heat dissipates into the surrounding board which is when damage occurs.
Clay Ford
You cheat the melting point of the board a bit by using heat sinks around the work area usually on the same circuit. However the cheating is limited
@@fseelearning usually what is right temperature for most things like this? Also, what usually is the right temperature for desoldering?
1 FOKU$!
Great video but as an American I have trouble hearing it as "solder" and not "sodder"
Travis Johnson as an American I think you should look it up, the L is not silent
What about the flux ?
sukshith shetty it’s in the solder already.
We had to use this as homework 😭😭😭
I want soldiering gun
Iron
When you're poor and you have to use a fan and an n95 face mask lol
good thing you have the n95 mask now. Stay safe my friend
Them Pumps are useless. Personally id use desoldering wick
Urban exploration Squad Totally disagree. A good pump works well for removing components. Wick is terrible for removing components, but is perfect for cleaning up the pads before installing a new component. Pro tip: buy some silicone tubing of a size that will tightly fit onto the tip of the pump. Cut a piece so that, once mounted, it extends about 1/4” past the hard tip. This lets you get in closer and make a better seal, even while touching the tip, since the silicone won’t burn or melt.
I ended up breaking my drone out of frustration because I could solder the power chord back on... yeeet
MSFTS TRIO First time I ever heard of a power chord being soldered.
Do not solder then cut as it exposes copper, always cut then solder, I work in PCB assembly so I solder everyday.
I don’t see the difference...if you cut and then solder, the copper is still exposed. Btw, every single professional I have seen on KZhead solder and then cut.
NY Prince Absolutely not. In the most demanding industries, like aerospace and defense, you always cut first and then solder, because then you pull the soldering iron up over the cut end, causing the solder to tin the cut end. Cutting first also ensures the solder joint isn’t mechanically stressed during cutting. Cutting afterwards is common in hobbyist and less demanding industries doing very small-run production, but cutting first is unquestionably the preferred method.
NY Prince The videos by Pace Worldwide, despite their age, remain the gold standard in soldering instruction. This is the one about through-hole component soldering, demonstrating how to tin over the cut end of the lead. I do recommend watching the whole series from the beginning, since they go into the foundations and terminology used in the later installments. kzhead.info/sun/dL1ufZGkfqqsrac/bejne.html
1:10
I smoke 2 packs a day...really not worried about solder smoke
i have friends with emphysema who cry that "nobody ever told them" there isn't any good way to die, and suffocating is no exception living each day with the feeling of being strangled if you have a desire to quit, bupropion has proven very effective
@@hamidmazuji or vape
I still don«t get how you call this basic :)
I don't know why you leave out using rubbing alcohol on your circuit board to remove any old oxidation that has built up and using flux on the board where your connectors are will give you a much cleaner soldering job result? I don't understand why so many people think that just because there is flux in my solder that I don't need to use any flux on my board, in my wires or on my connectors? That information is "bad" for the most part.
im having trouble because i dont have 3 hands and so far you are not showing the "trick" to getting the soldered points stationary im in girl-tears here.... And ya thats mine at the end. but my prob is that my solders don't conduct electic current. im using a kit just for pc.....?....looks like i have to lift the mother{F%&*$#@}board....darnit,,,oh thx it solved 1/2 the prob im giving thumbsup
pov: ur here for ur work from covid
first, you use the wrong tip for the through hole, and secondly, you should put the solder both pcb and components pin.. not to the iron tip...
melting...
So is the secret? To fixing most things is to re solder them?
I was forced to watch this for school
These tips are OK if you're working on consumer goods but both military and civilian aviation standards would consider these methods to be criminal, not to mention NASA and high component cost situations where excessive heat, cold solder joints, measleing, and crazing will get you fired. If you're not familiar with the afore mentioned terms then you are not a solder tech. If you can replace a burned resister...great. if you can't repair the damage done to a multi layer board because a component shorted and burned...well...you get the idea.
felonious craphammer Yup. I recommend the videos by Pace Worldwide, which definitely show military level soldering.
Oh- and it's lovely to hear -soldering - not sodering as the Americans say! cringe!
Federer935 I'm American and have never heard anyone call it soder
Miguel Angel In America we pronounce it as sodder. Sol-der is how the British pronounce it. The way we pronounce it the L is silent. If you are American and are pronouncing the L than you are not pronouncing it the American way you are using the British way.
Federer935 Toe-MAY-toes, toe-MA-toes LOL
Wrong method, author has no clue about proper soldering. Do not put solder wire directly on soldering iron tip, and then on joint! Place end of the wire to component lead and PCB pad.
Could this video be anymore drier... jeez. Informative I guess but dry. (Felt like i was trying to read through a textbook)