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help me pleaseeee - SOLDERING TIPS

Started by caustic, August 21, 2006, 01:18:18 PM

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caustic

ok
so I fully admit that this may be the most boring/stupid question that this forum has ever been subjected too but I didn't know where else to go.
soooooo
right
I'm very new to this but I wasn't having many problems till I bought 1/4" jacks from maplin. Why can't I solder to these jacks. the solder just wont stick at all it just slides off the surface. I think that there is a very easy answer to this question but I don't know it.
so I'm pleading for help.
pleaseeeeeeee

Iain

geigercounter120

hi.  just to make sure, you are applying solder to the right part of the jack aren't you?



it's the 2 eyelet bits, rather than onto the tip (upper left of the diagram)...

Sorry if my question offended you, it's just that i was looking to solder my 1st jack a couple of weeks ago and it took a little while before i realised where to solder!  :-\

the_zombiest

best thing to do in my experience, is to apply the tip of the iron to the lug of the jack/switch/whatever for a few seconds and then apply the solder to the lug until it melts.  Some components react differently to how you use your soldering iron.  Good quality components are ready tinned which make them easier to solder to.  Lesser quality components need a little more work to solder to.  I found this with certain jacks and switches that I bought cheap.  It makes bending 10 times more frustrating >:(

sometimes it helps to clean the surface of what your soldering to as well.  Use isopropyl alcohol and let it evaporate before soldering.

be wary about holding the soldering iron onto your components for too long... i've melted switches like that :o

caustic

yeah it's the eyelet things I'm trying to solder to
this is the component I'm trying to use
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?TabID=1&ModuleNo=1252&doy=21m8
thanks again

Iain

andy_wheels

another thing to check is the state of your soldering iron. a messed up tip will be useless for getting a decent join. it's all about quickly transfering enough heat to your join before conduction channels that heat to places it shouldn't.

caustic

coolo
thanks again for all the help

IAin

Signal:Noise

Going over the tags with a needle file very quickly is a good dodge, roughens up the surface and helps the solder grrab.

iqoruvuc

Also make sure you tin your soldering iron tip before you use it - otherwise you will be there forever!  Also what type of tip do you use?  I started with a real fine pencil tip, but it simply didn't transfere the heat enough so I use a chisel-shaped tip that is quite good. 

My soldering Iron is only 18 watts, and whilst I have never fried any components using it, it struggles a bit on things like Jack sockets. 

superset

use some extra flux.  just brush a little bit on and it should make your solder stick better.

Gordonjcp

It's really important to warm the solder tags a bit first, otherwise the solder won't "wet" them properly and you'll get it beading up like you have at the moment.  Quite often this is because the tin plating on the tags is a bit too shiny, but once you melt that it'll be easy to solder.

If at first you don't succeed, stick it through a fuzzbox.

PolyPhuckin

i agree with this lot.

You might also find useful a little tin of tip tinner which i find helpful and some solder wick for desoldering is so much better than a sucker,


When soldering you should be able to melt the solder on the tag/pin rather than on the iron an letting it run down, and withdraw the iron up the wire/pin rather than taking it off at a angle, you avoid little spikes this way.

just practice really.