Soldering Iron

C

Chris W

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Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

--
Chris W

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Chris W wrote:

Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for
a hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

oops that page didn't give the price. It is $65

Here is the page with the price
http://www.megaproductions.net/Electronics/RC_Electronics_Parts_Home.htm

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Chris W

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give the gifts they want
http://thewishzone.com
 
"Chris W" <1qazse4@cox.net> wrote in message
news:dDkEe.46465$rb6.26288@lakeread07...
Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

--
Chris W

Gift Giving Made Easy
Get the gifts you want & give the gifts they want
http://thewishzone.com
Hi Chris,
Since you are asking, the unit you link has specs more than suitable for
what you need. They make a comparison to a Weller, for a few bucks more you
can have a Weller.
In my opinion I would buy the Weller.
Something like this one:
http://www.hmcelectronics.com/cgi-bin/scripts/product/1980-0044
Tom
 
Chris W wrote:
Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

I haven't used one of those, but I recently bought one of these:
http://store.yahoo.com/webtronics/didisostc.html
and it appears to work very well. I especially like that I can get
parts for it at reasonable prices.
 
Hi,

On Sat, 23 Jul 2005 00:31:16 -0500, Chris W <1qazse4@cox.net>
wrote:

Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm
I have a very similar iron and would recommend it to anyone.
There are two variants over here (UK), one with a straight digital
temperature readout and the other with a LED bar-graph. Spares are
easy to come by and I haven't had to replace a tip in several
years of use. Throw away the sponge though and get some form of
brass turnings tip cleaner and/or one of those tinning pots made
by Multicore.

Treat yourself. Hobbyist need good tools just the same as the
professionals. I ran a large maintenance organisation for many
years and if I could have thrown those crappy 'Curie Point' switch
Wellers out of the window I would have done so but the military
supply chain had standardised on them.


Cheers - Joe
 
Chris W wrote:
Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

any approval?? don't see it in the spec sheet.
rw
 
"Chris W" <1qazse4@cox.net> wrote in message
news:dDkEe.46465$rb6.26288@lakeread07...
Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

--
Chris,

While the price is attractive and it might be a great deal, there are a few
things that bother me about the specs.

1. No approvals listed.
2. No ESD (maximum tip voltage to ground) spec.
3. No temperature stability spec.
4. They don't know much about soldering iron care if they think you should use
emery cloth and alcohol to clean the tips.

I've used Weller/Ungar stuff in the past, but now I would go with a Hakko
soldering station. You would pay a bit more ($90 or so) for a 936-12 ESD safe
station but you definitely know what you are getting. It doesn't have the
direct temperature readout, but you don't really need that for hobby work.
Specs for 936-12 are at http://www.hakkousa.com/products.asp?page=3&pid=936-12.

--
James T. White
 
you should take a look at this

www.noullogan.home.ro/logan/index.htm

it is awesome
 
James T. White wrote:

"Chris W" <1qazse4@cox.net> wrote in message
news:dDkEe.46465$rb6.26288@lakeread07...


Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

--



Chris,

While the price is attractive and it might be a great deal, there are a few
things that bother me about the specs.

1. No approvals listed.
2. No ESD (maximum tip voltage to ground) spec.
3. No temperature stability spec.
4. They don't know much about soldering iron care if they think you should use
emery cloth and alcohol to clean the tips.

I've used Weller/Ungar stuff in the past, but now I would go with a Hakko
soldering station. You would pay a bit more ($90 or so) for a 936-12 ESD safe
station but you definitely know what you are getting. It doesn't have the
direct temperature readout, but you don't really need that for hobby work.
Specs for 936-12 are at http://www.hakkousa.com/products.asp?page=3&pid=936-12.



Thanks for the suggestion. That sounds like a better solder station
than the one I was looking at and I found it for under $80. Not a bad
deal so I added it to my wish list. Hopefully I will get it for
Christmas if I don't decided to buy it for myself sooner :)

http://www.thewishzone.com/?ID=cdw3423

--
Chris W

Gift Giving Made Easy
Get the gifts you want &
give the gifts they want
http://thewishzone.com
 
Chris W wrote:
Can someone tell me if this a good deal and of reasonable quality for a
hobbiest?

http://www.megaproductions.net/Soldering_Iron1.htm

This model is available through Marlin P. Jones as stock # 15845-TL for $46.95.

http://www.mpja.com/directview.asp?product=15845+TL

John
 

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