Truth be told I am in awe at all of you who are fluent in all things electronic. I would love to develop my knowledge in this area so that I have a better understanding of what I'm working with and how it works.For now......
Truth be told I am in awe at all of you who are fluent in all things electronic. I would love to develop my knowledge in this area so that I have a better understanding of what I'm working with and how it works.For now......
Be careful it's a slippery slope, on one of the electronic forums I visit one of the popular threads is the TEA thread, Test Equipment Anonymous(TEA) group therapy.I'm sure it won't surprise you to know that this will be the most advance piece of electronics related gear I own
For now......
Fortunately I have a mild case, some have it pretty bad.
That's the same way I feel, and what got me started playing around with electronics again a few years ago. Get a few project kits from banggood/ali to practice with, and end up with something cool like the oscope one. I still don't really "know" what I'm doing, but I know a lot more than when I startedTruth be told I am in awe at all of you who are fluent in all things electronic. I would love to develop my knowledge in this area so that I have a better understanding of what I'm working with and how it works.
I sold a lot more than I still have, and trust me I have plenty of POJ analog randomizers ;-)Is that all yours? Holy CRAP! Some really cool stuff there. Especially that POJ Analog Randomizer in the bottom right corner. I have several of those. Incredibly useful.
Begs the question: What do you do with all that?
you win.Be careful it's a slippery slope, on one of the electronic forums I visit one of the popular threads is the TEA thread, Test Equipment Anonymous(TEA) group therapy.
Common diagnosis is for GAS Gear Acquisition Syndrome.
Fortunately I have a mild case, some have it pretty bad.
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What is your favorite source for replacement tips on the Metcal? I have one (SP200) I acquired at an auction ages ago but its missing the tip. Was always meaning to get one but my Hakko was my standby so never got around to it.I'm spoiled I have a couple of Metcal however I would not recommend them for your use because they are not very portable and are overkill for your purpose. BTW they heat up in 3-4 seconds!
I have not used Hako but from what I have read a lot of people like them.
I'm closer to the back of the pack, check out these contenders from the TEA group.
I'm retired now but spent most of my career designing electronics from the 70's on.
I have never used the SP200 it's smaller and lower frequency than the MX-500's I use.What is your favorite source for replacement tips on the Metcal? I have one (SP200) I acquired at an auction ages ago but its missing the tip. Was always meaning to get one but my Hakko was my standby so never got around to it.
I agree. That being said I think there are some parallels to machine tools WRT quality and serviceability of some of this older equipment compared to the new equipment. The ability to source some of this kit (especially when it needs repair) for pennies on the dollar also has some appeal. Almost everything in my picture was purchased as for repair or not working. Good quality old DMM's actually drift less than brand new versions of the same with the same references because they have had years to stabilize, just like a seasoned engine block is more stable than a brand new one. I just keep what I continue to use and sell off what I don't to keep the stack in check. I have found some people go on an on about how great a particular piece of equipment is and then I get one, fix it and find it's okay but lacking compared to some other similar piece of equipment, so it gets sold. When I can't reach it from my chair, the stack is too large and needs to be purged.I think that's a bit hilarious to be honest. That's a bit like one guy owning 23 mills and 17 lathes with no tooling.
Scopes on bang sticks, yesEveryone needs a scope right
Scopes on bang sticks, yes
I’m going to have to go back and re-read this thread. The Weller gun is my go-to, the blue point is when I need more heat.
I’m commonly soldering 14-20 gauge wires, if it’s bigger than than I’ll usually just use a butane torch.
I haven’t had any luck with the pencil style torches, for what I do, they don’t seem to have enough heat
I’m pretty sure I’m using lead solder, rosin core. I don’t know anything about lead free solder, hadn’t even heard of it until this thread
Some mornings a bottle of scope comes in handy as well.......Scopes on bang sticks, yes
Yep, horses for courses. After all this talk I tallied up my collection and I have 8 including a couple of those big Weller guns, a variety of others good for soldering tanks on rads down to things for fine work on PC boards. I even have one of those WTCP stations like below that I picked up for peanuts about 30 years ago. Still going on strong thanks to the last (now obsolete) TC201T iron that Weller had in stock and gifted me when I asked for a warranty replacement for a defective out of the box thermostatic switch. Just used it to assemble the interface boards for my DROs.The pencil style units are for soldering transistors, resistors and integrated circuits. Your big gun generates too much heat too fast and would damage these delicate components.
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