I have a Weller soldering gun & the tip burned through. Not having a
spare, I took a piece of 12ga copper wire and improvised (I know, it
won't last long). I find it so fiddly to get the ends bent just right
to fit in the holes after passing through the nuts & I saw the way
around it. I passed the wire in through the SIDE & locked in down: https://i.imgur.com/ojbDuT7.jpg
But that seemed too easy. Paraphrasing: "If it seems too easy, there
must be some problem". I can't see it, so I'm asking - what might be a problem?
Thanks
I have a Weller soldering gun & the tip burned through. Not having a
spare, I took a piece of 12ga copper wire and improvised (I know, it
won't last long). I find it so fiddly to get the ends bent just right
to fit in the holes after passing through the nuts & I saw the way
around it. I passed the wire in through the SIDE & locked in down: >https://i.imgur.com/ojbDuT7.jpg
But that seemed too easy. Paraphrasing: "If it seems too easy, there
must be some problem". I can't see it, so I'm asking - what might be a >problem?
Thanks
On Sat, 24 Sep 2022 12:38:28 -0400, Bob Engelhardt ><BobEngelhardt@comcast.net> wrote:
I have a Weller soldering gun & the tip burned through. Not having a >>spare, I took a piece of 12ga copper wire and improvised (I know, it
won't last long). I find it so fiddly to get the ends bent just right
to fit in the holes after passing through the nuts & I saw the way
around it. I passed the wire in through the SIDE & locked in down: >>https://i.imgur.com/ojbDuT7.jpg
But that seemed too easy. Paraphrasing: "If it seems too easy, there
must be some problem". I can't see it, so I'm asking - what might be a >>problem?
Thanks
That works well enough, until it doesn't. A few potential problems.
1. You might notice that the typical Weller soldering gun tip is much >stiffer and harder than the soft copper wire. When you try to push on
a solder connection with the tip, the Weller tip will not bend, while
the copper wire tip will bend into a pretzel. Copper alloys can be
hardened:
"Hardening of Copper Alloys" ><https://www.totalmateria.com/page.aspx?ID=CheckArticle&site=ktn&NM=71>
2. The copper wire is likely a different resistance than the real
Weller tip. My guess(tm) is that the Weller tip has a higher
resistance than the copper wire. If you have a milliohmmeter or ESR >(equivalent series resistance) meter, measure a real Weller tip and
compare it to the copper wire tip. If the copper wire has a radically
lower resistance, you might find that transformer winding in the
soldering gun will tend to overheat (or simulate a fuse). If the tip
becomes red hot, try a longer wire, or buy a real tip. Use an IR
thermometer to measure the tip temperature. 600°- 650°F (316°- 343°C)
for lead-based solder and 650°- 700°F (343°- 371°C) for lead-free
solder.
3. The idea behind a soldering gun is to heat the tip and not the
clamp where the tip meets the screw clamps. If you want to use wire,
I suggest you bend the ends of the wire in the same manner as a real
Weller tip to obtain maximum clamping pressure and surface area: ><https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61F0OVzw0gL._AC_SL1500_.jpg>
4. You probably need the blob of copper on the tip to prevent the
flux from destroying the tip. Try twisting the wire near the tip and
maybe beat on the twist with a hammer.
Tech Tips Tuesday, Super Hot Soldering Gun ><https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79uD6XwBg5E>
How to Make a Soldering Gun Tip
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amBafLkEtCA>
Homeade Weller soldering gun tips DIY ><https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U86GsflNjJQ>
More:
<https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=weller+soldering+tip>
Full disclosure: I gave up on soldering guns years ago and no longer
have any soldering guns. Temperature controlled irons are better.
I have a Weller soldering gun & the tip burned through. Not having a
spare, I took a piece of 12ga copper wire and improvised (I know, it
won't last long). I find it so fiddly to get the ends bent just right
to fit in the holes after passing through the nuts & I saw the way
around it. I passed the wire in through the SIDE & locked in down: >https://i.imgur.com/ojbDuT7.jpg
But that seemed too easy. Paraphrasing: "If it seems too easy, there
must be some problem". I can't see it, so I'm asking - what might be a >problem?
Thanks
Thanks for the replies!
I know a copper tip doesn't last as long as the iron(?) plated Weller
ones,
but I thought that it was that copper dissolves in the solder.
The tip about plating with silver solder was brilliant. I refined my
tip like that. And I got a big blob which I filed to the shape I wanted.
I have a temperature controlled iron & just use the gun when I want a
lot of heat on a crude joint. E.g., unsoldering an AC cord.
Installing the tip through the sides of the gun's arms actually doubles
the area of contact between the tip & the nut.
Thanks for the replies!
I know a copper tip doesn't last as long as the iron(?) plated Weller
ones, but I thought that it was that copper dissolves in the solder.
The tip about plating with silver solder was brilliant. I refined my
tip like that. And I got a big blob which I filed to the shape I wanted.
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