How to Tin a Soldering Iron Tip

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 67

  • @uria2001
    @uria2001 Год назад +24

    I remember having so many problems with oxidation until someone showed me how to properly tin an iron. So much difference. I think this and flux changed the issues I was having and made things so much more enjoyable. Appreciate your video. I'm sure many people while appreciate it as well.

    • @rafaellastracom6411
      @rafaellastracom6411 11 дней назад

      I hope so because I am struggling. A bit frustrating to be honest.

  • @derekacevedo489
    @derekacevedo489 9 месяцев назад +8

    I was having issues with melting the solder onto the tip after i dipped it in flux. After about 10 minutes i was able to melt it and get it to stick to the tip and from there on out it was easy. I thought i had a bad soldering iron because it was taking too long so I'm glad that it works perfectly now.
    TLDR: Thank you I thought my iron was broken 👍

  • @ShamsAfroz-vz1zo
    @ShamsAfroz-vz1zo 11 месяцев назад +3

    I had black tips and not holding solders, but cleaning method looks like it will work. Until i get the shiny tips, it means oxidation of solder is cleaned. I used different tips, flat and pointed, but having problem of li ion 3.7v batteries. Now will try this method at 45o temperature, Thanks for yor work.

  • @denniscorey1305
    @denniscorey1305 2 года назад +6

    I really appreciate that video. Please add more.

  • @go_play_with_sticks
    @go_play_with_sticks Год назад +6

    thank you for the tutorial I appreciate it

  • @tokk3n-hj4xg
    @tokk3n-hj4xg 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks so much. This video helped a lot.

  • @jimmykelley883
    @jimmykelley883 Год назад +2

    Great video! Thanks! Would have been nice to see you melt the solder.

  • @austinl3625
    @austinl3625 2 года назад +14

    Do you do this before putting the iron away for storage or do you do this before you start using it each time?

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  2 года назад +9

      Tinning is a common practice, regardless of whether you will be using soldering iron often or not, once the tip is covered in solder, it will not oxidize, even if it's not been used for a long time (unless you use lead-free solder, in that case, it is more prone to oxidation than leaded solder, but still better than leaving tip bare metal).

  • @MrBesmir7
    @MrBesmir7 2 года назад +2

    I just made some smallest cut around and it holds very good ..it very smooth so it don't hold to much

  • @TheOnlyOwnedbyCow
    @TheOnlyOwnedbyCow Год назад +6

    How do you do this with the other soldering tips. My first tip tinned nicely. I tried to do the blade tip one and it just wouldn’t take. Could you show how to do other tips and can you show where the solder needs to cover on each one?
    For the blade tip is it quite literally just the blade edge of the tip? With the pen shaped one, it covers about 1/4 inch of the tip.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  Год назад +1

      If the iron tip is too oxidized you might want to clean it with fine-grit sandpaper, after that, just keep repeating the process in the video, dip in the flux, apply solder, and clean inside the metal sponge, It should eventually start sticking.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  Год назад +1

      And yes, you don't have to tin the whole tip, just the part that will be touching the solder.

  • @TaizyaSimwanza
    @TaizyaSimwanza Месяц назад

    Helpful video, thanks! Tried it out using rosin flux (as that's what I had) but it seems the tip is just getting more oxidized when I dip it into the rosin. Don't know what I'm doing, or where I'm going wrong. What's worse is that the flux from the solder wire is doing the same thing too, keeping the solder from holding on to the tip.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  Месяц назад

      The layer of oxidation could be too great, can try sanding the soldering iron tip with a fine-grit sandpaper, until the shiny look, then repeat the process.

    • @TaizyaSimwanza
      @TaizyaSimwanza Месяц назад

      ​Thank you. I've actually tried that. I used a steel wire mesh (steel wool) making sure the tip got really shiny. But when I would turn my iron on and it would start heating up, the shiny tip instantly would change colour (color) and seem to have another layer of oxide. ​

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  Месяц назад +1

      Exactly, that's why you need those 3 components to make it work. Dip the soldering iron tip in the flux, melt the solder, clean the excess solder with the steel wool sponge. Keep repeating until you notice a small parts of solder starting to stick, then slowly expand that patch until the whole tip is covered.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  Месяц назад +1

      ​@TaizyaSimwanza And of course the damp cloth, as shown in the video.

  • @rx7fd329
    @rx7fd329 2 года назад +3

    thank you will try it later

  • @modelrailfan37
    @modelrailfan37 3 месяца назад

    This really helps! Thanks!!

  • @poncianoespiritu6527
    @poncianoespiritu6527 2 года назад +2

    Pwede ba gawin thinning ng soldering tip na walang flux? Salamat
    Thanks for the video.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  2 года назад +2

      You are asking if the soldering iron can be tinned without flux? I haven't tried it personally, but you should be able to do it, just make sure to clean the tip with the metal sponge and damp cloth often while applying the solder, it should be able to stick regardless.

    • @poncianoespiritu6527
      @poncianoespiritu6527 2 года назад

      @@diy7official Thank you. I tried it. It worked well.
      More power. Goodluck

    • @jundiepagala8925
      @jundiepagala8925 2 года назад

      Naks kala ko nasira na yung akin

  • @undeadassassin0438
    @undeadassassin0438 9 месяцев назад +1

    what temperature should you put the soldering iron on to start tinning? (i’m a beginner)

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  9 месяцев назад +1

      Between 300°C and 400°C the solder should melt ok, but try different values.

  • @Colt3854
    @Colt3854 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for the advice

  • @TaizyaSimwanza
    @TaizyaSimwanza Месяц назад

    Helpful video, thanks! Tried it out using rosin flux (as that's what I had) but it seems the tip is just getting more oxidized when I dip it into the rosin. Don't know what I'm doing, or where I'm going wrong.

  • @narutoytsastrellas5423
    @narutoytsastrellas5423 2 года назад +3

    What clothe do you use

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  2 года назад

      I used a regular kitchen rag, but any cloth would do, as long as it's dampened. But I would avoid microfiber towels as they melt easily.

  • @millennium677
    @millennium677 9 месяцев назад

    yup never under estimate the importance of flux, all though most solder has flux in it always have extra on hand

  • @noisefekt
    @noisefekt 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is not working for me. Tried multiple times to put flux on the tip and then some tin, tried even one with lead in it but no. Tin just doesn't hold on the tip only drops off. How can I fix this??? Need to use my soldering iron ASAP.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  6 месяцев назад +1

      If the solder tip looks burnt, then this method alone is not as effective, you can try using a fine grit sandpaper (1000 grit, or above) to clean the burnt part, then repeat the process.

    • @remy1993
      @remy1993 2 месяца назад

      Yup use smoother sandpaper and cordless drill. Then make sure don't heat temperature 400° above

    • @noisefekt
      @noisefekt 2 месяца назад

      ​ @remy1993 I end up ordering a few new tips and tip tinner. I used 350-360°C. Worked perfectly. Now I use the tip tinner every time I'm soldering something.

    • @ogprettyDEMOATNA
      @ogprettyDEMOATNA 27 дней назад

      Tip tinner is actually destructive. It's not actually for tinning, ironically it's actually for what you needed in the first place - resurfacing a badly oxidized tip.

    • @noisefekt
      @noisefekt 27 дней назад

      @@ogprettyDEMOATNA Everything you said is incorrect.

  • @jase4270
    @jase4270 Год назад +2

    I just used citric acid and it worked almost instantly no need to buy tinning flux.

  • @toybuns775
    @toybuns775 6 месяцев назад +1

    Keep air off your tip... thats all there is to know. Cover it with solder every few minutes of soldering and before turning it off. The solder will act as a barrier and wont let O2 oxidize it. Last forever and transfer heat the way it was made to do

  • @0r1xx_
    @0r1xx_ 4 месяца назад

    Hello, how do I fix my dell latitude 5400 not going to sleep when lid is closed. When my power option in windows "Choose what closing the lid will do" is set to sleep please... Please help

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  4 месяца назад +1

      Sleep mode related issues can be caused due to outdated BIOS, chipset, or video drivers, incorrect power settings in Windows, old or corrupt hiberfil.sys file, third-party software or applications, corrupt operating system files, and so on.

  • @renzabarracoso2520
    @renzabarracoso2520 Год назад

    can i do this without the damp cloth?

  • @Otacon3603
    @Otacon3603 4 месяца назад +1

    That shit don't work... Did to a bran new one and it just rolls off and i tryed a lot of times then i just gave up.

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  4 месяца назад

      Using the right flux is important, without the flux it would be very hard to get the solder to stick. Also, if you're using lead-free solder, it might require additional time to get it to stick.

  • @aquickfoo4256
    @aquickfoo4256 11 месяцев назад

    Can i use any flux or a special kind of tinning product?

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  11 месяцев назад

      Any soldering flux should work.

    • @aquickfoo4256
      @aquickfoo4256 11 месяцев назад

      @@diy7official thank you

  • @joeymalin
    @joeymalin Месяц назад

    First video that said WHY you tin the tip…

  • @silkroad1201
    @silkroad1201 Год назад +1

    I've never done this. All my tips turned black and they work just fine
    (I'm kidding. This is good to know)

  • @AdamTheBot
    @AdamTheBot Год назад

    Will yellow/ rosin flux work ?

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  Год назад

      Rosin flux should work ok, it does the same thing as any other soldering flux.

  • @lykagociridze643
    @lykagociridze643 2 года назад

    Why is my flux yellow is that even flux?

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  2 года назад +1

      There are various types of flux paste, yours is probably "Rosin Flux".

  • @aninternationalbadinfluenc9271
    @aninternationalbadinfluenc9271 2 года назад +1

    Kwl

  • @TouchthisWorld
    @TouchthisWorld 2 года назад +22

    Bad habbit. Don’t dip. Soldering iron in flux

    • @diy7official
      @diy7official  2 года назад +12

      Can't confirm nor deny that. Regardless, this video is about tinning the oxidized soldering iron tip, not something that would be done frequently.

    • @poncianoespiritu6527
      @poncianoespiritu6527 2 года назад +16

      What then is the proper way to use flux. Kindly educate us. Thank you

    • @poncianoespiritu6527
      @poncianoespiritu6527 2 года назад +4

      Dipping is the common practice I supposed.

    • @johngreen5837
      @johngreen5837 Год назад +8

      It's how you do it. Please tell us how to do it your way

    • @knkaitlog
      @knkaitlog 5 месяцев назад +9

      10 fu*cking months are youre not telling us the correct you dofus