Is Expensive Low Melt Solder Worth The Cost? Let's Find Out... $7 GuageMaster vs. $40 ChipQuik!

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024

Комментарии • 111

  • @ellensburgamplifier
    @ellensburgamplifier 2 года назад +9

    Another good one Phil! I am seeing a lot of comments on why people would NOT use LMS. One of the largest benefits of using LMS in on components or ICs that are sensitive to heat where it is not a good idea to hit it with hot air.

    • @highlight6384
      @highlight6384 2 года назад

      100% agree. It is the whole point for me.

  • @techadmirer6475
    @techadmirer6475 Год назад +1

    i am fairly new to low melt solder in fact i havn't even gotten any yet hints why i watched the vid. I think the main reason some people are willing to pay top dollar for low melt solder is because i imagine the main reason for using low melt solder in the first place it because their equipment for one reason or another can't melt all the solder. in these situations it might be best to buy the best low melt solder to ensure it stands the best chance at allowing the user to fully melt the solder they couldn't twithought the low melt. if they buy the lower quality stuff their's a chance it won't be able to do the job they bought it for.

  • @electronicrescue
    @electronicrescue 2 года назад +10

    I use bismuth for de-soldering stuff. I paid around 6 pounds for 50 grams which is claimed to be 99.9% pure (from aliexpress). The metal came shaped as a rock so I used a hammer to crush it into smaller pieces, or just use the soldering iron as it will melt almost instantly. And it takes a long time until the solder hardens

    • @baz5853
      @baz5853 2 года назад +3

      +1 for the bismuth, I have a de-solder iron setup and a mixture of bismuth and solder (that I re use) this is my go to when working on multi layer boards that tend to suck the heat out of the iron.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +4

      Thanks mate I'll have to look at getting some in to try out :)

    • @Leif_YT
      @Leif_YT 2 года назад +1

      I'm using the Mechanic XW5 solder wire with 50% bismuth. A little more expensive, but at about 12€ for 40g it's still cheap compared to chipquick.

    • @M.E63
      @M.E63 Год назад

      @@Leif_YT as far as I know it’s fake, tried it and many other reviews suggest it melts at over 200c

    • @limebulls
      @limebulls Год назад

      @@TheCod3rany updates?

  • @polonavarro6177
    @polonavarro6177 2 года назад +2

    I been using it like 6 years ago. For removing connectors and parts with plástic like fpc connectors. Amazing. Alittle expensive but if you have a repair shop its a must have. I use the fast chip

  • @rickclink9196
    @rickclink9196 Год назад +2

    I use chip quik. I had some tight transistors to remove. The soldering iron and vacuum sucked up the vias. I went to the most delicate method of removing through hole components I know of. That’s the iron and chip-quik. It transfers a lot of heat to the component and keeps it wet so it can be removed. This manufacturer used a via that was way too tight.

  • @Pixx_-
    @Pixx_- 2 года назад +15

    Not using low melt solder just seems like you're not using a tool at your disposal. The stuff is amazing for a ton of different things. If I'm laying bricks and I have the option to use pre-mixed vs regular cement mix I'll use the stuff that makes my job easier. Even if it only saves you a little time it's worth it.
    I don't think you need to prove anything to anyone about your skill at micro soldering. You're obviously very good at what you do.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +6

      I absolutely agree. My only objection is that it does take away some of the practical skill, and if you rely on low melt every day it would take the experience away that comes from doing jobs without it, and I like that challenge to be honest. Another problem I have is I'm cheap, I don't like spending money if I don't have to lol

    • @Pixx_-
      @Pixx_- 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r You can make one piece of LM last for a long time. You really only need to use a tiny bead to lower the melting point a noticeable amount. What you have should last you a few months.

    • @microgamingrepairs1981
      @microgamingrepairs1981 2 года назад

      @@Pixx_- exactly. I buy 2 tubes of the sra low melt solder sticks. Lasts me about a year. For $60 and as part of business write offs, it saves me time for sure, well worth the money to speed the process up a bit. One repair job and both tubes are more than paid for usually.

    • @Ghost572
      @Ghost572 2 года назад

      Yeah I was thinking the same thing haha, why risk breaking or damaging other components through heat

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid 2 года назад +1

    I've used gaugemaster for soldering together model railway rail ends and its pretty good stuff and bridges well.

  • @thebenchmonkey4117
    @thebenchmonkey4117 2 года назад +2

    Good comparison. Most techs don't know about "roses metal". It is used for jewelry making and is a low melt solder that comes in blobs not rods. It might be be even cheaper but not sure of the metallurgy recipe. 24.97 for 453grams on e-bay.

  • @TheBeefoxo
    @TheBeefoxo Год назад

    Informative, non biased, brilliantly done by a fellow brummie hats off to you sir ❤

  • @kerwalker4246
    @kerwalker4246 2 года назад +1

    Roses Metal is my own choice and buy it by the half kilo as I also supply at £10 for 50 grams. Way cheaper than the branded type with more or less the same results. They all contain more or less the same base metals, Bismuth, tin and lead just in varying percentages. Roses Metal comes in pellet form and works down at 95C and I can't fault it for its price. I place the pellet on a small piece of fire resistant glass and just dip the iron in and use that way.

  • @rongray8934
    @rongray8934 10 месяцев назад

    I just checked this gauge master. $34 to ship from UK. lol Cool video to see the difference

  • @edwarcuevas4334
    @edwarcuevas4334 2 года назад +1

    Very informative vid Phil, amazing comparison, love it. Keep it up mate.

  • @jwilko7998
    @jwilko7998 2 года назад +1

    Very good, enjoyed, the results are not surprising but there's the proof.
    Also a reduction in temperature is great for safe guarding against any damage too.

  • @Channel-xb4xt
    @Channel-xb4xt 9 месяцев назад

    If the melting point is lowered by the addition of solder, I wonder how much room each alloy gives you for adding more before it starts melting higher. Especially on those pins with such little solder compared to the amount of low melt used, I imagine each alloy has potential to be reused a few times. I will now be saving all my used chip quik and shaping it into little blocks like that.

  • @Enjoymentboy
    @Enjoymentboy 2 года назад

    I bought a 2lb spool of SUPER cheap chinese 60/40 flux cored solder a few years back for something like $5 shipped. I didn't expect much but it turned out to work amazingly well and it does a great job to remove lead free solder. I've compared it against a roll of Kester 60/40 flux cored and I find the cheap stuff is more flexible allowing the joints to move a little. Not good for anywhere I want strength (like the edge pins on USB connectors) but for that I like to use 63/37. But anytime I have a joint that seems to take more heat than I'm happy with I'll use this stuff and without fail the OEM joint melts at a significantly lower temp than without.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      Yeah to be honest I'm the same, I use some cheap ebay special for removals usually, so this low melt will likely last me forever lol

  • @microgamingrepairs1981
    @microgamingrepairs1981 2 года назад

    Low melt solder is something I use regularly for switch USB ports and hdmi ports on all consoles. It allowed me to remove an hdmi port in about 10-30 seconds. In my mind, the less time you need to blast a board / area with heat the better.
    The only low melt solder I've really used is a brand called SRA. works very well

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад

      The second one he tries is the SRA, it’s right on the package…

    • @microgamingrepairs1981
      @microgamingrepairs1981 2 года назад +1

      @@tookitogo I commented before it came up. But was also just saying.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад

      @@microgamingrepairs1981 Fair enough. :)

  • @revengenerd1
    @revengenerd1 2 года назад

    On the "made in same factory" I had a relative that worked in a fish factory, they did a few thousand salmon packs for M+S which at the time was about £9.50, then changed labels to Tesco Value which was about £1.50, it was the same thing.
    Same for many things, heard someone say in a frozen pizza factory the only difference was the budget pizzas used cheese sauce not grated cheese and a cheaper tomato. the bases and herbs etc were the same.

  • @Jamirie
    @Jamirie 2 года назад

    Thank's for the brilliant review mate! 👍🏼

  • @liddy85
    @liddy85 2 года назад +2

    Think I'd give it a miss.
    I think if you add in the time to mix in the low melt, you could have already removed it normally.
    It would have been interesting if you had used the conventional method time as a benchmark.

    • @milankvak1812
      @milankvak1812 Год назад

      I think you miss the point. It is about how long you heat up the board because sometimes there can be delicate components around or you don't want to stress too much board/pads.

  • @JoeyDoesTech
    @JoeyDoesTech 2 года назад

    Thanks for the comparison bud! Always been something I've wondered 👍👍

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      Cheers mate, yeah this is the "proper" low melt haha. I'll pop a stick in the mail for you ;)

  • @netmaster78
    @netmaster78 Год назад

    Is there like an overview that shows me which product you´re using when? Can´t figure that out by voice as a non-native.

  • @BasicComputerRepair
    @BasicComputerRepair Год назад

    The lms I buy is dirt cheap and works great!

  • @grahamhall2662
    @grahamhall2662 8 месяцев назад

    Good one I learned a lot there thank you.

  • @SPEXWISE
    @SPEXWISE 2 года назад +1

    If you are performing repair after repair and have a huge queue then I can definitely see why you'd use it. If it's the quickest and easiest method it's probably the most lucrative. If I was repairing one port on an xbox or something then I'd just take my time and wouldn't bother with the extra cost of low melt.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +2

      Yeah maybe, I just don't see the point in using it personally because it doesn't take more than a minute longer to not use it. I guess if you're doing 20 ports a day you're saving yourself a couple of hours a week though

    • @SPEXWISE
      @SPEXWISE 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r When time is money it makes sense. I agree with your conclusion though, the ingot for £5 is a no brainer if you need low melt.

  • @oBsRVr666
    @oBsRVr666 Год назад

    Wish you had put some links to the actual products used here, especially the block of LMS that you said you would keep a around ...

  • @phoenixconsoles4169
    @phoenixconsoles4169 2 года назад

    Haha I use the 20g ingot block and really love how it moves.

  • @_cherup
    @_cherup 2 года назад +1

    Great video and very useful information! Have seen that none of these products I can buy easily in Germany - or with very high shipping costs. Will go with the "Guagemaster GM01". Also cannot find anything comparable on Ali

    • @KILLorBE
      @KILLorBE 2 года назад +1

      Maybe look for Bismuth (Wismut) or Roses metal as mentioned by others, Chip quik is available at amazon and the stuff sold at rexin-loettechnik may work.

  • @fixitlads
    @fixitlads 2 года назад

    Use your soldering iron on the legs, no low melt but I use the regular 183melt wire spool I have on the legs beforehand but not necessary.... iron on the legs + hot air. You'll be surprised

  • @baistosh
    @baistosh 2 года назад

    thanks for the video,,hope more like this

  • @baistosh
    @baistosh 2 года назад

    as a beginner ,and started soldering as a hobby..cause of pandemic..i like the cheapest one..it does the job,it cheap as shit and looks cool too. maybe ill vote for expensive one but for a beginner like myself..the 4th one is hands down

  • @TravisStamper
    @TravisStamper 2 года назад

    Thanks Phil

  • @Thomas_Aslaksen
    @Thomas_Aslaksen 2 года назад +1

    It would be real cool to see how it preforms while you wick the pads. I think that Low melt is best for wicking. But can you please do a vid about that? Great vid BTW

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      I certainly can mate yeah :)

  • @mohandmohand2047
    @mohandmohand2047 Год назад

    Your stuff make fix so nice... Legand phill boss🎉🎉🎉

  • @revengenerd1
    @revengenerd1 2 года назад

    I am a beginner at soldering, now I know about Kingbo flux I ordered some, I stupidly ordered La Co flux as it was quite cheap and it was a pain to clean even with IPA and even then it didn't clean proper and ended up with green like mould on the connectors I did. The funny thing being is I knew about 99% IPA and spent about £80 on a proper solder iron and air gun, and £200 on a desolder station and I knew about mixing new flux to desolder better but I never understood why I was struggling so much! The flux I used was nasty, like a earwax/snot hybrid.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      Ah I've been there mate, you're not alone. Yeah La Co is a plumbers flux, but that was the first flux I bought too and it really was horrible, it ruined a few of my practice boards lol

    • @GinandTronics
      @GinandTronics 2 года назад

      I used Fry's Plummers flux when I first started as a novice, it actually worked fine, but yes apparently it corrodes the boards over time. (rookie mistake I guess)
      I have kimbo, it's works well, but I don't tend to use it much. (bit smokey and because I don't use it that much, it goes hard in the syringe) I have to heat it up.
      I use a quikchip flux daily, more expensive but tbh it seems to last forever, this might be because I'm more trusting of it, so I use less, honestly no idea, but I'll definitely buy it again.

  • @thepubliceye
    @thepubliceye Год назад

    I have never seen anyone use low-melt solder and hot air, I think it's for low temperature IC and with a solder iron as the pins stay molten for a long time.

  • @dadwillfixit1907
    @dadwillfixit1907 2 года назад

    Great video mate

  • @agenericaccount3935
    @agenericaccount3935 2 года назад

    Valid to keep the skills sharp. Of course, one could argue that learning to work with low melt is just another skill in the arsenal. Just in case you have a lazy day.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      Haha that is very true

  • @baghdadiabdellatif1581
    @baghdadiabdellatif1581 2 года назад

    Thank you.
    very helpful

  • @SURGE101
    @SURGE101 2 года назад

    Great comparison video Phil 👍really enjoyed watching. Shows price isn’t everything

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      Cheers mate, been asked about this so many times I lost count lol

  • @phester28
    @phester28 2 года назад

    how would it compare to mixing in tin lead 60/40 or standard lead solder :)

  • @manyitoagg3255
    @manyitoagg3255 2 года назад

    Hello, can you give me a hint or help?
    I have a ps4 pro, with AAA games squares start to appear on the screen.
    I reballed the GPU, changed the rams, changed the SIE, and it's still the same. Any clue what it could be? Could it be power issues?

  • @hamoudialnuaim9682
    @hamoudialnuaim9682 Год назад

    where can I get Gaugemaster GM01 Low Melt Solder 70 Degrees in USA PLZ HELP

  • @OniKuno181
    @OniKuno181 2 года назад

    Nice educational video!

  • @QsTechService1
    @QsTechService1 2 года назад

    I have it too but never used it The low melt sodder

  • @gbdjg3210
    @gbdjg3210 2 года назад

    Very cool video.👍

  • @GinandTronics
    @GinandTronics 2 года назад

    How long does a 480c port remove take, without low melt?
    I purchased the gauge master on your recommendation. I haven't used it yet,
    tbh I've never used low melt, and the only experience I've had with it wasn't a good one, I was drying a board after a ultra sonic, and when I was drying, the previous repair attempt must have used low melt, so I managed to heat it up by mistake and smear it over the board 🙈

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      Not too long actually, probably about 90 seconds. I'll have to do another video comparing that, leaded solder and low melt solder lol

  • @phynx-victumterra652
    @phynx-victumterra652 2 года назад

    Great video good sir

  • @pontinrob
    @pontinrob 2 года назад

    I have a new drinking game watch this video and do a shot everytime you say molton 😂

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      Haha you might get a little drunk 🥴 🤣

  • @Old_Man_Pete
    @Old_Man_Pete 2 года назад +1

    Cheap eBay special is not that cheap, it works out at around £31.50 for 4.5ft ( can't remember the exact price you said and can't be bothered to rewind the video lmfoa )
    Nice educational video btw.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      Yeah when you look at it like that it definitely isn't cheap. It's just that given the price per stick people would deem it the best buy on ebay (most likely) because most people only need it once

    • @Old_Man_Pete
      @Old_Man_Pete 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r if you look at it that way you have a very good point.

  • @gmorb666
    @gmorb666 2 года назад

    Is it profitable only fixing consoles? Id assume no client would want to pay much to fix something they can buy used cheap.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      It can be, it depends how much you charge. My average repair comes in at around £60 which is still viable even for PS3 backwards compatible and original xbox one consoles, though not for 360s

  • @RobBob555
    @RobBob555 2 года назад

    i would like to know WHY you would use this over regular rosin core lead / tin solder m8 ?

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      It's for component removal, you wouldn't want to use it for normal soldering because it's too brittle. It just has a much lower melting temperature so it can make it easier and quicker to remove things like ports and chips

    • @RobBob555
      @RobBob555 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r fair enough, but i just add regular solder to the older solder and use my Duratool desoldering station. or sucker if its a small job.
      I cant believe how expensive that low melt stuff was. 🙄 crazy price..
      love the vids and streams BTW 👍

  • @supercool3544
    @supercool3544 2 года назад

    I agree on using low melt solder, as another tool in your bag of tools. Even if you remove components with "practical skill" youre undoubtably going to take longer, introducing more heat into the board that you now know is unnecessary since low melt exists. One may even argue that the practical skill is in your tools, and knowledge of them. It's not like the technique youre using is much different, just faster. Also, from experience, I can tell you that a single stick of "preferred low melt" lasts a long time once you get used to using it. So, its not that expensive when you learn how much you need, as well as using it in caveat removals. hell, what you bought there can last years when used appropriately. 99% of the time your normal methods/tools will remain unchanged. Low melt really is only really helpful in SOME difficult component removals, but in those instances it can save you a world of pain.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      I agree, but people tend to start relying on it and forget completely how to use traditional methods, which is when they can mess up. If I do end up using it (I probably will just because I have it here) I'll likely use it on a rare occasion where I need to protect an area from heat

    • @supercool3544
      @supercool3544 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r Thats all i use it for, too really. i mostly use regular solder mixed with unleaded in most cases.

  • @cfq.tufanuf7601
    @cfq.tufanuf7601 2 года назад

    Phil, were going to have to "av it out" if you're saying Saintsbury's beans taste like Heinz's beans. ;))

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      Haha never tried Sainsburys, I'm not posh enough for that, but Aldi beans do 🤣🤣🤣

  • @sameeramzan7463
    @sameeramzan7463 2 года назад

    Great vid

  • @DavideNastri
    @DavideNastri Год назад

    Aaand...
    Subscribed!

  • @no1baggiefan
    @no1baggiefan 2 года назад

    I'd definitely prefer saving 25 quid than 20 seconds lol, the ingot looks awkward but its a no brainer, if it keeps your costs down then its a winner.

  • @stevedebeukelaer1424
    @stevedebeukelaer1424 2 года назад

    Hi it is piety you can not test the one that northridgefix sells. He swear it is magic. 😉

  • @loosemouthcowboy4790
    @loosemouthcowboy4790 2 года назад +2

    New sub. Awesome channel.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +3

      Thanks man, much appreciated

  • @mm0077
    @mm0077 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant and thank you so much for sharing. I have always used the cheap ones on ebay about £3. They work very well. Be careful though some of the ebay ones in my experience can damage soldering tips and I do not know the reasons but it happened. May be of cheap alloy they used in it. I tend to stick to the ones that I know works.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +1

      Interesting, I don't think I've seen the £3 ones, kinda wish I did now lol

    • @mm0077
      @mm0077 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r I think the amazon one you tested is much better than the one I have been using. The cheap one I used is just sold as low melt solder(SN62 179°C 0.7mm) . I used it when desoldering manually most of the time like example on biois chips. Most of the time I do not use and I just used leaded solder for ports. Next time I will buy the amazon one as only slightly more expensive by £1.75

  • @JohnGotts
    @JohnGotts 2 года назад +1

    *Gauge

  • @Finditfixitphilipit
    @Finditfixitphilipit 2 года назад

    I get them off alot quicker with solder paste

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      It makes a bit of mess sometimes though with paste, at least for me anyway

  • @hulkuk7590
    @hulkuk7590 2 года назад

    Great video, i've never used low melt solder before and would consider the budget version you tried,
    What would have been good to see in the comparison if you included your normal solder for time comparison and cleaning the pads in prep like you was going to install a new port.

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад +4

      Yeah I was thinking of doing both those things to be honest. I could always make another video though :)

    • @driverdis3488
      @driverdis3488 2 года назад

      @@TheCod3r I have heard that low melt solder can be a pain to wick away and remove to prep the surface for a new port, and a real pain to remove from fine pitch chips. Any chance you could demonstrate that in a later video?

  • @creativ5985
    @creativ5985 2 года назад

    Hi mate again I have a request if you can take a look at my video and give me a hint about this south bridge, thank you in advance

  • @xjordzx94s47
    @xjordzx94s47 2 года назад

    Can u fix phone for ur next video

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      I don't really work on phones these days to be honest

  • @REMEDY-REPAIRS
    @REMEDY-REPAIRS 2 года назад

    Let Go 🤓💯

  • @wolfymaceastern6072
    @wolfymaceastern6072 2 года назад

    Can you suck the solder off and see how many times you can reuse it

    • @TheCod3r
      @TheCod3r  2 года назад

      You could but it would get sucked into the wick or solder sucker and probably be unusable

  • @gizmo1252000
    @gizmo1252000 2 года назад

    15 squids each ,bargain m8 :)