Electronic – Tips and Help with Soldering

solderingsoldering-iron-station

I'm currently "using" my TENMA 217945, which is a decent soldering iron, I guess. The main problem is that I am absolutely horrible at soldering. I'm capable of doing through-hole stuff, but tinning wires is just a trainwreck and from an expert's point of view likely looks as if it was done with a flamethrower. I have a helping hand or whatever that is called, but it doesn't work all too well. I'm doing many things wrong.

(EDIT:) I know it can’t be good for soldering, because the tip is a charred black. I have a sponge, which came with my iron, but it doesn’t get it off. As an earlier responder noted, a new iron is good, but I don’t have a job and I don’t make an allowance, etc. Should I just invest into another tip, because solder won’t stick to the tip at all. Is there anything special I should do if I acquire a new tip?

I guess the most notable thing that I need help with is tinning wires. Thinking of how I tin wires makes me cringe and invokes a feeling of spontaneous regurgitation within the back of my throat. For example, only 10 minutes ago(The reason I have come here and am asking for help) I was attempting to tin the rather flimsy wires of a micro-servo motor, without my helping hands because they are at my dad's house and I'm at my mom's house, and I couldn't even tin the first wire without giving up on myself. They say that practice is the best type of learning, but if I don't have a clue as to how to tin, then what good is practicing bad practices. By the way, I have made an attempt to learn how to solder from the internet to no avail. Ironic that I'm coming here for help then. I'm not looking for an answer such as "turn on your soldering iron", something a bit more.

I expect to be redirected to 100 different pages and/or marked as a duplicate due to the simple nature of this question.

Thanks ahead of time, in the event that I am unable to respond.

(EDIT:) Thanks for all of the help! I understand that this community is supposed to answer questions, but I have been given answers like “There’s this thing called google” and “Have you heard of the internet?” before.

Best Answer

The goal of tinning is to leave a very thin, uniform coat of solder on the wire. So.

1 You will be manipulating 3 objects simulataneously: wire, solder and iron. As you've undoubtedly noticed, you only have 2 hands. So you'll need to immobilize one of them. I suggest the wire. You can get various nifty bench vises to hold pieces in place, but a good field expedient is a thick book. A dictionary will do nicely. Put it on your work bench, and put the wire about halfway through the book, with about an inch or so of wire (with the bare end exposed) showing. For tinning, the wire should be facing toward your dominant hand (usually the right). You'll see why later.

2 Don't use thick solder. .050 is good general-purpose, through-hole solder. Save the really fine .025 for surface mount work. And use rosin-core solder, too.

3 For tinning, set the iron to maximum temperature unless you're using really cheap wire with insulation which melts easily.

4 Clean the iron tip, then touch solder to the tip. You don't want a hanging blob, just a slight bulge of solder.

5 (Assuming you're right-handed) hold the iron in your right hand and the solder in your left. Touch the tip to the exposed wire near the insulation. The solder on the tip should make contact with the bare wire, and a bit of solder should bridge the gap between tip and copper. Now, simultaneously move the tip toward the end of the wire, and at the same time feed solder into the junction of tip and wire. The tip rate should be rather quick, and you can see the solder spread over the wire. At the same time, move the solder along with the iron, looking to see how much solder is being melted and tinning the wire. This does take a bit of practice, but if you're getting a blob you know you're adding too much solder.

6 It's easy to feed the solder onto the iron tip. Don't. The solder should contact the material being tinned. If the tip is properly tinned, there will be good thermal contact between the tip and the wire, and the best point to aim for is the junction of tip and wire. This way, even if the wire surface is dirty, the heat of the tip will activate the rosin core and clean the joint.