Re: Best Soldering Iron and Accessories for Guitar Work?
BlueGuitar said:
Most of the irons that Radio Shack sells have a philips head screw that holds the tip in place; no matter how you position the iron that screw is guaranteed to leave a tatoo between your thumb and forefinger... :saeek:
Can't say I've ever had that problem occur ... I just use a Radio Shack 40W, occasionally I'll drop the temp as needed (external regulator) . Temperature controlled tips and grounded tips (IC work) are great things to have if you find the need. a 15W to 30W (or 20W to 40W) switchable iron will also take care of 90% of everything your likely to encounter as well, and they can be had economically, Even Radio Shack has one that's well built for what it is (also uses the smaller tips, and has an assortment of different tips availble, more so than normal).
Yeah Fluke just *owns* the meter world, but not necessarily so, B&K, Tenman, and even Velleman make some units that are really nice ... go for true RMS reading meters, at todays prices there is no reason not to! And any DMM you buy should have an input impedance of at *least* 10Meg ohms (many Flukes are 40Meg or so), this becomes important in voltage measurements (not so much for guitar though). Auto-polarity is a worthwhile function if given a choice, auto-ranging is also, but you can definitely do without that (people did for years).
As for testing capacitance, most midline meters are accurate for guitar and pedal ranges, for test big electrolytic caps in amps, they aren't accurate, but for most uses you are fine.
Insulated alligator and microhook adaptors for your meters probes are a real *good* investment, the minihooks work better for grabbing the four conductor wires from pups, the alligators are better for anchoring to parts in amps.
Solder, 60/40 is fine, but get the lead-free formula (no reason not to), I tend to use the lead-free silver formula just because I like the extra strong bond, and I find it works better in pedals.
I prefer a solder sucker over braid, but that's personal bias, braid is good for when you really gotta get large blobs taken care of (after someone else has worked on something before you ... :yell: )
Hemostats double as heatsinks, but get a few legit heatsinks as well for ICs, everything else is really standard, strippers (that allow you to preset the strip depth), diagonal cutters, safety glasses, all that jazz can be as cheap or as expensive (a $60 set of wire strippers will last a lifetime, than a $5 set, but the $5 set still works) as you see fit ... other things like tip size, and type; solder diameter, mutlicore vs standard core is pretty much either personal bias or depends on what it is you are actually doing at the time.
Start sifting thru electronics component suppliers catalogues, as they have generally higher quality meters and at better prices than the electronic sections in most commercial stores.