World's Worst Soldering!

On 10/07/2018 12:08 PM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!

Eh. This was the soldering job in a commercially-sold SMPS bench power
supply from an Amazon.com reseller, IIRC, this was how it looked when it
left the mfgr, I took this photo immediately after opening the enclosure
and pulling the PCB (it had stopped working! can you believe it)

<https://www.dropbox.com/s/65km6pbq8wzch54/IMG_20171005_104357775.jpg?dl=0>
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 11:58:41 -0700, John Robertson <spam@flippers.com>
wrote:

4. Clean the enamel off the wires with sandpaper before you solder.

Sandpaper may be too aggressive if a rough grit, that can introduce
scratches to the copper leaking to the potential for breakage. I suggest
using something more like wet/dry emery cloth of about 1000 grit - true,
it is another sandpaper, but less likely to scratch.

I'm using 400 grit wet/dry sandpaper for removing enamel. No reason
other than it seems to last longer than the finer grits and I have a
fair number of sheets. For very thin magnet wire or litz wire, I use
finer sandpaper. If I want to scrape off the insulation, I use a
moderately dull edge kitchen knife that won't cut or gouge the copper
wire. If I try to solder magnet wire that still has some coating on
the wire and was not tinned, I get a black carbonized blobs, like in
the photo.

This looks handy - so I've ordered a couple for the shop:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/352464262209
Nice to be able to check calibrations by comparison.

I have one of those. It's a counterfeit clone and is not made by
Hakko. This is what the real FG-100 looks like:
<https://www.ebay.com/itm/New-Hakko-FG100-02-Thermometer-Fahrenheit-Fg-100-US-Authorized-Dealer/361688237097>
Note the price. I haven't bothered to verify the calibration on mine,
but it seems to indicate what I would expect.


--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
 
On 2018-10-07, Cursitor Doom <curd@notformail.com> wrote:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/

Eek! I'd like to see some insulator other than air between the AC
nodes of that bridge rectifier, it doesn't look like the gap is very
much at all.


--
Notsodium is mined on the banks of denial.
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 21:36:29 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 10/07/2018 12:08 PM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!




Eh. This was the soldering job in a commercially-sold SMPS bench power
supply from an Amazon.com reseller, IIRC, this was how it looked when it
left the mfgr, I took this photo immediately after opening the enclosure
and pulling the PCB (it had stopped working! can you believe it)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/65km6pbq8wzch54/IMG_20171005_104357775.jpg?dl=0

This is pretty bad. The box doesn't work.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0



--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

lunatic fringe electronics
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 20:06:40 -0000 (UTC), Cursitor Doom
<curd@notformail.com> wrote:

On Sun, 07 Oct 2018 10:36:05 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
1. How many watts is your soldering iron? It looks like the mess made
by too low power or too fine a tip. 75 watt seems about right.

I have 15W, 25W, 40W and 80W irons. This atrocity was carried out with
the 15W one which has a pointed tip for some reason.

There's your problem. 15 watts is far too small for the heavy gauge
wire you're using. The pointed tip is too small to retain enough heat
to solder some of the larger parts in your photos. You also didn't
bother to disclose whether you're using a temperature controlled
soldering iron or a crappy wood burner. I'll guess(tm) a wood burner,
probably with unplated rusted iron tips that can't be cleaned, wetted,
or tinned.

If my guess(tm) is correct, you don't have a prayer making a decent
solder connection even with a keen hand and a steady eye. The trick
to soldering is to use decent equipment, a clean tinned tip, and the
correct temperature. Use a hot tip set to the temperature for the
type of solder you're using. Get the work hot quickly, solder
quickly, and remove the iron as soon as possible. If you use a stone
cold 15 watt iron, you'll end up lingering on the joint for far too
long, which will dramatically increase the size of the heat affected
zone, which will likely burn the PCB, vaporize the flux before it's
needed, and possibly run some parts. By fast, I mean something like 1
second or less.

You're very kind in attributing this train wreck of a repair to my having
the wrong tools, Jeff. Sadly I don't believe it's the case. This kind of
work requires a steady hand and a keen eye and I possess neither.

A friend of mine lived long enough to get Parkinsons Disease. Near
the end, his hands shook bad enough that soldering was impossible.
However, before that, they were steady enough to hold the iron, but
not the work (wire and components). So, he build a fixture with an
articulated battery terminal clamp to hold the joint together while he
soldered it. For the soldering iron, he build something similar that
only required that he leaned on the iron to push it into the
connection. The process wasn't graceful, but it worked.

If you have vision problems, get a proper magnifier or microscope. My
eyesight is becoming bad enough that I need to use a microscope for
SMD work, and a magnifier for ordinary work. Good lighting also
helps. My soldering would look as bad as yours if I didn't have these
aids.

If you're not sure that decent soldering equipment will improve your
miserable soldering, then borrow someone's decent equipment and try it
for a day or three. If it's hopeless, look into the possibilities of
using a soldering robot:
<https://www.google.com/search?q=soldering+robot&tbm=isch>
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJMnk7maUVs> (1:33)

3. Are those 3300uF 25V caps 85C caps or 105C? The photo looks like
85C. If so, they'll last about 6 months inside a hot oscilloscope.

I followed the original spec as far as possible. The originals were
5500uF, 30VDC and 85C. I couldn't get the right capacitance within the
space available so used 33's in parallel. The old 85C's lasted for
decades so your 6 month assessment may be a bit pessimistic.

I had problems finding can type electrolytics so I used axial leaded
electrolytics as a substitute. They fit inside the old can, so I just
ripped out the guts from the defective capacitor and crammed the axial
caps inside. I used 85C caps which lasted about 6 months. I replace
them with 105C caps and they've been running for about 2 years.

4. Clean the enamel off the wires with sandpaper before you solder.
Tin the wire ends before attaching to a lug or PCB rivet.

Yes, I did do that. I know what I *should* do but it doesn't help.

If you know it's not going to work, why bother doing it? You're not
going to get a decent solder connection if it's covered with melted or
burnt insulation, no matter how nice your tools or technique. A
decent solder connection requires that ALL the parts of the puzzle are
clean before you apply heat and solder. Do it.

Also, if you don't have a hot air SMD workstation, this might be a good
time to get one because they often include an adjustable temperature
controlled soldering iron.

Can you imagine the carnage I'd leave behind attempting SMD stuff?? :-D

It takes a bit of practice, but once you understand how it works, it's
quite easy. Soldering SMD devices with solder paste is easy because
the part self-aligns itself on the pads once the solder melts. There
are plenty of videos on YouTube showing various ways to use a hot air
SMT desoldering station. Instead of declaring defeat and surrendering
before you start, watch a few and decide if you can handle it.


--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
 
On 10/07/2018 10:34 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 21:36:29 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 10/07/2018 12:08 PM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!




Eh. This was the soldering job in a commercially-sold SMPS bench power
supply from an Amazon.com reseller, IIRC, this was how it looked when it
left the mfgr, I took this photo immediately after opening the enclosure
and pulling the PCB (it had stopped working! can you believe it)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/65km6pbq8wzch54/IMG_20171005_104357775.jpg?dl=0

This is pretty bad. The box doesn't work.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0

Haha, I actually saw a small pile of those on the shelf at the local
(well, only) brick and mortar components retailer in the Boston area, on
sale for $8 each in kit form.

I think I'll pick one up next time I don't think I've ever owned a
capacitor substitution box before, or really needed one (it's easy to
substitute capacitors in Spice) but might come in handy someday, and I
mostly trust my own soldering. Maybe I'll splurge on some better quality
through-hole caps for it than those ceramic disk....things
 
DecadentLinux...@decadence.org wrote:
60/40 is for plumbing.

** You are thinking of " 40/ 60 " solder that is used by plumbers.

60/40 is ( or was) standard electronics solder.



the electronics industry settled on and proved to be the best 63/37 and
for decades it was.
This RoHS shit is the worst thing the world ever did.

** Hate the stuff !!!!

To rework a PCB you HAVE to clean ALL of it off before applying 60/460 or 63/37.


..... Phil
 
In article <19flrd597vqu0is1kvbkgh94lu7r85479a@4ax.com>,
jeffl@cruzio.com says...
It takes a bit of practice, but once you understand how it works, it's
quite easy. Soldering SMD devices with solder paste is easy because
the part self-aligns itself on the pads once the solder melts. There
are plenty of videos on YouTube showing various ways to use a hot air
SMT desoldering station. Instead of declaring defeat and surrendering
before you start, watch a few and decide if you can handle it.

I have been building kits and repairing electronics for about 50 years
and stayed away from the SMD up to about 3 years ago when I was about
65. I looked at Youtube and with a few simple items it seemed very
easy. I bought an inexpensive hot air rework station for about $ 70 at
the time and the best thing was an Amscope $ 200 10 power microcsope.
After playing around with it for a while on old junk computer boards I
started on the 'good stuff'.

That microscope was the best piece of shop equipment that I have bought
in many years. I seem to use it all the time now.
 
In article <ppea6l$ipf$1@gioia.aioe.org>,
DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org says...
60/40 is for plumbing.

The electronics industry settled on and proved to be the best 63/37 and
for decades it was. This RoHS shit is the worst thing the world ever did.
Metallic form lead is not dangerous to the environment.

The standard is for the tin content to be first and then the lead.

The 60/40 is most common for electronic solder, but 63/37 is slightly
better.

The plumbing is often 50/50, or was before the RoHS and lead free stuff
started.

I do agree the solders other than the tin/lead is very bad and hard to
work with. As I just do it for a hobby and in the US, anything I do is
with the tin/lead. If the area of a board I am working on has the RoHS
type solder on it, I remove it from the part I am working on.

It is going to be interisting to see if the devices have the 'tin
whisker' problem that high tin no lead content solder can have in a few
years.
 
In article <cda34813-55f1-4d14-9417-ef06dcd0b423@googlegroups.com>,
pallison49@gmail.com says...
the electronics industry settled on and proved to be the best 63/37 and
for decades it was.
This RoHS shit is the worst thing the world ever did.


** Hate the stuff !!!!

To rework a PCB you HAVE to clean ALL of it off before applying 60/460 or 63/37.

Sometimes it helps to put some tin/lead solder on the parts you are
trying to remove and then get rid of all the old RoHS type solder.
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 22:58:01 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 10/07/2018 10:34 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 21:36:29 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 10/07/2018 12:08 PM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!




Eh. This was the soldering job in a commercially-sold SMPS bench power
supply from an Amazon.com reseller, IIRC, this was how it looked when it
left the mfgr, I took this photo immediately after opening the enclosure
and pulling the PCB (it had stopped working! can you believe it)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/65km6pbq8wzch54/IMG_20171005_104357775.jpg?dl=0

This is pretty bad. The box doesn't work.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0



Haha, I actually saw a small pile of those on the shelf at the local
(well, only) brick and mortar components retailer in the Boston area, on
sale for $8 each in kit form.

I think I'll pick one up next time I don't think I've ever owned a
capacitor substitution box before, or really needed one (it's easy to
substitute capacitors in Spice) but might come in handy someday, and I
mostly trust my own soldering. Maybe I'll splurge on some better quality
through-hole caps for it than those ceramic disk....things

I also have their resistance box, which is very good!

I tossed the cap box.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

lunatic fringe electronics
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 20:06:40 -0000 (UTC), Cursitor Doom
<curd@notformail.com> wrote:

On Sun, 07 Oct 2018 10:36:05 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

There may be hope for you yet:

Unfortunately not!

1. How many watts is your soldering iron? It looks like the mess made
by too low power or too fine a tip. 75 watt seems about right.

I have 15W, 25W, 40W and 80W irons. This atrocity was carried out with
the 15W one which has a pointed tip for some reason.

2. Is the soldering iron temperature controlled? If yes, raise the
temperature and work fast. Mine runs at 750F (400C) for 60/40 lead-tin.
If no, go shopping and buy a decent adjustable temperature controlled
soldering station. Get a fine tip for fine work, and a thicker tip for
the big stuff (so that the tip doesn't go cold as soon as you touch the
work).

You're very kind in attributing this train wreck of a repair to my having
the wrong tools, Jeff. Sadly I don't believe it's the case. This kind of
work requires a steady hand and a keen eye and I possess neither.

I have terrible eyesight, so I got a used Mantis microscope thing.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/fp88o2rqgr87g9d/Mantis2.JPG?raw=1

I steady my hand on a table or something when I solder, especially
super fine pitch surface-mount parts. The Metcal iron really, really
helps.

You're fine, you're just using cruddy tools.

For really small surface mount stuff, I use a big wedge tip and slop
solder on all the pins, shorting everything, then wick it.

A q-tip and acetone cleans things up pretty.


3. Are those 3300uF 25V caps 85C caps or 105C? The photo looks like
85C. If so, they'll last about 6 months inside a hot oscilloscope.

I followed the original spec as far as possible. The originals were
5500uF, 30VDC and 85C. I couldn't get the right capacitance within the
space available so used 33's in parallel. The old 85C's lasted for
decades so your 6 month assessment may be a bit pessimistic.

4. Clean the enamel off the wires with sandpaper before you solder.
Tin the wire ends before attaching to a lug or PCB rivet.

Yes, I did do that. I know what I *should* do but it doesn't help.

Also, if you don't have a hot air SMD workstation, this might be a good
time to get one because they often include an adjustable temperature
controlled soldering iron.

Can you imagine the carnage I'd leave behind attempting SMD stuff?? :-D

I was afraid of 1206 parts when they first arrived. Now a US8 creates
only mild anxiety. 0805's look gigantic.

Desoldering is trickier than soldering surface mount parts. The part
is a goner, but you don't want to damage the board. My production
people are brilliant, so I let them do the hard ones.




--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

lunatic fringe electronics
 
On 10/07/2018 09:08 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/

As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!

Not even close. I hold that honor. Long ago I soldered a 25-pin RS232
cable. The blobs were so big I couldn't get the housings on. I didn't
think any of the pins were shorted, but I wasn't positive. I brought
the cable along when we visited a friend with hardware skills. While we
were talking he casually unsoldered my botched job and resoldered it
nicely. I probably never soldered again :-(

--
Cheers, Bev
When you stop bitching you start dying.
 
On 2018/10/07 7:34 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 21:36:29 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 10/07/2018 12:08 PM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!




Eh. This was the soldering job in a commercially-sold SMPS bench power
supply from an Amazon.com reseller, IIRC, this was how it looked when it
left the mfgr, I took this photo immediately after opening the enclosure
and pulling the PCB (it had stopped working! can you believe it)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/65km6pbq8wzch54/IMG_20171005_104357775.jpg?dl=0

This is pretty bad. The box doesn't work.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0

You bought that NEW? Or was it second/third/fifth hand?

It looks like an idiot tried to modify it. I have trouble imagining a
legitimate company letting something that hacked out for sale.

John :-#(#
 
On 10/08/2018 12:26 AM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 20:06:40 -0000 (UTC), Cursitor Doom
curd@notformail.com> wrote:

On Sun, 07 Oct 2018 10:36:05 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote:

There may be hope for you yet:

Unfortunately not!

1. How many watts is your soldering iron? It looks like the mess made
by too low power or too fine a tip. 75 watt seems about right.

I have 15W, 25W, 40W and 80W irons. This atrocity was carried out with
the 15W one which has a pointed tip for some reason.

2. Is the soldering iron temperature controlled? If yes, raise the
temperature and work fast. Mine runs at 750F (400C) for 60/40 lead-tin.
If no, go shopping and buy a decent adjustable temperature controlled
soldering station. Get a fine tip for fine work, and a thicker tip for
the big stuff (so that the tip doesn't go cold as soon as you touch the
work).

You're very kind in attributing this train wreck of a repair to my having
the wrong tools, Jeff. Sadly I don't believe it's the case. This kind of
work requires a steady hand and a keen eye and I possess neither.

I have terrible eyesight, so I got a used Mantis microscope thing.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/fp88o2rqgr87g9d/Mantis2.JPG?raw=1

I steady my hand on a table or something when I solder, especially
super fine pitch surface-mount parts. The Metcal iron really, really
helps.

You're fine, you're just using cruddy tools.

For really small surface mount stuff, I use a big wedge tip and slop
solder on all the pins, shorting everything, then wick it.

A q-tip and acetone cleans things up pretty.

Denatured alcohol is my go-to PCB cleaning fluid now, acetone is a
better solvent but seems to also aggressively maul a lot of different
plastics and resins as well.

I absent-mindedly poured a bit in a Styrofoam cup one day, the bottom
instantly disintegrates into goop, fun times
 
John Larkin wrote
This is pretty bad. The box doesn't work.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0

Strange, in
https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0&file_subpath=%2FElenco_CS-440_5.JPG
I see a position marked as R5 with a capacitor in it...
Maybe they use the same board for resistor bank and capacitor bank?

It is a good argument (the other pics) to use flexible wires from switches etc to the PCB,
not use PCB mounted / soldered user controls.
After some switch rotations the solder joints will make bad contact.
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 22:53:10 -0700, John Robertson <spam@flippers.com>
wrote:

On 2018/10/07 7:34 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 21:36:29 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 10/07/2018 12:08 PM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!




Eh. This was the soldering job in a commercially-sold SMPS bench power
supply from an Amazon.com reseller, IIRC, this was how it looked when it
left the mfgr, I took this photo immediately after opening the enclosure
and pulling the PCB (it had stopped working! can you believe it)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/65km6pbq8wzch54/IMG_20171005_104357775.jpg?dl=0

This is pretty bad. The box doesn't work.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/cja04ohlswjt1ig/Elenco.zip?dl=0




You bought that NEW? Or was it second/third/fifth hand?

New, from Amazon. It arrived that way. I opened it because it didn't
work right.

It looks like an idiot tried to modify it. I have trouble imagining a
legitimate company letting something that hacked out for sale.

It's Chinese.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

lunatic fringe electronics
 
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 22:33:49 -0700, The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com>
wrote:

On 10/07/2018 09:08 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/

As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!

Not even close. I hold that honor. Long ago I soldered a 25-pin RS232
cable. The blobs were so big I couldn't get the housings on. I didn't
think any of the pins were shorted, but I wasn't positive. I brought
the cable along when we visited a friend with hardware skills. While we
were talking he casually unsoldered my botched job and resoldered it
nicely. I probably never soldered again :-(

My uncle Sheldon had a TV repair shop and used to babysit me, but he
couldn't solder because he always had a beer in one hand and a
cigarette in the other. So I sat in his lap and soldered for him,
starting about the age of 3.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

lunatic fringe electronics
 
Some professional soldering people do that far worse.

The only problem for me in a possible shortcut between the two
connections of the rectyfier bridge, an insulation pipe should be welcomed.
It surely is the mains rectyfier, so a high voltage that could spike.

Cursitor Doom a Êcrit :
Hi all,

I just fixed up this classic Tek 466 scope I've been meaning to get
around to sorting out for the last few years. As you can see, my
soldering is atrocious. I've been soldering this type of circuitry for 50
years and never got any better at it in all that time. When it comes to
soldering and part-placement, I suck donkey dick!
Check it out and enjoy at my expense:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/45109856712/in/dateposted-
public/

and...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/


As you can see, the "world's worst" tag was no exaggeration!
 
On Mon, 08 Oct 2018 02:13:12 +0000, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2018-10-07, Cursitor Doom <curd@notformail.com> wrote:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/44247281105/in/dateposted-
public/

Eek! I'd like to see some insulator other than air between the AC nodes
of that bridge rectifier, it doesn't look like the gap is very much at
all.

You can't see it properly from that angle which I admit looks alarming.
If you could view it in 3D, you'd see there's plenty of clearance between
those leads and they're very rigid, plus this is the low voltage/high
current one and the applied voltage from the mains transformer across
that secondary winding is only around 3.3V.
I admit it's ugly, but it does the job fine and should last much longer
than the failed monolithic bridge it replaces.



--
This message may be freely reproduced without limit or charge only via
the Usenet protocol. Reproduction in whole or part through other
protocols, whether for profit or not, is conditional upon a charge of
GBP10.00 per reproduction. Publication in this manner via non-Usenet
protocols constitutes acceptance of this condition.
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top