Soldering station technology & the lie of "SOLDERING PATRIOTISM"

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 597

  • @djole94hns
    @djole94hns 5 лет назад +330

    "Fahrenheit has more steps within the useful temperature range"
    We have this brand new invention here called a decimal point

    • @zoomerenhd
      @zoomerenhd 4 года назад +7

      Was just about to make that exact same comment XD.

    • @Rudabaugh
      @Rudabaugh 4 года назад +11

      @Marcin Berman What are you talking about? "There is a fixed amount of digits" in between two chosen numbers? (E.g 1 & 2) Uhhh, no. There isn't. There is literally an infinite amount of numbers between 1&2. (or any other numbers)

    • @Thinwhiteduke1185
      @Thinwhiteduke1185 4 года назад +15

      @@Rudabaugh ...He means there's a fixed amount of digits in the display and the software that's controlling the temperature.

    • @benjaminlavigne2272
      @benjaminlavigne2272 4 года назад +2

      @@Thinwhiteduke1185 but i'm guessing Dave did not understand Marcin's comment because of how easy it is to add more digits to the screen.

    • @zuda8919
      @zuda8919 4 года назад +2

      lol congratulations, being so hung up about our systems of measurement. Must be really fulfilling

  • @derekbrewer9681
    @derekbrewer9681 2 года назад +13

    having done daily work with both a Hako 880D, Metcal automatic and an old Radio Shack Digital Weller clone I can honestly say that a classic ceramic core soldering pencil works just as well as the automatic integrated core system for surface mount work and most through hole. Unlike the integrated heating element system though, the separate core/tip last far longer. The hakko and the RS both never had an issue with their heating cores in 6 years, where as the metcal ate 100$ in tips a year. I'm willing to wait a few more seconds to heat up, if i dont have to buy an FX880 in tips every year....

  • @Brian-uq6jm
    @Brian-uq6jm 6 лет назад +2

    I'm a hobbyist. I've been using a cheap hakko 936 knock-off iron, the Yihua 939D (75W). It holds temp very well and heats up quite fast. It has been very reliable. Does it work and fit all my needs? Abso-fucking-lutely yes. Do I need any of the new tech crap? No. however, I do have the TS-100 because I was fascinated by the fact that the firmware is open-source.
    So if you're just starting out, maybe all you need is something just like the Yihua 939D for about $30-40.

  • @MartinKincl1993
    @MartinKincl1993 6 лет назад +30

    In my country, the FX-951 costs around $450 after tax, while the FX-888D is $170 after tax.
    Also, price isn't the only thing. When it comes to soldering stations, you might want to buy something that's not going to set your house on fire. You might want to buy something with a warranty. You might want to buy something that will last a while.

    • @mr.simulator4724
      @mr.simulator4724 10 месяцев назад +5

      sometimes you want to buy something that can actually solder.

  • @BaradaNels
    @BaradaNels 6 лет назад +81

    I have a Hakko FX888D. It is ready to solder within 10-20 seconds depending on the job. I only paid about 100USD for it on amazon. I do not do a lot of soldering. I am only required to use it about 5-10 times weekly. But for my small workload it's the best bang for the buck. If I was doing Louis' workload of course I would want better. But if you're a hobbyist or have a small customer base, don't look any further than the Hakko FX888D. The issues that Louis describes with the temperature isn't nearly as big of a deal as he's making it out to be in those instances.
    EDIT: Another point that Louis fails to mention is the cost of maintenance. We all know that a Hakko device is more than likely going to last longer than the Chinese knockoffs that he is promoting. That is not my argument here. What he fails to mention at all is the cost of the tips of the older tech FX888D vs the newer tech FX951-66. A tip for the old tech is approximately 5 bucks. The same tip in the new tech is over 4 times that at approximately 22 bucks. Tips go bad no matter how well you take care of them. If you go with the newer tech, the initial cost isn't the only premium you will be paying.
    Now my original statement stands. If you have a heavy workload, then sure. Pay the premium and buy the better product. But if you don't need that . . . the FX888D is the best bang for the buck if you want genuine Hakko quality.

    • @spartan456
      @spartan456 4 года назад +4

      I started with an 888D as well, as a matter of fact I still regularly use it. However, one thing I would like to say is that the cartridge style of irons are in a completely different league. One day I got lucky and a friend told me about some FM-202's on eBay for $200. They came with the stand, brass sponge holder, 2027 handpiece, and the dumb little card to lock and unlock the station. Seller was willing to take best offers as well, so I asked if I could get one for $175, and I was able to. I was similar to you, not really doing that much soldering. Maybe 5-10 times a week. I'm still in that same zone actually. But once you try using one of these cartridge stations you'll just wonder how you ever put up with the older ones. I like the 888D, it's a great station, it really is. If it wasn't, I wouldn't still be using it as much as I do now. But the comfort and utility of the cartridge ones makes them completely worth it in my book.
      The tips may be more expensive, but you'll be replacing tips on the cartridge ones just about as often as you would be on the older ones. It may be 4x more money per tip, but if you're replacing them once a year then it's not that much of a problem at all. Just having the ability to rapidly swap tips, while they're still hot and the station is still running, is a complete game changer. You might think "I never change tips", but when you have a handful of different tips to choose from and swapping to them takes all of 10 seconds, you'll inevitably find yourself changing them all the time as you progress through the repair.
      Being able to swap to a knife tip after using a bevel without having to wait ten minutes is amazing. When I use the 888 I'm reluctant to change tips because I'll have to wait for it to cool down, or deal with handling a very hot chunk of metal and trying to secure a new tip on if I want to save time. So I just rarely find myself wanting to change tips when I use it. The real benefit of these cartridge stations is the incredible ease of changing tips, it makes your workflow so much simpler and less time consuming.

    • @BaradaNels
      @BaradaNels 4 года назад +1

      @@spartan456 I can definitely see the usefulness of changing tips on the fly. With that said, I would never do this. Specifically because I calibrate the temperature every time I change the tip using this:
      www.banggood.com/DANIU-FG-100-Soldering-Iron-Tip-Thermometer-Temperature-Detector-Tester-0-700-p-952899.html?akmClientCountry=America&&cur_warehouse=CN
      Don't get me wrong. I am all for saving time. But my soldering jobs are normally multi-tasking events. I recently built a few Mechanical keyboards. Took me like 4 days to make them all. But during that time, I took care of 100 other things that needed done.
      Finally, for the price you paid . . . I would have done the same thing.

    • @spartan456
      @spartan456 4 года назад +3

      @@BaradaNels Something worth mentioning, a lot of these higher end stations actually calibrate the tip automatically. The T12/T15 tips from Hakko for example all have a barcode on the very end of them. On the FM-202, you can slide the tip's barcode end into a port on the station, and after a second or two it will recalibrate to a new profile specifically for that tip. It's actually super fancy.
      But yeah, I can see what you're saying. If you wanted to ensure the tip is really working the way it's supposed to, you'd either have to get an external calibrator, or have a station like the FM-202 that can calibrate them automatically. If you don't have a station with built-in calibration, then you really won't be saving much time with the cartridge tips, since you'd have to use the external calibrator to check them anyway.
      RE the multitasking, this is actually what I like so much about the cartridge stations. At work I regularly use my old 888D (I bought it myself and brought it to work after I bought the FM-202). The thing about my job is I am almost constantly interrupted. I'll sit down to start something and 30 seconds later I could have to turn everything off, get up, and do something else like talk on the phone or help a walk in customer. The 888D is super incompatible with this kind of constant, interrupting workflow. I turn the station on, it warms up, I tin it up, then I have to stop. I turn everything off because I have no idea how long I'll be away, it all cools down. I come back to it 5 or 10 minutes later and have to wait for it to all warm up again, re-tin everything, and hope I can solder what I need to before I get interrupted again.
      The 202 on the other hand warms up in less than 10 seconds. If I have to shut my 202 off to go do something it's not that big of a deal, it'll be ready to go again in a negligible amount of time.
      I would have to say that my biggest complaint is these types of irons have been around since, like, the late 80's and early 90's. They've been patented for at least 30 years, but there are VERY FEW consumer level irons that utilize the technology. With how long these irons have been around I would think that there would be way more consumer level ones that are cartridge based, but there just aren't that many at all. In fact, the only one I can think of is the PACE ADS200. And that is still $100 more than what I spent on the used FM-202. I was really happy to see a cartridge station appear in that price range because it's still pretty affordable, albeit on the high end. It would be great if more companies would do the same thing. Cartridge irons have been around for decades, there's no reason they should still be confined to $500+ stations.

    • @BaradaNels
      @BaradaNels 4 года назад

      @@spartan456 www.ebay.com/c/1331539188
      Found an FM-202 for only 180 on ebay. Seller seems reputable. I will consider it. I still don't think my workload would ever require that . . . but having another iron on backup and taking my 888D to the office sounds like a good idea. Would need to buy another exhaust fan too. So another 50. We'll see. It's obviously a quality iron.

    • @androiduberalles
      @androiduberalles 3 года назад +1

      My 888 is working great for my hobbyist level stuff
      I wonder what a little aluminum foil would go between the heater and the tip. I'm not gonna try it but would be interesting to see if it helps conduction.

  • @TSteffi
    @TSteffi 4 года назад +7

    I have a old-style Weller Magnastat station, and i am totally satisfied with it.
    Not the most fancy thing ever, but it is extremely reliable.
    I got this thing from a company i worked at over 10 years ago, and the company had used it for 10 years before that. Only thing i had to change in all those years were some tips, and since the tips don't have the heating element in them they are very cheap and can be swapped out in seconds.

  • @Rubafix989
    @Rubafix989 5 лет назад +55

    With Celsius you can use decimals for more precision where it's needed, but the scale reference points are what makes it better imho: 0 is freezing water, 100 is boiling water. You can easily gauge a temperature based on those limits, and even more precisely knowing that 37°C is body temp & 50 is sunny desert.
    In Fahrenheit every reference point is random numbers: 96°F is internal body temp, 32°F is freezing water, 212°F is boiling water etc

    • @mjc0961
      @mjc0961 4 года назад +12

      Fahrenheit excels for outdoor weather. 0 is freaking cold, 100 is freaking hot. Whereas Celsius devolves into random numbers here: the same range is -17 to 37. A scale based around water's phase changes is useless for weather and human comfort. For everything else, sure. Celsius all the way. But weather in Fahrenheit or GTFO.

    • @RayRay-mv9wn
      @RayRay-mv9wn 4 года назад +36

      ​@@mjc0961 0°C gives great gauge of weather, if it goes under zero, you must expect snow or frozen rain instead rain, ice on roads etc.

    • @NytronX
      @NytronX 4 года назад

      @@mjc0961 Well said, I agree completely. With that said, I wish we would use the metric system for distance type of measurements.

    • @bencze465
      @bencze465 4 года назад +3

      @@mjc0961 -17 doesn't really differ from -16 or -18 in terms of comfort. There's no threshold there, or at 37 either. Sure it's fun to have barrels (32 gallons? depends which barrel after all it's different for wine or beer), fingers (7/8 inch, how intuitive) or even knots but it's not very practical, and even amusing how some try to hang onto these. I mean I like steam machines, but they belong in a museum...

    • @tedsmart5539
      @tedsmart5539 4 года назад +3

      @@bencze465 We talking Imperial gallons or US gallons???

  • @PhasedragonWF
    @PhasedragonWF 6 лет назад +56

    Louis, have you tried the TS100? That thing is an absolute beast. It's marketed as portable, so you can power it from a battery or just a wall-wart. Even compared to full-fledged stations, it's still very impressive. Great example of where technology is at nowadays, and anything less for higher price is simply disappointing.

    • @samdeur
      @samdeur 6 лет назад +9

      After hearing Louis talk about the heating element being in the tip i thought about the TS100 that could be a great option for someone like me that wants to solder his own keyboard and perhaps later on repair small electronics.
      Check out Marco Reps where he compares it whit a Weller Like Louis he mentions the heating element around 03:45
      ruclips.net/video/HgrB5P-rDLw/видео.html

    • @samdeur
      @samdeur 6 лет назад +4

      only thing that's missing is a nice low cost desoldering iron. The Hakko FR-301 is €300 i could go for the "aoyue-8800" that one is €165 even the larger Aoyue 474A++ is €179 instead of the more expensive Hakko FR-301.. De soldering is full size keyboard with a hand solder sucker seems a nightmare..

    • @cowwels
      @cowwels 6 лет назад +10

      I have TS100 and i will not buy another iron for a long time. I pay $50.

    • @samdeur
      @samdeur 6 лет назад +2

      do you use it for longer period say 1,5 hours ?? doing a large project?

    • @cowwels
      @cowwels 6 лет назад +3

      I use it all day long, but at max 10 min. each soldering. More than that heat is transfer to the iron body. It is just 'incovenient' but hold it for an hour must be unconfortable...

  • @dwindeyer
    @dwindeyer 3 года назад +2

    Still ended up getting an FX-888D.. Something about high temperatures and knockoff brands doesn't sit well with me

  • @dustin9258
    @dustin9258 6 лет назад +15

    The old technology stations are still worlds better than a $20 iron that just plugs into the wall.
    I use the hakko fx888 every day at work with no issues. It heats up in a reasonable amount of time for what I do. I also have one at home that is overkill for home use. So maybe it’s just because I’ve never used a new technology station, but I have absolutely no issues with the fx888.
    Plus replacement soldering tips are relatively cheap and readily available.
    Although now I would like to use a new station just so I could really see how big of a difference it makes.

    • @310shadow310
      @310shadow310 Год назад

      Which station do you use? I'm looking into getting one

  • @dillon2753
    @dillon2753 6 лет назад +171

    I just use a bic and bendy straws to solder my work

    • @InvidiousIgnoramus
      @InvidiousIgnoramus 6 лет назад +34

      Dillon Nollid wait, you don't use a candle? You're fancy.

    • @cameronsmith5968
      @cameronsmith5968 6 лет назад +8

      I use hot glue #Lifehack

    • @KX36
      @KX36 6 лет назад +15

      I just phone a premium rate number and breathe heavily on my solder joints.

    • @NoMoreBsPlease
      @NoMoreBsPlease 6 лет назад +8

      Dillon I use a pencil and a wall charger.

    • @DannyGruesome
      @DannyGruesome 6 лет назад

      No More BS Please poppin them sockets huh? Lmao

  • @hddrecoveryservices
    @hddrecoveryservices 6 лет назад +42

    yeah, but the JBC is so good for flexing on the gram

  • @Roel_Scoot
    @Roel_Scoot 6 лет назад +58

    I stand with Dave, Fahrenheit is garbage and non intuitive and contradicts everything you just said about favouring the new technology ;-)) and please go metric!

    • @jasongooden917
      @jasongooden917 6 лет назад +5

      Only 3 countries are still Imperial, 1. USA and two countries that nobody cares about...lol

    • @TremereTT
      @TremereTT 5 лет назад +1

      +Jason The other two countries don't realy use imperial...because they import in Metric...and they need to export in metric and no one besides grocerymarked women use imperial in these countries.

    • @mjc0961
      @mjc0961 5 лет назад +1

      You and Dave are wrong. Fahrenheit is incredibly intuitive, it's Celsius that's garbage and non-intuitive (unless you need to measure the temperature of water, in which case it's great)

    • @TremereTT
      @TremereTT 5 лет назад +5

      +mjc0961
      I bet you are a male US citizen without a scientific degree....
      When do you not measure the temperture of weather or water in everyday live ? Celsius is optimal for these use cases. Only if you are doing physics like astronnomy or particle physics I would use kelvin instead.

    • @GoetzimRegen
      @GoetzimRegen 5 лет назад +1

      Lord Kelvin rule them all :-)

  • @antiekeradio
    @antiekeradio 6 лет назад +5

    When looking for a source of the knockoff Hakko FX-951 I came across a number of even simpler and cheaper stations that seem to use the new technology, with quick heat-up times etc.. the nice thing is that they are even cheaper.. The common name I found is T12, which seems to be the type of tip connector/handpiece they use.

  • @DFX4509B
    @DFX4509B 5 лет назад +6

    No real problems with the FX-888D for a starter station, hell, some people may want to solder for crafts rather than electronics repair, for example, and something like an FX-888D is perfect for that purpose, if not overkill, and it's also fine for the hobbyist-level or low-volume electronics repair operations for which it was intended.

  • @nsciucco
    @nsciucco 6 лет назад +4

    I just use a cheap $20 60 watt soldering iron from eBay. Been using it for almost 10 years.. It gets to full temp in less than 10 seconds. As a hobbyist, why would you need any quicker?
    Maybe if I was doing board repairs for a living I would get a "modern" soldering iron. But I honestly don't care if the heating element is built into the tip.

  • @Multifuchs
    @Multifuchs 6 лет назад +61

    ...but the 386 has a TURBO-Button! =)

    • @InvidiousIgnoramus
      @InvidiousIgnoramus 6 лет назад +12

      jiddschdr Turbo down clocks the CPU anyway.

    • @JohnCena-iw2vk
      @JohnCena-iw2vk 6 лет назад

      depends on the settings.

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 6 лет назад +5

      jiddschdr The 386 doesn't suffer from Spectre/Meltdown like the Pentium II and later.

    • @KX36
      @KX36 6 лет назад +5

      doesn't matter that the turbo button turned down the clock to 4.77MHz. It was a button that said "turbo" on it and in the 80s-90s, that made anything awesome. :)

    • @captainbodyshot2839
      @captainbodyshot2839 4 года назад

      @@johnfrancisdoe1563 A security risk that no one has ever taken advantage of in the real world is a small price to pay for instruction pipelining

  • @Dodoid
    @Dodoid 6 лет назад +7

    "If you're holding them for, you know, five or ten or twenty minutes, they may start to kind of burn your hands"
    I've got an Aoyue and even it doesn't do that.

    • @super5oldier139
      @super5oldier139 3 года назад

      I don't want to disappoint him, but I've never heard of this problem

  • @andrzej_autko
    @andrzej_autko 6 лет назад +3

    Louis, I suggest You look into Quicko T12-952 It's the c heapest soldering iron, which uses hakko tips, has a motion detector in the handle to put it to sleep after few minutes, better interface and an oled display for less than 50 $$$$$, I'm using it in my repair shop for 4 months now and for this price I can't imagine it getting any better.

  • @Spartacusse
    @Spartacusse 5 лет назад +2

    8:48 *Just to correct Luiz there, fahrenheit IS garbage because you don't have a clean 0 to 100 scale, where 0º freezes, 100º boils and disinfection at around 70º.*
    (More steps isn't even an argument, just add a ',' (comma) and have decimal values from ,0 to ,9. Just like meter and millimeter system... Oh, wait, you probably like the the imperial garbage too)😂

  • @joshm264
    @joshm264 4 года назад +6

    Another great "new technology" station is the KSGER T12 station. If you get one that's from Ksger, not Shine now or Quecoo, I think you'll be very happy, because I know I am

  • @electronash
    @electronash 6 лет назад +27

    6:38
    Haha - So weird seeing my comments on one of these vids.
    It's tough to convey to people about what it's like using a "direct-heating" soldering station vs the older style with a separate heater.
    Until I used a Metcal at work (about 15 years ago), I'd used many of the usual brands of iron, from Antex to Weller, including the cheapo mains irons and the expensive stations with big chunky transformers that heated up much faster.
    But, I then used the direct-heat Metcal stuff for an hour or so per day, and I've never looked back.
    I couldn't really justify the cost of a brand-new station for home use at the time, so I bought a second-hand SP-200 for only around £70 on eBay (including a chisel tip, handpiece, and stand). A few years later, I then saw an MX-500 station for only around £100 on eBay, and couldn't resist.
    That was more than ten years ago now, and the MX-500 is STILL going strong.
    The tips cost around £11-16 on average, but last easily 4 years or more if taken care of, which is much longer than most of the cheap mains irons last (at a similar cost to a new Metcal tip).
    It's easy for people to say it's somehow "elitist" to champion the direct-heat stuff, and yes, they do cost a fair bit more new, but I guess you would have to try one for a few weeks to see the light. :p
    Something like that 951 looks ideal at around $250, and I reckon it would pay for itself in no time.
    So yes, IMHO, I would say that the extra $100-150 for a direct-heat soldering station is worth every penny. I don't think I'll ever go back to using the older style iron.
    That's especially true if you don't mind buying second-hand, as the stations are generally very robust and reliable, so it's well worth taking a chance on one, as long as you're not relying on it for "mission critical" use. I sold two of my previous Metcal / OKI stations to friends over 4 years ago, and those stations are also still working great, even with the same original tips that were included.

    • @electronash
      @electronash 6 лет назад +2

      Oh, wow, I hadn't even seen Dave's follow-up reply of "2nd-hand doesn't count" yet, as I just got back from a weekend break.
      So, thanks for making a better point, Louis. lol
      You're right - I would also much rather use a $100 knock-off station or second-hand direct-heat, OR just pay the extra $150 for something like the genuine Hakko 951 than use the older style tech, any day of the week.
      I kind of expected some of the sillier replies on Dave's vid when I first posted on there, but I would bet that at least 60% of those people have never used both types of soldering tech over many years in both a production environment and at home before forming their opinions.
      I don't think I'm too biased either, as I'd used all sorts of cheap AND very expensive soldering stations for many years before settling on a direct-heat system for personal use.
      At the four different electronics factories I worked at (Nortel, Bookhams, AVX, and Syntech), they used the direct-heat stuff almost exclusively (Weller, Pace, Metcal / OKI, JBC etc.). I think that says a lot. lol

  • @AM-yj5yc
    @AM-yj5yc 6 лет назад +18

    The complaints about not wanting to spend a couple hundred dollars due to poverty are, to me, a bit irritating. I'm on disability, and while I'm immensely grateful to my province for allowing me to not be dying slowly on the streets in complete abject poverty, I don't exactly have a wide margin of error in my personal budget. I have to contribute to supporting my family, pay for housing and all other expenses on a comparatively tiny amount of money, especially in a very expensive Canadian city.
    I have been putting away small amounts of money, once a month, in an envelope for almost a year and a half, since I started watching YT electronics videos and learning, from scratch, everything there is to know about both modern and 'antique' electronics. Most months, I'm able to save $20 or so, and with patience and mental resistance to spending the saved money, I'm within a few months of being able to put together a rudimentary lab and start playing with this stuff. Ideally, I hope to be able to make some of my own money with this knowledge (thanks to Louis) and support myself despite being unable to work a normal job due to major health issues.
    I understand I'm quite blessed to have a government willing to help me, and I also understand that even in more wealthy nations, there are many people in far worse poverty than I am. If you really want this, however, it is absolutely worth your time and a few dollars a month to save up slowly and patiently; the knowledge here is worth tons of money if properly applied, and if you've been wstching these videos from people like Louis and Dave Jones, you've been given a ticket to tons of profit with in detail explanations on every aspect of running this kind of business for absolutely free. In the not to distant past, all this knowledge available here on YT would have cost tens of thousands of dollars and at least four years in a university.
    If you are serious at all about this, even as a hobby, you can amass the money for gear that is slighty more expensive than the lowest hanging fruit, for a massive increase in quality; you even have access to detailed knowledge and reviews about these products here, again, for free. I know this will piss some people off who feel they still won't ever be able to afford this stuff, but I suggest anyone who feels they can't to just try putting a few dollars away each month. You'll be surprised how quickly it feels like you grow your savings and the end investment is absolutely worth it, even if it takes a few years.

    • @ian1352
      @ian1352 4 года назад

      The point is why spend two to three times as much on a soldering iron when the cheaper one will work just fine? Here the 951 is at least 2.5x as expensive as the 888. The 888 is already quite expensive by local standards. Budget variable soldering irons can be had for a quarter of the price. And they're what most people buy because even the cheapest Hakko is a luxury.

  • @EddieSLC
    @EddieSLC 6 лет назад +3

    This guy is great! Got to love a tech guy with a personality-that simply talks no bs talk!

  • @bassome3000ify
    @bassome3000ify 6 лет назад +15

    What I understand is, just wait 3 seconds with my old cheap soldering iron :)
    Without integrated tip to heater element

    • @ToumalRakesh
      @ToumalRakesh 6 лет назад +5

      Sure. But now solder a big chunky connector. Integrated heater tips are just immensely superior.
      One thing I'd say about the JBC though is that it *still* has a better thermal capacity than the hakko IMHO. Your mileage may vary.

    • @bassome3000ify
      @bassome3000ify 6 лет назад +1

      Toumal Rakesh nice input 👍 it does make sense.
      After all it gets back to feasibility or worthiness

    • @ToumalRakesh
      @ToumalRakesh 6 лет назад +1

      Absolutely. JBC is expensive, I love mine, but I honestly could've lived with the Hakko knockoff as well. The only real drawback is their user interface, which is terrible. "Alarm Clock Interface" indeed. A rotary encoder would be superior. Simple up/down buttons would've done the job. Like on the JBC. Thermal capacity may be bigger, but the question is whether it's $200 bigger...

    • @hellterminator
      @hellterminator 6 лет назад

      +Toumal Rakesh Put on a chunky tip and/or raise the temperature. Sure, it's not as good as a JBC with a high thermal capacity tip, but it'll get the job done.
      Of course if you're a professional that's an unacceptable waste of time, but if you're just a hobbyist, you can get by with $30 Hakko knockoff.

    • @thetechgenie7374
      @thetechgenie7374 6 лет назад +2

      I prefer the weller but the WX series. Just due to also work on a lot of older stuff and well and having 200w is useful and built quality is better then the hakko I tried.

  • @tHaH4x0r
    @tHaH4x0r 6 лет назад +4

    You can also build your own JBC station, just buy the tipholder and tip for 100$, build the rest yourself for 100$ and you have a JBC feel and quality for 200$.

    • @androiduberalles
      @androiduberalles 3 года назад

      You have to include the value of your time in that though.

  • @obfuscated3090
    @obfuscated3090 2 года назад +1

    Soldering stations are like welding machines. Most hobbyists don't know even expensive industrial welding power sources are treated as "consumables" in production and especially construction. They exist to join metal and that they produce sufficient number of proper joints for their cost that is all that matters.
    Either machine needs only to last long enough and produce enough quality joints!
    Pace make nice stuff but for the cost you could equip most of a workbench, get going, and should they wish to buy a Pace they can AFFORD them.
    There isn't a hell of a lot inside a Pace or anything else. I just dissected a dead one to save the case for a project box and while the components are clearly industrial quality and I can afford one I will not be buying from them because that extra money will put much more equipment on my workbench! The high price delta means a customer can have a ready spare and still have change left over.

  • @giacintoboccia9386
    @giacintoboccia9386 11 месяцев назад +1

    Interestingly, the even older tecnology was Weller Magastat where the heating element is separate but the sensor is the tip, because it senses the temperature based on the magnetic properties of the alloy uesd in the tip.

  • @florianoberacker6500
    @florianoberacker6500 6 лет назад +1

    It is not about, if it´s the "new fancy technologie" or the "crappy old one", soldering stations are all about the sensing and the control technologie. In the company I work (and any other company I know) use soldering stations from kurtz ersa, which is like industry standard or industry premium. They all have "the old crappy technologie", but melts solder in less then 4 seconds after turning on. You can also control how aggressively it heats and its temperature is very stable, even if you solder on a ground plane.

  • @joshbryant1133
    @joshbryant1133 3 года назад +3

    This was really helpful. I have a low budget (I'm a teenager with a min. wage job) and I was about to buy an fx-888 instead of a hakko t12 tip station made by a company called KSGER but now I think I will change my mind. I guess I was more motivated by the hakko brand name than anything else.

    • @CompGuy66
      @CompGuy66 2 года назад +1

      I would say go for the KSGER T12 tip station. I am a university student who has been using a cheap $20 soldering iron for over 10 years and I finally decided to look into a better soldering station. I honestly wish I knew about the KSGER and other affordable t12 tip compatible stations earlier. I thought that good soldering stations still cost $250+ so I just stuck with my $20 station which would take forever to heat up and only has one tip making it impossible to work with anything that has a lot of densely packed pins. Only recently did I discover that there are a lot more options on the market. I honestly feel so dumb that I put up with cave man era tools instead of finding the time to do some research.

    • @joshbryant1133
      @joshbryant1133 2 года назад +2

      @@CompGuy66 thanks for the comment. I got it a couple months ago and I'm LOVING it. It takes, at most, 5 seconds to warm up. And the tip to handle distance is fantastic. My only issue is the temperature fluctuates a little (±5 degrees) but that might be my fault because I tried to calibrate it and I didn't know I needed a soldering iron thermometer. Other than that it's a fantastic piece of kit.

  • @SchwachsinnProduzent
    @SchwachsinnProduzent 5 лет назад +2

    This new technology might be interesting, but I will keep my cheap (~40€) ZD-937. It needs a little bit longer to heat up, but it will do the job it has to do. I have gotten 3 machines for less than the one you recommended. ZD-937 (~40€), Desolderingstation ZD-915 (~80€) and a hot air station 858D+ (30€).

  • @haheyourdead1187
    @haheyourdead1187 6 лет назад +8

    South Park “they took our jobs” hahhahaha

  • @e30Birdy
    @e30Birdy 6 лет назад +1

    I went for the JBC and happy i did.. cost me a lot of money but it will last me forever. The Hakko 951 is 368 euro here which is what the JBC cost so i went for the JBC.

  • @fieldlab4
    @fieldlab4 4 года назад +1

    Back in the ancient days I used a Weller workstation with a little temp dial and a pencil iron with chisel slug tip, and it would solder heavy 16 gauge wires into sockapex stage lighting connectors, all day long. 24 wires per connector.
    And the English fractional system is mostly far superior for too many technical reasons to list. We never should have gone metric. The reasons were mostly silly.

  • @acoustic61
    @acoustic61 6 лет назад +1

    IMO, all irons, even in the $100 price range, should use tip cartridges. They don't seem to cost more to make.
    I repair music equipment, older guitar amps with point-to-point wiring, old thru-hole PCB's and some newer, smaller stuff. I've been using a Weller EC1002 station for 25-30 years. I want to get a new iron with faster recovery. Considering the FX-951. Also, I'm wondering how the new Pace ADS200 will be? The FX-951 is 75W. The Pace is 120W which for my use, may be better with higher thermal mass tips. The Hakko comes with a setback stand which is optional for exta cost with Pace. Do I need a setback stand? Probably not.. The Pace will sleep after 10 minutes. The Hakko is hugely popular with parts availability galore. Will the Pace become popular? BTW, the transformers used in Pace are Chinese made. A lot to consider. I think I'll wait for the reviews of the new Pace station before deciding.

  • @LemoUtan
    @LemoUtan 6 лет назад +17

    An almost criminally deceptive graph at the beginning where you are required to notice that the y-axis on the first graph is 20-350 whereas on the second it's 280-350. The second graph's yawning chasms would appear as small bumps on the first's steady state line.

    • @Monkeh616
      @Monkeh616 6 лет назад +5

      You're also required to notice one is for heating time from cold and one is for maintaining set temperature under load.. It's not deceptive if you can read.

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  6 лет назад +5

      It is as I called it enemy propaganda, I just loaded it up to make a point

    • @LemoUtan
      @LemoUtan 6 лет назад

      +Monkeh - fair enough. Although Mr Rossman had already explained that 'propaganda'. It's the kind effected by the juxtaposition of those graphs as a visual montage - Eisenstein'n'all that. Nothing to do with text (which I can manage adequately, thanks).

    • @nexaentertainment2764
      @nexaentertainment2764 6 лет назад +2

      Not just that, but the irons recovery time is *gasp* 5.5 whole seconds! Wow, what are you gonna do! Time is money! Chop chop, I lost 3 cents of my time just waiting here!
      Honestly it might important for a professional like Louis, but for most home users, hobbyists, or people not doing super heavy work, it's almost irrelevant.
      Better spend 2.5x as much on an iron that recovers 5.5 seconds faster! Yeah! Sound advice! Or just buy a knock-off station! Yeah!
      Honestly a knock off isn't a bad idea if you're just getting started. But you're still better off with genuine gear most of the time.

    • @KX36
      @KX36 6 лет назад +1

      it's not "deceptive", it's "statistics".

  • @ainzooalgown7589
    @ainzooalgown7589 4 года назад +1

    a good budget soldering station is KSGER T12, it uses hakko 951 tips and soldering iron and can be found for around $50

  • @WutipongWongsakuldej
    @WutipongWongsakuldej 6 лет назад +1

    I'm a bit concerned about the quality of the knock-off, counterfeit products. It might get the job done, but for how long?
    Well it can get you start up quicker (than the real deal, inferior products) and then you can get the real deal after you made enough money from those knock-off. Just to be aware that it might burn your shop down or something :)

  • @billybbob18
    @billybbob18 3 года назад

    I have a 50+ year old Weller station (well older than me) with the 4 prong offset plug. It was originally in the navy, then spent time in a lab and now its on my desk (I'm the 3rd owner). I used it the other day and found that something wasn't right. Either an element or the magnastat is going out. I get a good hr of use before it starts to malfunction. Model # TCP-1. I hop to fix it up as my de-solder rig. It still has the de-solder bulb attachment, chisel scraper and dip remover. Due to it's age, I'm not going to trust it with my MCU projects but i like using really old stuff in every practical way.

  • @PDPIE1029
    @PDPIE1029 5 лет назад +1

    I have an fx888D and it works just fine. I had a shitty $15 iron before and it’s a major upgrade. Besides the tips are nice, last long and are easy to replace.

  • @pr0xZen
    @pr0xZen 4 года назад

    It makes sense. Most of these older tecgnologies had _at least_ two seperate objects' surfaces interfacing before reaching the tip, and _at least_ a good inch of materials+layers between the thermal sensor and tip. As thermal energy build in or drain from the tip, it takes a good while for the sensor to know that. With age and use, inner surfaces (those you can't easily service) of heater elements, tips, mounting parts - they wear and oxidize, causing decreasing surface contact and thermal conducticity.
    With all this baked into one part, we (to most extents) eliminate these oxidation issues, we can better control galvanic contact, and we can move both the heating element amd thermal sensors riiight up there where we need it.
    As an added bonus to hobbyists who favor the Hakko route, some knock-off tips have gotten seriously good for a very affordable price, and the Quicko / KSGER / Insert-(re)brand-here T12 stations have also gotten pretty dope for $40'ish with the cheapest handle and a few T12 tips, or another 15-20 with an onboard PSU. There are the self-contained irons like the TS80 and 100, although personally I perfer one that is more ergonomical and plays better with T12 tips (because of cost and availability).

  • @chaos.corner
    @chaos.corner 6 лет назад +1

    Aren't there govt agencies that are required to buy American? Can't help wondering if that's why some of those prices are so high.

  • @andrei54445
    @andrei54445 6 лет назад +1

    Louis, for CD stations from JBC (cheapest ones) you can connect both type of handpieces t245 (standard size) and t210 (for microsoldering), like you did with fx951

  • @petermopar
    @petermopar 3 года назад

    You can use any ripoff station because integrated tips are great, even just a cheap "12-24v 75w mini adjustable handle," which I use with a solar panel for outdoor soldering.

  • @fallingwater
    @fallingwater 6 лет назад +1

    Another TS100 convert here, after owning two traditional soldering stations. The first thing I did after trying mine out was order another one to have a backup in case the unthinkable happens. I needed something that could do high power joints because I work a lot with drones (whose main power wires can easily carry 100+A), and once you crank up the temperature the TS100 *will* do them - which is nothing short of miraculous when you consider how tiny it is. And of course it's an excellent all-round iron, good for SMD work too if you order the special narrow tip.

    • @GlishaSo
      @GlishaSo Год назад

      still on ts100 after 4 years ? or you founded something better ?

    • @fallingwater
      @fallingwater Год назад +1

      @@GlishaSo I now mostly run a KSGER T12. It's a fixed soldering station so a little more ergonomic for benchtop work, also it runs cheaper T12 tips. But I still have my two TS100 as backups and if I need to solder somewhere else. However, there is a better portable iron today - the Pinecil v2, effectively an evolution of the TS100.

    • @GlishaSo
      @GlishaSo Год назад

      @@fallingwater ok cool i love to see that i am on same way i had 1 ts100 and before few months i purchased T12 and now using them both how i feel but yeah t12 have cheaper tips and its own power. nice yeah i saw pinecill v2 its sick but still i think i am good with this one and will wait maybe little more for it or not change it at all we will see :) and to be honest these days im fighting to find good soldering wire in EU idk. sometimes mechanic from ali is ok but still searching for good one. i had 250g old one loctite it was amazing but now idk if you have some rly good to recommend tell me :) tnx

  • @carpandrei7493
    @carpandrei7493 6 лет назад

    These days you can buy lots of different controllers for T12-T15 hakko tips for around 20 USD or less. Kits to build a small soldering station (box, encoder, connectors, a tip and holder) can be had for about 35 USD. You need a power supply, but still, over-all you can have Hakko soldering quality for about 50USD or maybe less. You can also buy fake Hakko tips for about 3USD/piece and they work amazingly well! I have several of them and for a hobbyist, this is more than enough.
    The TS100 is even a better package with a much smaller desk footprint and perhaps better ergonomic!

  • @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797
    @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797 6 лет назад +1

    I bought a station kit from ebay for 27 bucks, uses modern cartridge "tips", made a power supply for it and voila! Really makes a difference. Heats up in 9 seconds, convenient.

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 6 лет назад

      MrJohhhnnnyyy Hey pls pls give me a link to buy it. Is it temperature controlled with feedback?. Pls reply.

    • @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797
      @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797 6 лет назад

      b888 You can find the link below the video on my channel "t12 kit review". If I'm gonna whack the link right here, this response might go straight to spambox. You won't see it at all, I've been there.

  • @MattacksRC
    @MattacksRC Год назад +1

    The hakko fk888 is a very high quality soldering station for a hobbyist. these fancy technology soldering stations may be better for professional work but I'm not certain the average Joe who does soldering here and there would benefit much from investing in that.

    • @user-yk1cw8im4h
      @user-yk1cw8im4h 16 дней назад +1

      Wrong. It’s not fancy technology at this point, it’s relevant vs irrelevant technology. You might as well use wood sticks to start a fire to cook your meal.

  • @coli24200
    @coli24200 5 лет назад +8

    Louis , I want to thank you for all the things I've learned with you, you are a great teacher!...but sometimes you repeat so many times the same thing that I fall into sleep :)

  • @Vizeroy9
    @Vizeroy9 6 лет назад +1

    If you have a good sensor position and know your system, you can get a very close temperature control on the "old" technology.
    You just have to avoid simple regulator types.
    Edit:
    Time to reaching the 350°C target temperature is mostly defined by the power of the reating element... So JBC implemented stronger heating elements. Great.

  • @ClokworkGremlin
    @ClokworkGremlin 4 года назад +1

    American companies don't deserve my business just for being in the same country that I live in. American companies deserve my business if, and *ONLY* if, they offer better services at better value than overseas companies do.
    Take some pride in your country. Prove you can do it better than they can overseas.

  • @CharlesJCliffe
    @CharlesJCliffe 6 лет назад

    @Louis Rossmann -- for PACE tweezers the "old tech" TT-65 are the ones where the handle gets hot -- there's special grips (which they should have installed by default instead of selling separately) available to mitigate this. The MT-100 cartridge tip tweezers don't have that problem that I'm aware of.

  • @daishi5571
    @daishi5571 6 лет назад +1

    You can spend ~$100 for an iron by company with a good reputations of reliability and quality and lets not forget there is nothing actually wrong with the older system it's just a bit slower (lets ham up it up) at heating up and recovery. Or you can buy a knock off with no reputation and questionable quality. Lets be real, knock offs can go from being OK to being a fire hazard (I have been burned, literally by a no brand iron). To be open I have a Hakko 888D and FR-300 but I'm seriously looking at the Pace ADS200 but that will probably be another year of saving.

    • @daishi5571
      @daishi5571 4 года назад +1

      As a follow up, after a while of using the Hakko I never felt the need to replace it. However recently someone stole it, so I decided to get the Pace and it is nice. It is faster at heating (far quicker than I can get ready) the recovery time is next to nonexistent, the tip distance it very short and very easy to control, the handle is so comfortable and the user interface is really easy (It's the one thing I really disliked about the Hakko but beyond the presets I had setup I didn't use it). But at a bit over $300 (including a few tips) it's expensive and my finished work hasn't changed (not a surprise) so I basically paid an extra $200 for a bit of extra comfort. I would recommend the Pace if you are buying new, but if all you are doing is upgrading its a bit steep.

  • @mariushmedias
    @mariushmedias 6 лет назад

    I bought a used Pace HW-50 (50w soldering station) for around 70$. It uses those tips with heating element integrated in them, you can still buy the tips for around 10$ each at reputable distributors. I also have an original Hakko 936 - the benefit of those Hakko 888 is that they're basically refreshes of Hakko 936 (while officially tips are different in practice you can still use tips for hakko 936 including cloned tips you can find on ebay at x dollars for 10pcs set)

  • @GagLV
    @GagLV 6 лет назад

    As someone with not-so-steady hands, i love me some Metcal MX-500. It has the shortest tip i have seen and makes things very easy for me, while with the regular length tips, i could not solder nearly as good.

  • @Skauber
    @Skauber 6 лет назад +4

    Rather than spending the 100 bucks on a knockoff chinese hakko 951, I'd spend the money on the excellent TS100 soldering iron, which is an ideal low cost soldering iron for hobby use. Paired with a 24V DC power supply, it's very powerful at 65W and can handle just about anything you throw at it. I've done fine soldering and soldering of heavy gauge wiring with it, and it performs very well. For everyday use in a professional environment I'd spend a bit more on the soldering iron of course, but for your typical DIY hobbyist which needs a versatile iron that can handle a variety of different soldering applications, the TS100 is a very good and cheap choice, and is better built than the typical chinese knockoff stations.

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 6 лет назад

      Skauber I feel so bad I didn't buy the TS100 before now it's $100. I remember it being 30-40$ 😢

    • @Skauber
      @Skauber 6 лет назад

      Depends on which bundle and where you buy it. Aliexpress still has it for 65$ (free shipping, depending on your location) including two tips, but no power supply, or even 56$ with one tip. Here's one example, even has a box, which is the same I purchased: www.aliexpress.com/item/TS100-Mini-Digital-Electric-USB-Smart-Adjustable-Soldering-Iron-Set-with-2-Solder-Iron-Tips-K/32839724274.html?spm=2114.search0104.3.83.17e45b8fXcEshP&ws_ab_test=searchweb0_0,searchweb201602_4_10152_10151_10065_10344_10068_10342_10343_5722611_10340_10341_10696_5722911_5722811_10084_5722711_10083_10618_10307_5711211_10059_308_100031_10103_10624_10623_10622_10621_10620_5711311_5722511-10152,searchweb201603_25,ppcSwitch_3&algo_expid=0fc66160-5188-4d6b-a8a3-c92e6989b1bc-11&algo_pvid=0fc66160-5188-4d6b-a8a3-c92e6989b1bc&priceBeautifyAB=0

  • @deadbluesky
    @deadbluesky 4 года назад +1

    Thats not really accurate i have 4 soldering stations, the Aoyue int866, Hakko 951, Weller WN1010NA and a Weller WES51 and they kinda all work the same i do not have temperature drop i test them every month with a temperature probe to be sure every station woks well in my shop, tho the WES51 get really hot near the fingers !! Btw EEVblog do a nice comparison but for the WE1010NA he got the older iron who came too hot near fingers grip and got a bad grip and the element was too short, the las version of the iron is not the same at all the temperature is more precise, the grip is better and the heat near the fingers is gone !! I like the Hakko 951 the same as the others, maybe i should try a JBC to really know the difference and to be honest i will probably do...

  • @orangesharpy
    @orangesharpy 3 года назад

    I have a Weller 1010NA and I love that thing. Mine heats up really fast and always works great. Mind you I am not a professional but it far exceeds my usages.

  • @timramich
    @timramich 6 лет назад +4

    That old technology works just fine for me

  • @_BangDroid_
    @_BangDroid_ Год назад

    The only problem is, where do you find the *good* clones? There are at least just as many, if not more, bad clones out there. How do you know you're going to get a good one, even if you do find the listing? People who make cheap knockoffs have no incentive to make sure they're not going to burn your house down.

  • @alexisfrjp
    @alexisfrjp 3 года назад +1

    Why nobody is talking about the fx950? It's almost 100$ cheaper for the same features and accepts T12 tips!

  • @m2useinu
    @m2useinu Месяц назад +1

    Crap on the $100 station because it's not worth $20. It doesn't work. It works as a wood burning tool intermittently but that's it

  • @horusfalcon
    @horusfalcon 6 лет назад

    I still use a 30W Radio Shack iron made by Ungar (the one with the screw-on tips). WIth the fine tip (0.0625" chisel point) it does not take too long to recover between joints. With wider tips, even less. If I did as much soldering as you do, I'd probably want something better. This has caused me to consider a Hakko if I find myself needing a temperature-controlled station. Thanks for doing this.

  • @brunoleonardo3315
    @brunoleonardo3315 6 лет назад +1

    Goot soldering stations use the cartridge tips too. It would be great to have your impressions on them. There's a model that offers dual ports, with one being a high-output - 150W if I remember.

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 2 года назад

    The most confusing thing about buying clones and knockoffs, especially if you're buying directly from Asia (or perhaps from ebay), is that you can't easily determine in advance which clone or knockoff is built the best, or most similarly to the known-quality name-brand unit. There are dozens upon dozens of "brands" of soldering stations sold online: Many of the different brands might actually come out of the same factory but we have no way of knowing this in advance, nor if they're built to the same specifications and quality, nor if one "brand" was commissioned by a seller that wants it for the absolute lowest wholesale price and therefore the lowest quality; nor do we have any way of knowing how interchangeable the parts might be from one clone to the next. My advice would be to purchase your Asian-made soldering-equipment clones from a distributor based in the same country as yourself, so that at least you don't have to attempt to communicate directly with someone in China or Asia if you have a problem with your newly purchased equipment.

  • @jasonh4534
    @jasonh4534 5 лет назад

    If you have a good iron, even the ceramic heater type with separate tips, you will not have slumping. Temp control is important, and most lower cost irons don't have the best. For most users, a variation of several degrees isn't likely going to cause a problem though.
    If you want tight temp control you have to spend more on the iron... I have used the Pace MBT and PRC 2000, they never slumped in temp when working lots of connections. Cheaper Hakkos are not at the same level. They are fine for consumer grade light use though. If I am working professionally, with soldering being a primary focus of my work, I am spending extra money on my iron, $350-400ish in the low end. Thats not set in stone but a benchmark, there may be good ones that are a bit less.
    A cheap knock off iron may heat up quick, but have poor temp control, that varies.
    If I even had someone turn up my iron to anything over 700*F I would kick them.
    You can do everything you need to do at 600*F max.
    My level of training... I can fix bullet holes in multilayer circuit boards. With the soldering standards of NASA use for space flight. There is no such thing as allowable tolerances in that standard. (Well at the time of my training, it may have changed in the past decade or so since my training)
    F vs C... Both are fine. If you are worried about the difference between 1*F and 1*C you're priorities are off. For soldering you don't need that fine of adjustment. You will usually make changes of several degrees at a time, so 10*F vs a change of 5*C
    I use F simply because I am used to it, and familiar with it. C would work fine if I was familiar with the scale.
    Pace makes good stuff, they are very expensive... If you use a nice Pace, even with the ceramic heater with separate tips, you would see the difference between them and similar Hakkos.
    Pace was the only soldering station I was allowed to use when working military aviation, as they were temp stable to within a single degree I believe, vs a Hakko which is something like 5-6*...
    Hot tweezers... Have you actually ever used the Pace version? You may not be understanding what they mean. Not saying that is the case. But they could mean constant 20min never stop use, but most would never do that. There are starts and stops.
    There is a lot to consider when selecting a proper iron, that many might not think about.

  • @bobingabout
    @bobingabout 6 лет назад

    I do have a question though. I burn through tips quite often.
    How much would you pay for a tip, that is just a tip that you put over your element, vs a tip, that has an element built in?
    The iron I actually use most often is an Antex XS25. it's a stick a plug in a socket and go, not even temperature controlled.

  • @robbyxp1
    @robbyxp1 6 лет назад +7

    Totally agree. The buy X brigade (replace X with your country name) obv has never read any economic history. The experiment was tried in the 30's and ended up with a deep recession across the world. An Example. If we in England decide only to buy British products, that means we won't be buying any American Boeing airliners. You won't be buying any Airbus airlines because they are not American. Competition is reduced, prices increase, consumers suffer. This of course is ignoring the fact that a lot of parts inside Boeing and Airbus aircraft are made in each others countries. Economic suicide ;-)

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 6 лет назад +1

      robbyxp1 The worst part is consumers suffer right?. But let's just ask why? The answer is prices increase. Ok but why do prices increase? Well no competition right?!. I say ok cool there's no competition is that affecting any production costs or any initial investments?, 9/10 times no. So Why the hell does the price increase if there's no competition?. The answer is: GREED, that's right capitalism is a greedy, unequal, wild system. If there isn't someone to hold u back, all ur gonna do is exploit the weak, exploit the individuals, the consumers. Consumers don't drive prices and IT IS NOT A FREE MARKET. It's a manipulation market. There is no contentment.

    • @davadoff
      @davadoff 29 дней назад

      Only buy X country only applied when you had a choice, I thought. So airbus and Boeing is ok.
      Sometimes you don’t want to buy from some countries at all if they are cheaper by exploiting & destroying the environment or climate.

  • @flightographist
    @flightographist 5 лет назад

    Solid reasoning to backup solid skills, your strategic vision is admirable.

  • @pa4tim
    @pa4tim 6 лет назад +5

    I went back from a station with the element in the tip (Metcal crap around 700 euro, I had 2 of them) to a station with the heating element not in the tip. Even worse, the tips are fixed with a screw. Being my antique over 20 year old Pace MBT-250 Dropping temp while soldering ? If so it was and is never been a problem. I can desolder like 200 joints without any problem and soldering too. I have it at 320 celcius and I can solder shielding tins or massive ground planes without any problem. If it drops it is only a few degrees. It takes time to heat up but that means it also takes time to cool down ;-)
    OK this station cost serious money but for me as a professional repair tech it is the ducks guts. Tips cost little and last for ever. Changing them is easy. They still sell parts and I have never used a better desoldering iron as the SX100.
    I do not say all cartridge tip stations are crap, I say that not all old-fashioned stations style stations are crap. But wait until all cheap crappy stations are the cartridge types. That cheap crap stations with the heater not in the tip do not work very well, does not mean the principle sucks.

    • @mrlazda
      @mrlazda 6 лет назад

      You are not only one who have that experience, PACE is hard to beat, I tested JBC and from my experience (and what I hear from people who have use/try both) "old" PACE technology is much superior to "new" JBC.I tested JBC simply because on internet many people say it is great soldering iron and I do not argue with that, and it is superior to Hakko or Weller and many others, but at end I just bought another PACE which is much better (from my experience) even I was never big fan of PS-90 handle.
      Here PACE is not popular (here Ersa, JBC and Metcal are most popular, even Weller is more popular PACE even all agree that new Weller are crap compared to old Weller), but everyone who so some "serious" work/production (and have money) and try PACE switched to it.

    • @Monkeh616
      @Monkeh616 6 лет назад

      You can dump a lot of power in to heat slowly with poor thermal contact, it does not imply thermal mass. Just because it heats slowly, doesn't mean it will cool slowly. And no, I'm not criticising your Pace - I'm just pointing out a faulty assumption.
      And my 25+ year old Metcal does just fine.

    • @pa4tim
      @pa4tim 6 лет назад

      General speaking you are right, good to mention. However, I was only talking about my Pace PS-90 sensatemp and SX100 sensatemp powered by a MBT-250 (black edition ;-) )
      A cartridge heater is no warranty for a good station. The sense part must be in the right place, be the right type. It must have enough power and a fast enough controller . There is a larger part of the tip exposed so possible more loss. For the budget brands still lots off possibilities to fool the customer. I only buy original tips but it is not to hard to make usable knockoffs . I sometimes make my own tips for special purpose. But a knock-off cartridge is a much bigger risk, not only regarding how long is will work but for cartridge irons the tips design is a big part of the performance.
      My Metcals were superfast and bizar powerful. I did like that but cartridges where almost 40 euro's . The desolderpumps were worn after 1,5 years. I worn down 3 hoof cartidges, they still looked like new but the coil part was open. Two handpieces. The fist after a few months, the second after 1,5 years. The cable became over 100C. I known problem but after 1.5 years and a burned arm no guaranty. The desolder gun is also replaced within a year and I wore down 4 tips. But to be fair, I have an OKI/Metcal hot air station, I think I have it around 8 years now and not a single problem. My back-up station for the last 10 years (and for SMD because it is not als bulky as the Pace PS-90,) station is a Weller WS-81. Not the thermal performance of the Pace but very usable. Replaced the tip-sleeve once (5 euro) , still the same tips I bought when I bought the station.
      I use them for hobby (restoring testgear, Tubes, RF stuff, most hings I build are dead bug on groundplanes) and work (repairing measurement and calibration gear)

  • @cowwels
    @cowwels 6 лет назад +13

    Try TS100 please!!!!

  • @samdeur
    @samdeur 6 лет назад +13

    Louis after hearing you talk about the heating element and the tech behind it. i wanted to ask you about the TS100 OpenSource portable soldering iron. it uses the same tech you mentioned here..
    if i understand you correctly buying that $66 soldering iron would be better than a FX-88D.
    my use case is soldering a couple of mechanical keyboards getting in to the hobby..
    Here's a nice vid about the TS100 it stars getting interesting around 01:35
    Would love to hear your opinion perhaps even try one out ?????

    • @tunahankaratay1523
      @tunahankaratay1523 5 лет назад

      The only problem of TS100 is the difficulty of grounding the tip. But if you invest some time, it will be fairly ok.

  • @angeldelvax7219
    @angeldelvax7219 6 лет назад +1

    I bought a chinese soldering station for about $60,- and I'm very pleased with it. Yes, it's slower than the hakko, but it does have a hot-air unit, and for me it does what I need it for.
    That being said, I do agree with what you're saying! The newer technology IS better in this case, even if you buy the knock-off.
    So even if the cheap chinese set works for my hobby needs, if I needed it to solder every day I'd prefer to spend a bit more money to buy better equipment.

  • @kimjongun365
    @kimjongun365 6 лет назад +1

    For all those suggesting the ts100, a hakko is much more reliable than a Chinese soldering iron, he has to fix a lot of boards in a day so he needs one that will last a lifetime. He doesn’t need portability. Also a proper station means the actual iron is lighter which would be nicer.

  • @ArcadeJason
    @ArcadeJason 6 лет назад

    i use pace desoldering irons because they are the best i have ever used also they have had the element built into the tip since like 1983. i will say the pace tips don't last as long as they should though.

  • @GodLike-pe6kj
    @GodLike-pe6kj 6 лет назад +1

    I bought myself a used Metcal MX-500 (the old one without the display) for 150€, probably one of my best investments ever.

  • @cypherf0x
    @cypherf0x 6 лет назад

    People I know don't normally spend money on the hot air station, they just buy the rework station that has supplies for air and vacuum. The MBT-301 and MBT-350 being the primary two for all-in-one units.

  • @rafflesmaos
    @rafflesmaos 6 лет назад

    I've used Pace, JBC, Metcal myself. All can get a bit warm after extended periods of use. Some Hakko irons even come with thicker 'antibacterial' rubber grips to counteract that, just like Pace has them for the TD-100, and JBC for the T245.

  • @Rod_Knee
    @Rod_Knee 5 лет назад +1

    The PACE rework station I use at work is excellent - but it cost NZ$3,500.

  • @Arek_R.
    @Arek_R. 6 лет назад +5

    Could you please compare ts100 to 951?

  • @cyphre
    @cyphre 4 года назад +1

    While it seems that is a pricey hot air station from Pace, I'd be interested in your thoughts on the Pace ADS200, which also appears to compete with the JBC and Hakko 951.

  • @PropaneTreeFiddy
    @PropaneTreeFiddy 6 лет назад +3

    Been waiting for this video since you posted that comment

  • @sadakotube
    @sadakotube 6 лет назад

    Thank you for not buying into the hype.
    I thought you were going to promote it.
    But as a user of the old style hakkos. All I really care about is that it just works.

  • @23RaySan
    @23RaySan 6 лет назад +38

    Louis, i cant get your argument with fahrenheit. Or do you say,oh this part has a little bigger footprint, maybe i should crank up the the temperature 1°F...1°C would be too much. I rather have a faster ramp up time when i press the button. Just think a minute about that ;-)

    • @brainndamage
      @brainndamage 6 лет назад +28

      Ray San 0.5°C resolution is very common (0.1 or even 0.01°C on professional meters) so the "fahrenheit has twice the points" argument has no sense to me either. You don't even need 1°C resolution on a soldering iron, for christs sake, 5°C is more than you'll ever need.

    • @AttilaTheHun333333
      @AttilaTheHun333333 6 лет назад +8

      Jernej Jakob
      I don’t think Louis was talking about Fahrenheit being superior on soldering stations due to more steps, but in general. I could be wrong though. Also he seemed goofy about it...I don’t take these things too seriously anyway, it’s always a matter of taste and habits.

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  6 лет назад +9

      At least with air conditioning and heating I prefer Fahrenheit because you have more steps. 32 to 212 gives you more steps than 0 to 100. People will say but you can use decimal points to which I respond, what consumer heating and cooling solutions give you decimal point level control?

    • @truckerallikatuk
      @truckerallikatuk 6 лет назад +2

      Fahrenheit, like most old Imperial units is a human centric scale. Degrees science is more logical, and easier to work with, but less human relatable.

    • @truckerallikatuk
      @truckerallikatuk 6 лет назад +7

      You take a little joke about "Degrees frankenstein" and "Degrees science" and leap to a rant... Obviously someone who should watch AvE a bit more and chill :) This is why I like Britain so much. We use metric for 95% of stuff, and hang on to old measures for a few others. My cheap soldering station measures in degrees science. My car measures in MPH, but my work ride is in KPH, and I have to convert in my head as our speed limits are in MPH. Oh, and by the way, a mile is roughly 1.6km. I could google the exact amount, but I can't be arsed. I use both measures each day. I just personally find that for a quick guess, imperial works better, but for precision, metric all the way.

  • @atomicskull6405
    @atomicskull6405 6 лет назад

    Hakko FX951 is still a thermal iron though, for the absolute best look at the Metcal irons, these are what are used in aerospace. They use radio frequency energy to heat the tip instead of a thermal element. Temp control on the Metcals is by the curie point of the soldering tip, it absorbs the RF or not depending on the temperature of the tip, the temp control is based on physics rather than electronics. However you also have to change the tip to change the temperature as each tip has a fixed temp it operates at.
    High frequency AC induction irons aren't bad either, they typically have a hollow removable tip with a temperature probe that slides into the inside of the tip. Unlike thermal irons like the FX888 they use high frequency AC to heat the tip by induction. (there's a coil in the handset that heats the tip directly rather than using a thermal heater). The advantage of these is that you can find them in watt outputs equivalent to a soldering gun, but with temperature control. I use a Xytronic LF3200 for soldering 6mm gold plated DC connectors to 10 AWG stranded wire for example.

  • @PERILEX
    @PERILEX 6 лет назад +3

    The ERSA i-Tool is pretty much the best of both worlds... Separate heating-element and Tip but with the Sensor placed very close to the tip.
    Kinda sad that they aren't more popular outside of Europe because they do make some quite nice tools.
    www.farnell.com/datasheets/57060.pdf

  • @2216sammy
    @2216sammy Год назад

    I just bought the Hakko and it's by far the most impressive soldering station I've ever used . It's ridiculously good.

  • @dooronron69
    @dooronron69 6 лет назад +1

    great video Louis,
    I've not spent $256 on all the irons I own and 4 I've had over thirty years, I have about 8 irons and the dearest is a $50 weller, I'd like to afford better irons but so far the ones I've got have done everything I need, ok it may take a minute to heat up but hopefully I'll live around 80 years so 1 minute is fine

  • @freemansfreedom8595
    @freemansfreedom8595 6 лет назад +1

    Or if you really don't want to support knockoffs, that mini iron with a laptop charger you showed before seems an awesome alternative. It seems that with irons is like phones, to have something more than capable to hold it's weight you don't need to throw extra cash and certainly makes the old ones a joke in comparison.

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 6 лет назад

      Paya Chinglish true it's bcoz of asswipe fanboys that companies still have these old styles in production. Of hakko only produced fx 951s instead of the shit ton of lower end $100 models they could bring the 951 price down to $150.

  • @hardergamer
    @hardergamer 5 лет назад

    I just brought a JBC CD-2BE Soldering Station to replace my £9.49 Silverline 100w, and to my amazement the JBC is a wast of time! it could not solder 2mm solid copper wire to 0.3x25mm Nickel! The JBC has 130w but its not up to the job, I build EV's so I solder 2AWG and solid 2mm copper daily. What I'm thinking is wrong with all the newer irons is they don't have any mass to retain the heat, and the temps are far to low, I like my iron at 550-600C.

    • @davadoff
      @davadoff 29 дней назад +1

      I think that station is only capable of ~75w continuous. T470 is their temperature controlled high thermal demand iron, if you want that. Probably T245 can do it with large tip & a DDE station.

  • @kght222
    @kght222 6 лет назад +2

    i use a soldering iron about once a month, my weller wlc100 does fine for me, and it is only 40 bucks.

  • @felixstoger2800
    @felixstoger2800 6 лет назад +2

    I have the JBC and it is possible to change the iron out. It has a DIN (or similar looking) connector at the back

  • @kaptain_zero623
    @kaptain_zero623 6 лет назад

    I just want to know why Hakko sells the FX-950 analog station in every other marketing region EXCEPT for NA! They even show in the parts list, a 120v transformer, so it's not like they couldn't sell it here in NA.....

  • @rentabomb
    @rentabomb 5 лет назад +2

    After watching a few reviews on youtube I've just bought a KSGER station that is compatible with the Hakko T12 tips and it is the most comprehensive solder station I have ever used and allows you to calibrate multiple different tips. Not only that, the solder pencil is way better constructed and much more reliable than the knockoff pencils which can be very intermittent. Also the Hakko user interface is totally brain dead and a real pain to use. I have two of those knockoff fx-951 stations and they have now been put back in their boxes and are now sitting in storage. But I agree the fx-951 and other direct heat technology is far superior to the old style heater element sense technology. But you forgot to mention Metcal which came out over a decade ago which I believe uses RF induction heating and curie temperature monitoring directly at the tip. Also I might add I have a PACE sens-a-temp iron and it has been my workhorse iron for more than a decade. PACE maybe expensive but it's still a good reliable quality product and I believe they have a new direct heat technology iron. I believe you should support your local manufacturing as much as you can because a service based economy repairing stuff won't carry an economy and make it prosperous. Only value adding can do this. The chinese know this and is why they are so keen to steal manufacturing jobs from anyone they can.

  • @delos86
    @delos86 2 года назад

    Louis due all respect you should try ersa i-con soldering station. “Old technology”, but heats up very quick, has got amazing heat recovery and for me can easily compete with “new technology” jbcs.

  • @george8bitsworth
    @george8bitsworth 6 лет назад

    You don't sound like someone who has studied economics but you are right on about "saving jobs." The goal really is a strong economy. Just creating (or saving) jobs does not in itself make a strong economy.
    On a different subject, though, relations between China and the U.S. are a little strange and that could become problem when buying things from Asia.

  • @paulylewis8512
    @paulylewis8512 6 лет назад

    this is really helpful, since i can use the sweet Pace(mbt350, and the hot tweezers never burn our hands) rig at work, i want something better at home and want something cheaper than the full out station. while i like the pace, i am not married to a brand yet.
    the MBT 350 has 3 channels, our set-up uses one for the iron, one for the hot air or the solder sucker, and one for hot tweezers. this put 3 devices in one unit and helps with bench space.

  • @roerdomp16e
    @roerdomp16e 4 года назад +1

    hm I understand your point. I am not sure what the prices are in the US, but her in Holland, the basic JBC analogue (which I prefer) station only costs 229 Euro: www.eleshop.nl/jbc-bt-2bwa-soldeerstation-140watt.html
    For a T12 station I think I would trust the KSGER stations more than the fake Hakko station.

  • @dougthetechguy5005
    @dougthetechguy5005 6 лет назад

    I replaced all my soldering equipment recently I went with a Xytronic LF-1660ESD with curie heat technology it's a dual station and it comes with a micro pencil and micro soldering tweezers from Vetco Electronics delivered for $119.51 and then I bought the Quick 957DW+ hot air station from Adafruit for $112.96 so for $235 basically for all new equipment I feel like I got a hell of a value for the money.

  • @GMCLabs
    @GMCLabs 6 лет назад

    We had some nice station when I went to school at LTI. However the tips were so fucked, I got pissed, left class and when to radio shack. I bought the smallest tip they had and literally jammed it into a $10 iron,I had to put aluminum foil around the threads to make it even fit. Anyway the class was for SMT certification and I built my project with that hacked shitty iron and my board passed a microscope inspection. Of course I was 18 back then and could actually see that shit without magnification, so I'd have a hard time doing that today. I guess my point is its better to have a shitty iron with a good tip, then a $1000 station with tips so fucked they can't even be tinned.