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Hal Rosser January 18th 05 02:35 AM

plain old 60-40...worked well for me
Hal Rosser

If you say so. That wasn't the question.


**************
Oh contraire Pierre - the question was ...."Favorites ?" (look at the
Original post)
That was mine - because it works for me.. sheesh !
*******************

eutectic (if my memory serves) just means it's either solid or liquid
--and won't just 'soften' -- like ice and water

Yup--and that's important for good results.

*****
I thought so
******



JeffM January 18th 05 09:04 PM

plain old 60-40...worked well for me
Hal Rosser


If you say so. That wasn't the question.
JeffM


Oh contraire Pierre - the question was ...."Favorites ?"
(look at the Original post)
That was mine - because it works for me.. sheesh !
Hal Rosser


Next time, just before you hit the Post button,
you might want to look at the title of the thread.
If he just meant *solder*,
he wouldn't have included *low-temp* in the Subject line.


Hal Rosser January 19th 05 01:23 AM


Next time, just before you hit the Post button,
you might want to look at the title of the thread.
If he just meant *solder*,
he wouldn't have included *low-temp* in the Subject line.

so -
what's your "favorite" solder, dude?



DaveB January 19th 05 01:42 AM

On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 20:23:24 -0500, "Hal Rosser"
wrote:


Next time, just before you hit the Post button,
you might want to look at the title of the thread.
If he just meant *solder*,
he wouldn't have included *low-temp* in the Subject line.

so -
what's your "favorite" solder, dude?


The silver stuff

Regards



Daveb

NSM January 19th 05 04:07 AM


"Hal Rosser" wrote in message
...
|
| Next time, just before you hit the Post button,
| you might want to look at the title of the thread.
| If he just meant *solder*,
| he wouldn't have included *low-temp* in the Subject line.
|
| so -
| what's your "favorite" solder, dude?

Best of British: "Multicore Solders Ltd, Kelsey House, Wood Lane End, Hemel
Hempstead"

N



RST Engineering January 19th 05 07:21 AM

Back when I was doing microwave stripline-on-sapphire, the solder of choice
was a mixture of tin and indium (and perhaps a bit of bismuth) that we
called tindium. It melted well below the boiling point of water. (No, it
wasn't Wood's metal.)

Jim



Roby January 19th 05 03:20 PM

wrote:

I've had good luck with the kester 62/36/2% silver stuff, which is
eutectic.

Many many years ago, I had some luck with a indium-bismuth solder paste
in syringes from Indium Corp. Haven't fiddled with any of their stuff
since then.

Radio Shack sells a bag of little peices of tape-form stuff. Never got
it to work well.

Favorites?


Many many many years ago, one of my kid buddies built a Heathkit DX-35
transmitter. He couldn't get it to work, sold it to me.

The solder joints were absolutely TERRIBLE. Sooo, I plugged in my Weller
gun and remelted one. A puff of acrid smoke erupted. He had used "Liquid
Solder". Room temperature.

The good news: he had left all the component leads full-length, so I just
clipped everything out, replaced the toob sockets and tiepoints and
reinstalled the parts with real solder. It worked, I sold it.

Roby

JeffM January 19th 05 07:25 PM

tindium. It melted well below the boiling point of water.
(No, it wasn't Wood's metal.)
Jim (RST Engineering)


I haven't seen it yet, but I've heard stories about guys
who make spoons of such stuff.
When the victim withdraws the stump from his coffee,
you're supposed to say,
"Man. That's some STRONG coffee".


NSM January 19th 05 07:27 PM


"Roby" wrote in message
...

....
| The solder joints were absolutely TERRIBLE. Sooo, I plugged in my Weller
| gun and remelted one. A puff of acrid smoke erupted. He had used "Liquid
| Solder". Room temperature.
....

Hey, it said 'Solder'! But that's happened oh so many times.

N




JeffM January 19th 05 07:40 PM

I have used hi-temp stuff for fixtures that go in burn-in ovens.
I almost always use readily-available 63/37.

Like you, I don't use low-temp solder.
Unlike you, I came to this thread to learn,
not to post OT comments.



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