joyouswolf
New member
How is it to work with Lead free solder?
Does this stuff work as well as the 60 (tin)/40 (lead) solder?
Thanks & peace
Does this stuff work as well as the 60 (tin)/40 (lead) solder?
Thanks & peace
FWIW - Here's an example of the results I'm getting with lead-free rosin core silver bearing solder. dotsdad is right, it does take a hotter iron and you gotta be fast to get it right. Also, I keep the tip clean, tinned, and replace it every project/guitar.
View attachment 43290
As for lead free solder, I find it a bit harder to work with, but not impossible. And ironically, the smoke it gives off is WAY more toxic than leaded solder. RoHS was designed to keep toxic stuff out of EU landfills, not builders' lungs![]()
But how does it sound![]()
FWIW - Here's an example of the results I'm getting with lead-free rosin core silver bearing solder. dotsdad is right, it does take a hotter iron and you gotta be fast to get it right. Also, I keep the tip clean, tinned, and replace it every project/guitar.
View attachment 43290
Jessie, you don't seriously pay $120 for solder, do you?
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Also, replacing the tip every other project? WTF? If you keep your tip clean and tinned that's absolutely unnecessary. I've been using the same tip for 2 years through probably a hundred pickup mods/wiring jobs and it's still fine.
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A good iron solves both problems. A variable-temperature Weller or clone will get hot enough to do that kind of work cleanly and efficiently. You can still burn the tips up if you leave them cooking at max temperature and keep leaving them like that for a few hours at a time. Take care of the thing properly, and you're looking at infrequent tip replacement and an iron that will last years.