Interesting, thank you. My father was an electronics engineer at the GE and the British Post Office back in the 60s. He taught me another method. You fan out the fray of wire strands on each wire like a spanish fan. You then cross the two fanned wires into each other so that the individual strands cross each other. Then you twist the result which makes the two wires mesh together, then you solder using your very nice method. And shrink sleeve them. Super mechanical strength.
@@YHYHHUH If you are using solder with flux included you shouldn't need it. However, not all solder is equal. So if you find your solder isn't flowing appropriately check the temp of your iron and if that is good put a small bit a flux on the wire before starting .
That's how I've done it, especially when soldering connectors to harnesses on vehicles. Seems stronger, I did learn what is presented in the video, have done it that way too when there is little chance of stress on the splice.
25 years since I was taught in the Army. Never really used it that much. I am building a diy CNC router and for my life I couldn't figure out what I was doing wrong couldn't get solder to stick or flow. Thank you. Clean and properly tinned iron and solder flows where it has been! Army didn't teach me shiznit! You though me more in less than 10 minutes than they did in two weeks. Just because you learn something doesn't mean you learned it right.
OK....I'm impressed and I would personally like to thank the U.S. Navy for your fine training. I thought that after you tinned the wires and then cut off the ends, you were going to "butt join" the wires and then solder them together but then I said " Impossible, because I'm the only one who can pull off that trick." The Sublime Prince of Humility" Toronto
Thank you for the vid. Soldering is my weak spot and Im trying to learn how. I was in the Navy also from 99 to 03. I got out as an HT2. Thank you for serving.
I don't recall my Navy electronics school teaching an overlap joint like this... but then again, I went through that school in 1985, so I could be wrong... :-) Thanks for your video!
really a thing of beauty this video right here. These days I perceive s such an intense need to talk and talk and talk in videos, as if it's an embarrasement to not reach the 10 minute mark. This was really lovely, just right. Thanks a lot
Awesome! Thank you so much. You wouldn’t believe the videos and such I’ve watched that just didn’t work for me whatsoever lol. Nobody ever pointed out that the solder just flows where it needs to. Just that info helped me out quite a bit. Also I could actually see what was going on in your video which helped. Thank you again for your time and lesson!
Great video, you make it very understandable!! I tend to add a bit of flux to my solder joints. I know it's not necessary, but it helps with the solder flow. Not a GOB of flux, just a little bit.
Hands-down better than all the other tinning videos I watched, thanks. Now onto that western union nassau splice video. Maybe link that up in the info on this video. I thought I’d leave the auto correct instead of correcting it to an a essay. wow it did it again N. A. S. A. Love your videos going to do a deep dive.
Bravo. Let me thank you for another tip you gave that i used extensively on my current project: use a dab of super/crazy glue to hold a component (female headers especially) in place so u can solder without the part falling out. That is simple yet brilliant and u may want to repeat that tip in a future video for all the new subs you're getting!
Love your soft, down-holmsy yet professional style. Great close ups & basic instruction w/o talking down. Nice radio voice too. I'll talk you up on my blog & socials. You'll see a Lil bump in subscribers (esp in CA & EU mkts. Keep it up.
When I solder a handheld joint like that, I always check for a cold joint caused by excessive shaking while the solder is cooling, If the solder is shiny, uniform and glossy it's ok but if more greyish, lumpy and dull it may be a cold joint.
I am so grateful for your video. I finally was able to tint my wires after trying for weeks. Again thanks for the time you gave to create this great tutorial. By any chance do you know how to make a battery interruptor? If so can you make a video, pls?
I like to leave the wire untwisted, meld one wire into the other so wires are integrated then flow both at the same time. It allows u to have a really small belly because solder almost stays the size of the insulation. And every strand has solder on it. But either way works. And yes, I have forgotten to put the shrink tube on first or sometimes with a short piece of wire the heat from heating the wire actually shrinks the tube prematurely 😵💫. That always sucks. Take care.
Hi Paul, Thanks for all the content. I’m a newb and find your explanations tend to resonate much easier than Ive found in other videos. Would you consider doing a video on low voltage (1.5v - 3.7v) circuits. I’ve been trying to make a simple astable multivibrator with a cmos TS555 ic but don’t really understand how to size capacitors or resistors. Best I can get is a solid led😏
I had a bad habbit of soldering both ends before putting on the shrink tubes. Similar thing happened when I made a flare end on copper tubes before putting on the flare nuts.
worst part of the flare nut is you think people have to be way too dumb to do something like that, and then you do it and realize how easy it is to forget xD
Hello dear man!! I would add a recommendation to put a shrinked sleeve on the metal clips, because they have sharp teeth, and the heat causes the insulation to be soft and then the teeth can damage the insulation... I understand this video is only for demonstration purposes, but that's an important point to mention. On this wonderful occasion, I would like to thank you very much for all the sweet activity you do for us here. I also want to wish you good health and success in all you do.
i used some Tin Wire Solder Tube to attach a broken chain cross and it worked lol. i wonder how long it will last. i assume the tensile strength would be pretty strong vs super weld glue.
Thank you for the tips. The Navy must of had excellent electronics training. A co-worker years back gave me a few of his Navy electronics training books and they are very detailed, he was in the Naval reserves.
Technology has always been a function of the Navy. They are right now working on developing a large-scale rail gun. Very cool stuff. I was a sonar tech, and electronics was a very big part of the training.
@@squidscrew1339 They books were issued by the United States Navy. There were a few Electronic books that my friend had gotten while in the Naval Reserves.
I want to marine tin some ends of copper wire in my boat along with some exposed 6 gauge battery terminal wire. Is there a preferred solder to tin this wire without losing any electrical conductivity? The electric solder I have at home has lead in it, and I would think the composition of lead added to the tin in the solder would reduce electrical conductivity to my battery terminals.
The problem with this process is that as the world moves to smaller & smaller electronics, preheating a smaller or thinner wire will start to melt the plastic coating, even char the wire itself. The method I use depends entirely on the thing I'm soldering. But I've begun to move towards micro-soldering as it looks more likely the world is moving in the direction. 35 years ago, wires were as thick as elephant trunks (I just fixed an old pioneer receiver from the mid 70s. It was a dream to work on since everything was huge). It's a culture shock to then crack open an iPhone where you literally (not figuratively) need a massive magnifying window or microscope to work on it.
Wonder if anybody could explain.....I wanted to solder some antenna coax a while back.....the outer mesh was not copper coloured but a silver coulor. Nothing I did would get solder to tim this outer coax....almost as if it was not copper. I gave up in the end.....any ideas guys.....I still have many meters ot this coax and I would rather not bin it. The inner conductor was the normal copper color....and tinned no problem.
Ok, dumb question for someone who has no soldering experience and wants an easier way out. Is there some kind of conductive glue that I could use to seal the twisted speaker cable?
What if you do all that and it still doesn’t work!? I’ve done exactly as you say now and when you put the blob of solder on the iron then put it to the wire it just goes hard and drops off and the solder wire I’m touching the wire with doesn’t do anything….the wire I’m soldering gets too hot for me to touch and starts melting the casing but still no capillary action, it just goes hard and chunky and does nothing (that’s what she said 😂)….then it just drops off the wire or will pull off easy…what’s going wrong?
I'm going to assume that attempting to use a soldering station with a fine tip meant for electronics work is not really the best tool for soldering wires?
when i tried to do this my wire did not heat up even though my solder works perfectly even when it did heat up when i touched the solder to the wire it started forming globs
How tf are you heating your wire up in seconds??? I leave the damn soldering iron on the wire for 45 seconds and the shit won't capillary. And yes I out a drop on for thermal transfer.
That little spot of solder on the tip to for heat transfer was a complete game changer. Thanks.
Interesting, thank you. My father was an electronics engineer at the GE and the British Post Office back in the 60s. He taught me another method. You fan out the fray of wire strands on each wire like a spanish fan. You then cross the two fanned wires into each other so that the individual strands cross each other. Then you twist the result which makes the two wires mesh together, then you solder using your very nice method. And shrink sleeve them. Super mechanical strength.
Very crucial question, should you use flux paste?
@@YHYHHUH If you are using solder with flux included you shouldn't need it. However, not all solder is equal. So if you find your solder isn't flowing appropriately check the temp of your iron and if that is good put a small bit a flux on the wire before starting
.
@@aaron1shmim What this guy said!
That's how I've done it, especially when soldering connectors to harnesses on vehicles. Seems stronger, I did learn what is presented in the video, have done it that way too when there is little chance of stress on the splice.
"Just a TOUCH of solder, for thermal transfer."
Huge 'lightbulb' monent right there.
Makes a difference
@@learnelectronics u
For me it was "thermal transfer" and "capillary effect". I have a large vocabulary, but little common sense. Just let the heat do its job.
@@browwiw Same I guess, I tend to overthink or overcomplicate things but for some reason this concept just didn't click.
The drop of solder for thermal transfer... this is the step i've been missing! makes so much sense, thank you!
Solder flows where solder's been...thank you so much for this. Things make more sense now. Keep up the good job.
I learned more in 5 minutes than I ever had from 10 - 15 minute videos on you tube
25 years since I was taught in the Army. Never really used it that much. I am building a diy CNC router and for my life I couldn't figure out what I was doing wrong couldn't get solder to stick or flow. Thank you. Clean and properly tinned iron and solder flows where it has been! Army didn't teach me shiznit! You though me more in less than 10 minutes than they did in two weeks. Just because you learn something doesn't mean you learned it right.
Glad to help
OK....I'm impressed and I would personally like to thank the U.S. Navy for your fine training. I thought that after you tinned the wires and then cut off the ends, you were going to "butt join" the wires and then solder them together but then I said " Impossible, because I'm the only one who can pull off that trick." The Sublime Prince of Humility" Toronto
Just tried this and was surprised how much quicker/easier it was. Thank you my tinned wires no longer look like garbage!
Translating a file into Spanish about electronics, I found your video and got a pretty good idea of what tin the wire or cable is about. Thank you!
Thank you for the vid. Soldering is my weak spot and Im trying to learn how. I was in the Navy also from 99 to 03. I got out as an HT2. Thank you for serving.
Another great tip from the Naval archives. Thanks for this one!
I love the soldering videos. Short & to the point.
Best 5 minutes on the subject I've seen. Appreciate the camera angle close in and helpful voiceover. Thanks!
That was so clear and easy; really nice sharp and stable video too. Thank you!
I went from no 1 skill to the better way in 5 mins.
Nice job.
Good video.
Holy crap. I've been getting into guitar modifications and this video is a godsend. Thank you.
I kept asking myself wtf are people soldering on a guitar, the strings?
Then it struck me: an electric guitar 😂
I don't recall my Navy electronics school teaching an overlap joint like this... but then again, I went through that school in 1985, so I could be wrong... :-) Thanks for your video!
really a thing of beauty this video right here.
These days I perceive s such an intense need to talk and talk and talk in videos, as if it's an embarrasement to not reach the 10 minute mark.
This was really lovely, just right. Thanks a lot
Awesome! Thank you so much. You wouldn’t believe the videos and such I’ve watched that just didn’t work for me whatsoever lol. Nobody ever pointed out that the solder just flows where it needs to. Just that info helped me out quite a bit. Also I could actually see what was going on in your video which helped. Thank you again for your time and lesson!
A very good example of how to do the tinning right and the video right!
earned a sub by adding in the part where you tinned two wires and joined them together!!! 🤩🤩
finally thanks so much for this i have been doing wrong all this time and struggling but no more thanks to you
You are awesome. Thank you for this plain and simple instruction. Go Army.
Thanks for sharing! Clear and no nonsense video, just the way i like them!
The thermal transfer of heat does all the magic !!!
Great video, you make it very understandable!! I tend to add a bit of flux to my solder joints. I know it's not necessary, but it helps with the solder flow. Not a GOB of flux, just a little bit.
Flux is always good!
Hands-down better than all the other tinning videos I watched, thanks. Now onto that western union nassau splice video. Maybe link that up in the info on this video. I thought I’d leave the auto correct instead of correcting it to an a essay. wow it did it again N. A. S. A. Love your videos going to do a deep dive.
Bravo. Let me thank you for another tip you gave that i used extensively on my current project: use a dab of super/crazy glue to hold a component (female headers especially) in place so u can solder without the part falling out. That is simple yet brilliant and u may want to repeat that tip in a future video for all the new subs you're getting!
Thanks buddy. I'm glad one of my tips helped.
Good
My soldering instructor at Keesler AFB made us remove insulation without bird caging the wire. Super tedious but made for a solid connection
Love your soft, down-holmsy yet professional style. Great close ups & basic instruction w/o talking down. Nice radio voice too. I'll talk you up on my blog & socials. You'll see a Lil bump in subscribers (esp in CA & EU mkts. Keep it up.
Thanks
Fantastic video, just the essentials, but done right - thank you very much for making this.
thanks for the tip...never been a solder person but have needed to many times and always made a goopy mess
!!!
Dielectric silicone on connection before shrink rap slipped over. Is something I have done in past. Keeps moisture out even better...
This is why youtube is awesome. Thanks
0:38 “oh God, I am going to hope you twist it” I lost it hahahaha. Good work pal thanks
Absolutely delicious! Thanks from the UK. I needed this as I'm just about to tin my first ever wire. Probably badly but this helps - cheers.
Thank you. Some of the guys I know are use the blue flame on the lighter but I think yours was better.
".. oh god, I'm just going to assume you would twist it first!" -- too funny!! ROFL!!
When I solder a handheld joint like that, I always check for a cold joint caused by excessive shaking while the solder is cooling, If the solder is shiny, uniform and glossy it's ok but if more greyish, lumpy and dull it may be a cold joint.
Shiny is the best evidence always
Thank you! Now to practice, practice!
That rhyme is next level, man... got me all 🤯
Be sure to use thin soldering wire. I started with thick wire and had a heck of a time.
How thin for 22awg wire?
1 mm or thinner?
Yea.... Thats sweet. Im just getring into this. Very helpful. Thanks.
Gonna try this to make some shorter dupont jumpers for breadboarding! Thank you!
Nice one dude. Quick, concise and helped a lot. 👍👍
I am so grateful for your video. I finally was able to tint my wires after trying for weeks. Again thanks for the time you gave to create this great tutorial.
By any chance do you know how to make a battery interruptor? If so can you make a video, pls?
Exactly what I was looking for. Thanks!
Thanks for the tips & want more
Excellent video 👍❤️
Nice & Clean. Man you Rock🤘🤘
That's Right USN, World's Finest Navy! RM/ET2
Fair winds and following seas shipmate! STS2
I like to leave the wire untwisted, meld one wire into the other so wires are integrated then flow both at the same time. It allows u to have a really small belly because solder almost stays the size of the insulation. And every strand has solder on it. But either way works. And yes, I have forgotten to put the shrink tube on first or sometimes with a short piece of wire the heat from heating the wire actually shrinks the tube prematurely 😵💫. That always sucks. Take care.
Super helpful
Thank you!
well. that's how I do it. and I figured it out myself. just always done it that way! great video..
Exactly! Thank you! That's what I was doing wrong
Good job
Is it good if I dip the exposed wires to flux first? I'm new to soldering, your videos have been really helpful, thank you
Hi Paul, Thanks for all the content. I’m a newb and find your explanations tend to resonate much easier than Ive found in other videos. Would you consider doing a video on low voltage (1.5v - 3.7v) circuits. I’ve been trying to make a simple astable multivibrator with a cmos TS555 ic but don’t really understand how to size capacitors or resistors. Best I can get is a solid led😏
Very nice.
Hey,
your new Indian sub here.
I had a bad habbit of soldering both ends before putting on the shrink tubes. Similar thing happened when I made a flare end on copper tubes before putting on the flare nuts.
worst part of the flare nut is you think people have to be way too dumb to do something like that, and then you do it and realize how easy it is to forget xD
Hello dear man!!
I would add a recommendation to put a shrinked sleeve on the metal clips, because they have sharp teeth, and the heat causes the insulation to be soft and then the teeth can damage the insulation...
I understand this video is only for demonstration purposes, but that's an important point to mention.
On this wonderful occasion, I would like to thank you very much for all the sweet activity you do for us here.
I also want to wish you good health and success in all you do.
Thanks! I appreciate it!
amazing videos
Glad you like them!
Nice video! Very helpful!
i used some Tin Wire Solder Tube to attach a broken chain cross and it worked lol. i wonder how long it will last. i assume the tensile strength would be pretty strong vs super weld glue.
Thank you.
well explained
Very crucial question, should you use flux paste?
Thank you for the tips.
The Navy must of had excellent electronics training. A co-worker years back gave me a few of his Navy electronics training books and they are very detailed, he was in the Naval reserves.
Technology has always been a function of the Navy. They are right now working on developing a large-scale rail gun. Very cool stuff. I was a sonar tech, and electronics was a very big part of the training.
Can you name those books & author?
@@squidscrew1339 They books were issued by the United States Navy. There were a few Electronic books that my friend had gotten while in the Naval Reserves.
Very useful video! thanks.
Thanks for the helpful tutorial... subbed....
I want to marine tin some ends of copper wire in my boat along with some exposed 6 gauge battery terminal wire. Is there a preferred solder to tin this wire without losing any electrical conductivity? The electric solder I have at home has lead in it, and I would think the composition of lead added to the tin in the solder would reduce electrical conductivity to my battery terminals.
The problem with this process is that as the world moves to smaller & smaller electronics, preheating a smaller or thinner wire will start to melt the plastic coating, even char the wire itself. The method I use depends entirely on the thing I'm soldering. But I've begun to move towards micro-soldering as it looks more likely the world is moving in the direction. 35 years ago, wires were as thick as elephant trunks (I just fixed an old pioneer receiver from the mid 70s. It was a dream to work on since everything was huge). It's a culture shock to then crack open an iPhone where you literally (not figuratively) need a massive magnifying window or microscope to work on it.
Thanks.
In the absence of solder, could you merely wrap the ends of the wire in aluminum foil? Just to stick it in a screw terminal?
What model soldering iron are you using in this video?
Is that rosin core? Some say we should use Rosen core but Harris, with the high silver content, isn’t Rosen core.
I've been looking all over youtube on how to correctly solder stranded wire to solid wire. Any thoughts?
What's the best wattage for a soldering iron in this case? I have a 15W most likely for PC boards. It _worked_ but it was sooooo slow..
How much is your soldering iron watts ?
What about for 10awg cable is the theory the same🤔 thanks G
I actually think it's easier to clamp the soldering iron and run the solder and wire along the tip
great!
My tip is a pointed tip, can I use that or should I change it to a flat tip? Can I make a flat tip with a nail?
What is the size of the wire that your are using. I mean much mm?
Wonder if anybody could explain.....I wanted to solder some antenna coax a while back.....the outer mesh was not copper coloured but a silver coulor.
Nothing I did would get solder to tim this outer coax....almost as if it was not copper.
I gave up in the end.....any ideas guys.....I still have many meters ot this coax and I would rather not bin it.
The inner conductor was the normal copper color....and tinned no problem.
nice video. can this be used on microcontrollers like arduinos?
Yes
The tinning should always cover the copper all the way to the plastic/rubber, otherwise it will oxidise.
Ok, dumb question for someone who has no soldering experience and wants an easier way out. Is there some kind of conductive glue that I could use to seal the twisted speaker cable?
Not that I'm aware of.
Go Navy
What if you do all that and it still doesn’t work!? I’ve done exactly as you say now and when you put the blob of solder on the iron then put it to the wire it just goes hard and drops off and the solder wire I’m touching the wire with doesn’t do anything….the wire I’m soldering gets too hot for me to touch and starts melting the casing but still no capillary action, it just goes hard and chunky and does nothing (that’s what she said 😂)….then it just drops off the wire or will pull off easy…what’s going wrong?
Can you take a quick video of you doing the technique on your phone and send it to me?
FIRST TO WATCH!
I'm going to assume that attempting to use a soldering station with a fine tip meant for electronics work is not really the best tool for soldering wires?
when i tried to do this my wire did not heat up even though my solder works perfectly
even when it did heat up when i touched the solder to the wire it started forming globs
No mention about flux. Flux or not to flux?? Flux core solder?? What's up??
Do you use flux or without?
Depends. Rule of thumb though is always use flux. It makes solder flow better.
@@learnelectronics I got thanks
How tf are you heating your wire up in seconds??? I leave the damn soldering iron on the wire for 45 seconds and the shit won't capillary. And yes I out a drop on for thermal transfer.
I have the same problem and it's driving me crazy, did you solve this?
@@nbenja3 nope. I will try again when the weather warms up...most my needs are in my car.
@@brianshissler3263 so I have found out that my solder is really shit quality so I picked some up with flux today and it's much better
@@nbenja3 i probably have crap supplies too. I will get some better stuff in a few months then. Thanks for the advice
Should I "Tin a wire" for cripping on a Female Disconnect on to my 16 gauge wire?