Lead Solder And Toxic Exposure At Work

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
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Комментарии • 241

  • @robber576
    @robber576 2 года назад +46

    63/37 is not your " basic 60/40 solder"
    That exact mix of 63/37 makes the solder eutectic meaning it does not have a melting range but a melting point and so consequently it also has a solidifying point in stead of a range.
    In other words, when the solder cools down it solidifies all in one in stead of being malleable (past like) for a while before becoming completly hard.
    That way it prevents a "cold joint" due to moving the joint while cooling down.

    • @daveogarf
      @daveogarf 2 года назад +2

      (*instead)

    • @robber576
      @robber576 2 года назад +5

      @@daveogarf thats ok, if you now make a post in dutch language without spelling errors 😂

    • @jeepien
      @jeepien 2 года назад +1

      @@daveogarf you can edit, you know.

    • @eric_d
      @eric_d 2 года назад +1

      @@daveogarf If you're going to point out "instead" being wrong, how did you miss "past" instead of "paste" a few words later? :-P

    • @eric_d
      @eric_d 2 года назад +1

      @@robber576 I haven't studied Dutch in over 20 years. I should pick it back up again. I never learned it fully, but I could understand basic conversations. I learned more Dutch than I learned Tagalog, but not as much as I learned Spanish and Russian. Languages are fun.

  • @mfx1
    @mfx1 2 года назад +16

    Contrary to common belief there is NO lead in leaded solder fumes, lead vaporizes at 1749 °C (3180 °F) , no soldering iron gets that hot, the only fumes are from the flux and generally the flux used for lead free solder is more harmful than the flux used for leaded solder I'm 52 have been soldering since my early teens and have never really taken any special precautions, my lead levels have been tested and are perfectly normal.

    • @mayie2lkna
      @mayie2lkna 7 месяцев назад

      Every academic source I've googled seem to state the contrary but everyone on reddit seems to swear by lead solder. Vaporized lead seems unlikeky leaded solder but lead oxide fumes can still be produced according to papers I've read on MIT and Uni of Warwick (they're popular google hits).

    • @mfx1
      @mfx1 7 месяцев назад

      @@mayie2lkna The Uni of Warwick think isn't a scientific paper it's generic H&S information that repeated elsewhere. Lead oxide doesn't form unless you heat lead to 600 deg C way above normal soldering temperature.

  • @Toby1952
    @Toby1952 2 года назад +20

    I've been soldering for much of my life, dating back to the late 60s when I became an Amateur Radio operator. I'm 69 now, and starting to feel my age 🙂 During that time I've never used any fume extractors or any other special equipment when soldering, although nowadays I turn on a fan when I'm soldering to blow the flux fumes out of my face. And I don't eat when I'm soldering. Anyway, a couple of years ago I got to thinking about lead exposure (I have always used 60/40 solder) so I asked my Primary Care Physician to check my lead levels. The test came back at the bottom (almost undetectable), so I was relieved. Of course, that doesn't mean I haven't been exposed at a low level of lead all these years, and it's my understanding that lead doesn't leave the body very fast, especially in the case of bones and teeth. Spurred on by this video, even at this late stage in my life I'm now actually taking more precautions when soldering, and will be setting up a fume extractor soon.

    • @iceberg789
      @iceberg789 2 года назад

      they end up in bones and brains. not sure they always maintain trace in blood.

  • @SchrodingerDeeps
    @SchrodingerDeeps 2 года назад +18

    As a child I remember a kid trying to convince me his walls tasted sweet. I remember this HUGE gap where he had (over aeons) ate the paint of the wall. He didn’t do well in school, but being a child I never made the connection.
    Many moons later and I’m an adult learning about the things you demonstrate here - someone mentioned kids get brain damage from lead paint because it tastes sweet.
    Horrible flash into the time fog! I’m glad we have learned lessons and paint like that is avoided now - but I totally agree about the precautions with older wires etc in particular!

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +4

      Old wallpaper often contained arsenic, which does indeed taste sweet. Takes a while to build up to toxic levels but could certainly damage a child's brain and nervous system.

  • @CookingWithCows
    @CookingWithCows 2 года назад +12

    But then, the most toxicity at work usually comes from..the people, not materials.

  • @patricklozito7042
    @patricklozito7042 2 года назад +40

    I'm almost 73 years old. I've been soldering with lead solder for 60 years. I'm also a gunsmith, licensed in the City of New York for many years. Needless to say, I have handled a lot of lead. My blood work has never had ANY concerns with lead levels of any kind.

    • @jeffreyyoung4104
      @jeffreyyoung4104 2 года назад +5

      I too, have used solder from my early teens till now, and still do, at 65. No lead problems with me either. My worries were from the flux, especially the zinc fluxes.

    • @ScottGrammer
      @ScottGrammer 2 года назад +4

      I've been soldering with real (lead/tin) solder for 47 years myself. No problems with lead in my blood, per the bloodwork results of last exam. Of course, I don't eat the stuff....

    • @donovanpl
      @donovanpl 2 года назад +3

      My brother had a vial of mercury from school. I used to play with it too. I've been using lead solder too for years. No issues so far.

    • @TheNuclearPinball
      @TheNuclearPinball 2 года назад

      Do you have numbers? I have found 3 studies from industrial solders that have conflicting results. Also for industry the action level is 25 ug/dl while what is being considered normal is being lowered to 2 ug/dl. I think that to be considered non hazard there should be no measurable increase from soldering. I can send the studies I have found to anyone who is interested.

    • @acefighterpilot
      @acefighterpilot Год назад

      Standard blood tests don't screen for lead and even if you were tested specifically for lead, it's not like all of the lead that has entered your body circulates in your blood forever. It primarily collects in your bones and brain. Unless you had a major lead exposure, lead isn't going to show in your blood even just a couple weeks after it entered your body.

  • @onlyrick
    @onlyrick 2 года назад +13

    For years I used a hot-type machine called a Ludlow that cast lines of type for making rubber stamps. I still have some jeans with lead splatters on them. I never thought about the lead at all, though back then it was still in the gasoline. Probably shaved a few points off my I.Q., but I wasn't gonna be a genius anyway! You, on the other hand, need to take care. Love your ideas and adventures.

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 2 года назад +10

    "The Poisoners' Handbook" is a fascinating history book about the development of forensic medicine and the search for scientific methods to determine the cause of poisonings, whether accidentally or purposeful.

  • @BobDarlington
    @BobDarlington 2 года назад +25

    I get tested about every two years. I'm on year 38 of soldering. A lot. So far I'm below detectable limits. Always wash hands afterwards! Don't eat or drink at the bench.

    • @Firefoxfifty
      @Firefoxfifty 2 года назад +1

      We used to get tested too. We used to wear a air monitor on us for about a working day and go for a blood test.

  • @WorBlux
    @WorBlux 2 года назад +10

    Lead/tin solder is just soo much better, especially for hand assembly, or repair/rework. I also like the Hakko 951 as the station, it's got better temp regulation, and the includes the option for a switch stand, that turns the iron off when it's in the stand, reducing fumes and increasing tip life.

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 2 года назад +18

    Arsenic, which was once used to make dyes for wallpaper, also tastes sweet, and children would poison themselves by licking the wallpaper. Similar to kids eating sweet-tasting paint chips and getting lead poisoning. When we were were kids we used split-shot, small round BB-like lead weights with a slit in them that you could squeeze onto the fishing line; we were supposed to use pliers for this, but if we didn't have pliers, or the pliers had frozen solid with rust while sitting in the tackle box, we used our teeth! Nowadays, most fishing weights and lures aren't made with lead anymore.

    • @SchrodingerDeeps
      @SchrodingerDeeps 2 года назад

      I did the same with the fishing weights, I can never remember using a pliers!

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +1

      @@SchrodingerDeeps , I was happier when Water Gremlin came out with "Rubber-Core" sinkers where the line fits into a groove in the sinker and you twist the rubber core to hold the weight on the line, without compressing or kinking the line and weakening it. I used to make my own sinkers, from 1 ounce to 12 ounce; and Diamond Jjgs for catching bluefish (still have the molds). I even made molds out of Plaster of Paris with which to make copies of favorite bucktail jigs and tin squids that weren't being made any more.

    • @6F6G
      @6F6G 2 года назад

      Arsenic made a green dye used for wallpaper. Bacteria could release the arsenic from the dye as arsine gas AsH3. One theory was that Napoleon was poisoned by arsine from wallpaper while he was in exile on St Helena.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +1

      @@6F6G , my wife lives in fear of my "arsine" gas!

    • @scottyanke655
      @scottyanke655 2 года назад +1

      Thank you for reminding me about the lead fishing weights. Never used a pliers on them, just my plain fingers to squeeze them. That and the lead soft-tip bbs I used to use hunting squirrels. Those too were handled directly by hand when put in the bb rifle.

  • @mark314158
    @mark314158 2 года назад +8

    When I studied chemistry ('72-7) we were wary of mercury vapour and benzene. However everyone had squeeze bottles of acetone. And so many exotic organic compounds... Some must have been deadly - still here I am😁

    • @loberd09
      @loberd09 2 года назад +1

      Same deal when I studied chemistry (‘05-9). Chemical squeeze bottles of flammable chemicals. And I’m still a chemist and the same applies (I also do have a small plastic tube of waste Hg as a fidget on desk). Also I really prefer Pb solder.

  • @martincowie4520
    @martincowie4520 2 года назад +2

    Have you done a video on Tin Whiskers? Mercury vapor under UV light is also scary...

  • @emilycs8823
    @emilycs8823 2 года назад +4

    Beryllium is another one to be aware of and Its probably the worst of them. (It causes berylliosis) Its was and still is common as HV insulator, and it was also used in old heatsink compounds. I.e. may be found in ceramic insulators, things like magnetrons. Id be cautious with old heatsink compound.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +1

      I already knew that beryllium was used in beryllium copper alloys which you will often see used for leaf springs and switch contacts and perhaps military grade tube sockets, but I wasn't aware that it was used in heatsink compound. As far as I knew that stuff was all silicone based.

    • @stephenbell9257
      @stephenbell9257 2 года назад

      It's beryllium oxide that is used in insulators not metallic beryllium. Beryllium oxide has excellent insulating and thermal transfer properties, second only to diamond. However, crushed beryllium oxide dust is carcinogenic when inhaled.

  • @suzysheer66
    @suzysheer66 2 года назад +3

    The old timers, who worked on the dew line, and i learned electronics from used drums of carbon tetrachloride to wash equipment in. They seemed to be mostly ok. :)

  • @opticaltrace4382
    @opticaltrace4382 2 года назад +2

    Bit off topic Fran but how is your sense of smell/taste now after Covid?

  • @charlesspringer4709
    @charlesspringer4709 2 года назад +2

    Your 63/37 is eutectic and does not do cold joints compared to 60/40. I must say I have NEVER heard of anyone poisoning themselves with solder in electronics including people who always held solder in the mouth like Steve Wozniak, or worked at a PCB plant with solder wave equipment, and we never used fans or anything like that. And this is elemental lead. It is not soluble in water or fats. I hear of it from lead smelting but not lead mining. Same for mercury. You need a compound that is soluble. But I am probably out of date. I am much more concerned about solvents - and old paint with lead compounds, red or white. Nonetheless, thanks for the video.

  • @tvtoms
    @tvtoms 2 года назад +8

    In the 80's Methylene Chloride was used in large amounts in circuit board manufacturing. Pretty much the entire plant had vats of it. They literally had it on tap so workers could fill their small pots with it and use it at their stations. I recall pretty elaborate health related paperwork in being hired, and supplemental to that too but wasn't around for too awful long. Long enough to have gotten MC on my fingers in small amounts regularly. You would use a cotton bud / q-tip dipped in MC to clear off any epoxy you had accidentally gotten on a pad while you were touching up where the silk screened epoxy was insufficient. It takes almost nothing but the slightest touch and MC will wick right into you.
    In the silk screening process if a worker screwed up an entire important board, they could walk over and dip it into the large open vat of MC. Come out clean as a whistle, that is for dang sure. When I think of it now, I shudder a bit.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +4

      Chlorine and chlorine compounds are particularly dangerous to organic life. Chlorine is a strong oxidizer and its affinity for oxygen means that it will damage almost anything and everything. It's no surprise that chlorine and related gasses were once used in warfare. Nowadays we worry about exposure to things like PCB's which are chlorinated biphenyls, and solvents such as trichloroethylene and triflorochloroethane. Dioxin, which is the most carcinogenic organic substance known to man, is also a chlorine compound. For what it is worth, I almost never use chlorine bleach for cleaning anything. I've had excellent results, and so far no incidents of damaging anything, by using an oxygen bleach, such as oxyclean crystals in water which break down into sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) and oxygen

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain 2 года назад +1

      MC was common in Aerospace and other Industrial processes up until around 1997 or so.
      I've heard stories of a plant in El Salvador making bushings for (well known Aerospace company), pots of MC and the ladies at the (post turning process cleaning station) passing out (fainting) after so many hours (non PVA gloves vanish and they're hold the wet parts in barely covered hands)
      A machine builder in the US where a few brave souls used MC to clean adhesive residue off their (bare hands). No thanks use lanolin instead, (not the gritty stuff, the smooth stinky version)

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +1

      @@RetroCaptain , ah, Lanolin, it sounds so soft and lovely ---- but women in particular dont like to be informed that Lanolin is actually rendered fat from lambs and sheep!

    • @johnmccallum8512
      @johnmccallum8512 2 года назад +2

      @@goodun2974 Lanolin is the byproduct of raw wool scouring it used to earn a goodly sum for the city of Bradford in The West Riding of Yorkshire, they would get it from the sewer works and ship it to the cosmetics companys.

    • @cndbrn7975
      @cndbrn7975 2 года назад

      @@goodun2974 I think you mean Choline and Benzine but you're spot on with. PCB's they were supposed to be banned in the late 70's but they're in everything we use, our drugs, food (butter) everything. They're in our system as well, i think this is an important factor when dealing with gain of function research.

  • @jeepien
    @jeepien 2 года назад +2

    When I was young and stupid I used to light cigarettes right off the (tinned) tip of my Weller soldering gun. I'm now old and not quite as stupid, and no longer smoke. Luckily didn't poison myself, and wised up a good deal in the decades since.

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 2 года назад +10

    Lead boils at over 700゚F but but tin/lead solder is formulated to melt at far below those temperature, and so virtually no lead is actually outgassed when you are soldering. Some people find ordinary rosin flux fumes to be quite irritating. I don't, and I have found no evidence of rosin fumes actually carrying lead or being a major health hazard, but ideally I guess you should avoid breathing it if you can by using an exhaust fan. Lead-free solder fluxes, however, contain organic acids, and that stuff is nasty and harsh to breathe. Unlike rosin flux, lead free fluxes are also conductive and corrosive, and must be thoroughly cleaned from the circuit board or it will cause problems down the road. Lead free solder also breaks down, and crystallizes and degrades at extremes of temperature (both hot and cold; Google the phenomenon known as "tin pest"), And the higher temperatures required for lead free solder, in conjunction with the corrosive acidic fluxes, will beat the heck out of the tips of your soldering iron in short order. I use only leaded solder. BTW, I made my own fishing weights and lures from molten lead as a boy and have come through unscathed.
    PS, Liquid Mercury actually sublimates and turns to a gas at room temperature and the vapors are more dangerous and more easily absorbed then the liquid metal is. Most of the environmental Mercury that builds up in the food chain and concentrates in larger predatory fishes actually originates from coal burning power plants. The exhaust is carried on prevailing winds to the coast and comes down with rain, where it is then acted upon by micro organisms and turned into Methyl Mercury which is highly neurotoxic and easily absorbed into fatty tissues.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 2 года назад +3

      There is strong epidemiological evidence that rosin flux causes asthma; that in the 80s and 90s, when this research was performed, almost half of the electronics workers had asthma symptoms, IN SPITE of air extraction and filtration - even exposure to minor trace amounts leads to respiratory disease over a long enough time. However, they did not find an increased incidence of any lead-related diseases.
      This shouldn't be a surprise. "Colophony disease" was known anecdotally before.
      No mechanism by which flux would cause asthma has been conclusively demonstrated, but keep in mind, plausible mechanisms are, more often than not, misleading. Just because something has been demonstrated step by step in a rodent doesn't mean things work the same in a human, and vice versa.
      Uhmmmmmm what do you think rosin consists of though? Abietic acid, acetic acid. Organic acids. The whole "lead-free fluxes" diatribe is complete nonsense.

    • @Liofa73
      @Liofa73 2 года назад

      I know a guy who got throat cancer in his 50s, wasn't a smoker, physicians assumed it was because he worked every day with solder as he was an electronics guy.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +1

      @@SianaGearz , well, for what it's worth, I am 64 and not asthmatic. The difference between breathing rosin fumes and lead-free fluxes is quite obvious to anyone who has worked with both. I didn't say rosin fumes were harmless, but I'd rather be exposed to that than leadfree flux. The corrosive and electrically conductive properties of leadfree fluxes are also well known. It's a little like alcohol versus other solvents; I and many others might be blase' about handling isopropyl alcohol and breathing a little of the fumes, but MEK and Acetone are another story, and I use those only when I must, preferably outside if possible.
      Leadfree solder is a scam, as far as I'm concerned, adopted industry-wide as an end-run around the possibility of manufacturers being forced to have a plan for responsibly collecting and recycling all of their products. Leadfree solder also works poorly and degrades, and the resulting broken connections shorten the lifespan of products, consigning them to the dumpster prematurely. Which is good for the manufacturer's financial bottom line, but bad for the environment. It's not as if removing lead from electronics manufacturing makes those discarded products "harmless" to the planet.

    • @Simonjose7258
      @Simonjose7258 2 года назад

      Are you sure? 🤔😅✌

  • @zedcarr6128
    @zedcarr6128 2 года назад +2

    I can't even buy leaded solder for home use from my electronics supplier here in the UK, Rapid Electronics, so I went over to lead free solder. 99.5% tin, 0.5% copper and a trace of cobalt.
    Granted, it feels different to work with after 35+ years of using 60/40, but after adjusting my soldering station to find that sweet spot over the first few days of using it, I don't notice much of a difference to the leaded solder I use at work now TBH.

    • @samuelchamberlain2584
      @samuelchamberlain2584 2 года назад

      Yes I have used lead free for many years now . I have seen 60/40 still available in uk . I use an air purifier with hepa filter .

    • @AndrewGillard
      @AndrewGillard 2 года назад

      Rapid's "Premium" lead-free solder (Sn 95.5%, Ag 3.9%, Cu 0.6%) seems to be a bit nicer than their regular lead-free solder (Sn 99.3%, Cu 0.7%), though unfortunately it's also more expensive (£29/100g). I just have a small 12g tube of the premium stuff (~~85-6610~~ (moved to 85-6869, £6)), which was only available in 1mm, but that size is a cheaper way to evaluate if the pricier stuff is worth it.
      I don't notice _any difference whatsoever_ between their premium lead-free and their leaded solder. Mind you, I barely notice a difference with their _regular_ lead-free stuff 🤷‍♀️
      Rapid also sell an even fancier (“Produced under license from Fuji”) alloy: Sn 96.43%, Ag 3.0%, Cu 0.5%, Ni 0.06%, Ge 0.01%. I'd love to try that, but they only sell it on 500g rolls for £140, which is a bit much for my limited use!
      That's actually the same price as 500g of Premium Lead-Free, but that one is also sold on slightly more reasonable 100g spools...
      I really don't understand people's complaints about lead-free solder 😕 I'm wondering if their only experience of lead-free solder was some crappy stuff decades ago before the composition was fine tuned - or just crappy stuff from eBay or something? I've received some absolutely terrible _leaded_ solder from eBay/AliExpress in the past, so terrible lead-free solder is probably floating around as well!
      That whole "lead-free flux is bad for you/will eat your children!" thing seems to be nonsense as well. Most of the solder I see for sale - leaded and lead-free - is RMA, i.e. rosin, and if you check the datasheets/MSDSs, it's exactly the same 🤷‍♀️
      Yes it's possible to get lead-free solder with nasty component-eating flux, but the same is true for leaded solder...

  • @JimHendrickson
    @JimHendrickson 2 года назад +1

    Things I never thought I'd learn on Franlab: what Pb and Hg smell and taste like. Don't try this at home.

  • @lurkersmith810
    @lurkersmith810 2 года назад +1

    The problem with all those chemicals that cause slow neural damage is it can turn you into an Internet troll without your even realizing it.

  • @6F6G
    @6F6G 2 года назад +1

    Lead free solder doesn't flow very well.
    Very small quantities of organic mercury compounds such as dimethyl mercury can be deadly.

  • @Exciting__Electronics
    @Exciting__Electronics 2 года назад +1

    I'm in my 30s and will only use leaded solder as lead free is rubbish and takes twice as long to do anything, it will be a sad day in history when lead solder is banned.

  • @maryrafuse3851
    @maryrafuse3851 2 года назад +1

    The old time radio station chief engineers often smoked. I recall one defying gravity with a long line of ash, sticking to his cigarette, and the ash hovering over a wired chassis. Rest in peace Don Holmes 580 AM CJFX Antigonish, Nova Scotia. They were I believe the second station in North America to use a 10.000 Watt Nautel AM transmitter.

  • @NoahSpurrier
    @NoahSpurrier 2 года назад +2

    I used to work a lot with solder. Sometimes I used a fume extractor. I never ate around my workstation. For an unrelated health issue I had my lead level tested in my blood. It came back low normal.

  • @beefchicken
    @beefchicken 2 года назад +3

    Yes! A pragmatic approach to hazardous substances is the best, especially when working with vintage gear where lead, asbestos and PCBs are unavoidable. Understand the risks, and develop a personal protocol.

  • @elliotsmith9812
    @elliotsmith9812 2 года назад +2

    We had a barrel of Freon with a loose pump in the hole on top. This we would put into ~1 L bottles (and all over the floor). These were used to brush the Freon onto cards to remove flux. Always fun to send the newbies into the Freon room with a styrophone cup, which would dissolve instantly on contact with Freon. When asked how to dispose of contaminated Freon, my boss said, "Pour it on rocks out back. It will evaporate." I love to see people today always going for the PPE.

  • @scottdrake5159
    @scottdrake5159 2 года назад +1

    SN100C! (The Nihon stuff, Allied manufactures it, though Kester has a "K100" that is not as good.) I like the "FastCore" flux when I get flux-core wire, but there's choices. Which brings me to flux: You're right to bring it up. Flux fumes BAD, idle iron is just an unhealthy chemical candle.
    I built my station lead-free from the start, which is kind of necessary, and have a separate station for taking apart vintage equipment. Btw, since you like your eutectic 63/37, SN100C is eutectic!
    One last PSA about benzene, etc. Wonderful advice about volatiles. Minimize exposure, or wear throw-away gear and a P95 or better mask. Minimizing exposure being the easier option. Also benzene et al turns up in weird places, like 99% isopropyl alcohol; it has no health utility whatsoever, btw (the 70% stuff from the pharmacy is optimal for healthcare), but the industrial sizes and mixtures use "drying agents", hence the MSDS sheet you get with it. It preserves the proportions of the solvent, but it's extremely toxic; don't touch without gloves.
    And great advice about military hardware; also applies to civilian firearms (sights) and _to hospital antiques_! It's too bad wide-spectrum detectors are so expensive, but they really are the price of admission for vintage gear. Got to have β, γ, and X-ray detection.
    Long post, but there's a lot of stuff that you wouldn't expect to be dangerous, especially if you didn't buy it new with its safety literature. End PSA. Thanks for the great vid Fran.

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics 2 года назад +3

    I use 60/40 and don't really care about poisoning since I don't put it in my mouth :)
    Have worked as a typecaster, dealing with an alloy of lead, tin and antimony, most of it being the lead. Not worrying about the vapours too much though, as the metal is close to its melting point and the intermolecular bonds will keep it from evaporating. Haven't even smelled it.
    The real deal is volatile organic components from decomposing machine oil on typecasting machines, or flux from the iron tip. That stuff can be cancerous if you inhale too much of it.
    Smelled enough acetone, isopropyl alcohol, ammonia, toluene, cyclohexane etc. through my studies in chemical engineering. And I think I'm still rather smart, LOL.
    Asbestos... yes, I remember your commentary on all these girls working in the vacuum tube manufacturing industry.
    As long as it doesn't strip off forming fibres, it's relatively safe. I wonder if asbestos could be kept together with some spray paint that forms a rather thick and flexible layer, and penetrates the pores in the stuff.
    "Mercury, lead, asbestos" is good, but "salt, asbestos, curtain" is certainly better :)

    • @BobDarlington
      @BobDarlington 2 года назад +2

      My old Boy Scout leader was an industrial plumber. He kept his coffee mug warm on his melting pot. He had multiple organ transplants, twice, ultimately leading to his death from lead poisoning.

    • @mangamaster03
      @mangamaster03 2 года назад +1

      All the testing spheres are made out of asbestos. Keeps out the rats.

  • @mdouglaswray
    @mdouglaswray 2 года назад +2

    I've used lead solder since I was a kid building projects! My dad was careful about teaching me safety - he was a plumber and regularly used lead to seal sewer pipes. He died just short of 90. Diabetes got him, not lead!

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 года назад +1

      Yup, I worked for a plumber for a year, right out of high school; we sealed vertical cast-iron waste pipe stacks by tamping oakum (tar- impregnated stringy rope, also used for sealing wooden boat hulls) into the flared bell-ends where one pipe fit into another, and poured liquid lead into the flare, on top of the oakum. I still prefer lead solder for sweating pipes in my own house because its so much easier to work with, except perhaps for the pipe joints to the kitchen sink and the water hookup for the refrigerator.

  • @jankcitycustoms
    @jankcitycustoms 2 года назад +5

    I like to think of ingesting small amounts of toxic stuff as entering a shit lottery. some people do it for years and see no negative side effects, while others aren't so lucky.

  • @ats89117
    @ats89117 2 года назад +1

    For me, the biggest problem with solder is the solder dust and small chunks that build up in the soldering stand and brass tip cleaner. I was surprised you didn't address this...

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 2 года назад

      That's very coarse material. You are unlikely to breathe any of that in. Having said that, absolutely nothing stops you from using lead-free solder these days. It doesn't look as pretty, but in my experience it's perfectly fine, even for hand soldering. I have both at hand. All my production is lead free, as required by law.

  • @ericnichols3252
    @ericnichols3252 2 года назад +1

    Most of us of "a certain age" used carbon tetrachloride for contact cleaner. I was practically up to my armpits in the stuff for years....and as anyone can tell you, I'm perfectly normal!

  • @JeffreyLWhitledge
    @JeffreyLWhitledge 2 года назад +1

    I guess Mercury Lead & Asbestos would a heavy metal band.

    • @stephenbell9257
      @stephenbell9257 2 года назад

      You could add Cadmium, another toxic heavy metal, to make a quartet.

  • @davidquirk8097
    @davidquirk8097 2 года назад +2

    One of my slack time tasks that I was given as a Technician was to decommission a large number of Mercury manometers. I was worried when I was told of the task but reassured when I found that the next task after that was going to be to decommission the 'Mercury Room' that I didn't realise that the works had. It was a bit grubby but it had a downdraft bench and all the PPE to keep me safe. Oh and the first part of the task saw me being sent off site to a chemical company to undergo Mercury handling training course. One hit training, trained for the one job then never used the training since.

    • @davidquirk8097
      @davidquirk8097 2 года назад

      @@jhoughjr1 not when handled correctly. My biggest problem was that most of the manometers were broken and very fragile since they were not in any kind of chassis, just the soda glass tubes. I've worked with more hazardous things that definitely are dangerous (now). We used to have to dip sheep in an organophosphorus based insecticide once a year, by law, in the UK. That was nasty s**t and I know a few people who have suffered as a result of exposure to it. What a difference a year made: we went from Jeans and a tee shirt to fully face respirator, one piece water proof coverall and being hosted down after work in one year.

  • @new-knowledge8040
    @new-knowledge8040 2 года назад +1

    A real bad mix, is having exposure to lead, and at the same time having plenty of amalgam tooth fillings. This produces the combo of lead and mercury messing with your bodily functions, with the autoimmune system being hit the hardest.

  • @someoneoutthere7512
    @someoneoutthere7512 2 года назад

    Back in my day.......... Everyone in the office smoked, except me. There was always a blue haze throughout the building. It's a wonder that I don't have cancer... yet.

  • @piclife1178
    @piclife1178 2 года назад +1

    I have worked in electronics for the last 42 years have never once heard of anyone getting lead poisoning. I don't think lead is that bad, for decades we used lead pipes for drinking water here in the UK.

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 2 года назад

      Lead pipes by themselves are not a problem, either. It's the mixture of lead pipes with steel pipe that is and there are additives to drinking water that seem to make lead pipes unsafe, if I am not mistaken.

    • @samuelchamberlain2584
      @samuelchamberlain2584 2 года назад +1

      John Re lead pipe Unless you live in flint mich USA.
      There is plenty of lead water pipe installed in the UK and it is generally not a problem as the inside is scaled up and the PH of the water is controlled .

  • @n.mariner5610
    @n.mariner5610 2 года назад

    At least in Germany solder wire containing lead is (officially) no more available. However the substitute is not by any means working as good as as the "Fluitin" (American product?) LSN60. Therefore I try to obtain a LSN60 solder from China quite successfully. But in this solder the flux isn't so good.
    The new solder has a wide temperature range with a "creamy" or half-solid consistency, which makes it difficult to produce solder connections with a nice, smooth and shiny surface.
    Besides this I have been using this LSN60 solder for more than 50 years and "survived" this with obviously no damage.

  • @mevk1
    @mevk1 4 месяца назад

    This vdieo should be one of those "required reading" videos. Thank you!
    Except for mercury I use basically every chemical you mentioned, and will be much more careful!

  • @fkthewhat
    @fkthewhat 2 года назад

    I'm just a hobbyist. Depends on the project, but generally I prefer not to use leaded solder anymore unless I'm working on a device where I suspect lead was used in the first place. I am acutely aware that it's dangerous and it just takes the fun out of it all. What does worry me is inhaling rosin flux and isopropyl alcohol... I generally solder outside but I think you still get plenty of those fumes...

  • @jagmarc
    @jagmarc 2 года назад

    Large companies typically have a 'medical' member of staff responsible for 'employees health' and their job is more legal than medical. Primarily to ensure the company has safeguards in place to prevent them being sued for industrial disease. They will 'health screen' employees by searching for risk and then 'interview' the employee, invite the employee to recognise risk, identify measures to reduce the risk and then take a signed statement from the employee that they will wear thick gloves, facemask, rubber boots, rubber apron, etc. That way if ever a industrial injury claim ever goes to court the company can supply the evidence that absuelves them from responsibilty.

  • @carlhunsinger9638
    @carlhunsinger9638 2 года назад

    Your 63/37 solder is eutectic solder. Drastically different than 60/40, which is not eutectic.

  • @garygullikson6349
    @garygullikson6349 7 месяцев назад

    I was a leadman on a soldering/electronic assembly line and later a soldering instructor. Never heard of lead problems from soldering with tin/lead solders. Had a friend who was a welder and a welding instructor, developed brain cancer from welding fumes. That may be where tales of lead danger from soldering may have come from. Don't put solder in your mouth or eat while soldering, have a fan going for prolonged soldering work, (couldn't hurt). Unleaded solders and fluxes require higher heat and possible damage to plastic connector bodies and circuit boards, possible unreliable connections due to poor solder flow when used in hand soldering . Use 60/40 tin/lead rosin core solder for hand soldering and good technique in care and cleanliness of iron tips, "tinning" of wire ends, use of flux, quick heat transfer, watching solder flow, and practice. It's good to have a third hand, a helper, or holding devices.

  • @acoustic61
    @acoustic61 2 года назад

    I don't think lead solder is dangerous to work with. I'll be using it as long as it's available. If they ban lead solder, I'll buy a lifetime supply.

  • @sonyajones
    @sonyajones 2 года назад

    Used to work in natural gas measurement. Some of the very old meters used mercury. We had to drain out the mercury, squeeze it thru a rag (by hand) and put it back into the meter, adding some to make up for any losses. My hands were silver colored after that and used kerosene to wash it off best as possible, followed by water. Still have about a pound of mercury stored in a cupboard. LoL .. Not aware of the dangers back then.

  • @russ-aepx3307
    @russ-aepx3307 2 года назад

    I done bin sodderin since kidhood. Dun got my PhD-EE and still dun more sodder. Yup. I;d say how many years, but I fergit howta count. LOL

  • @George10767
    @George10767 Год назад

    Fran, can you please make a presentation on American English irrational pronunciation? If the "l" in solder is not pronounced, perhaps it would be better to omit it altogether?
    Also I would like to know whether US citizens get their kicks on *root 66* or *rowt 66* ?

  • @jaybird57
    @jaybird57 2 года назад

    I have been putting solder in my mouth since i was a kid.. 35years ago... and i'm ok.. ok.. ok.. yah, Come to think of it.. I should get tested...

  • @kenmore01
    @kenmore01 2 года назад

    Yeah, well, as a youngster in the '60s, I'd hold the solder in my mouth. You only have two hands, right? What did we know back then?

  • @hestheMaster
    @hestheMaster 2 года назад +1

    It is nice to see many commenters concerned about lead poisoning from soldering. I always use a small fan to
    blow away fumes from soldering since I was a teen. You should actually be worried more about transdermal
    liquids that are mostly still sold as solvents. They can damage organs and nerve endings.

  • @DJPhantomRage
    @DJPhantomRage 2 года назад

    Yikes, here I am with no fans, nothing and using 60/40 since I was a kid... This explains a lot... (at least I never put it in my mouth and washed my hands)

  • @octogames6823
    @octogames6823 2 года назад

    Love the hat! I used lead solder for 20 years with no hood. Safety was not a real thing until the late 90's. I would just blow on the solder to keep the fumes out of my face. I often wonder if my old habits will cause some sort of long term illness. She is right, Use common sense. Solder in well ventilated room , wash your hands when done handlining lead solder, don't eat and solder. clean your work station when you are done, wipe things down if you have pets.

  • @magnifikus3
    @magnifikus3 2 года назад +1

    my experience was, if you use bad lead free solder its a pain and you never touch it again. but we tried some with high silver at work and meanwhile i think its even better :)

  • @ronchang9791
    @ronchang9791 3 месяца назад

    I saw Mercury, Lead & Asbestos at The Forum in '79. Or so my friends tell me.

  • @womble321
    @womble321 2 года назад

    Just to let you know that despite being subscribed with notifications on I haven't had a single notification for months. Don't you just love RUclips.

  • @lepidoptera9337
    @lepidoptera9337 2 года назад

    Lead is only a problem for recycling and possibly during manufacturing. In the lab it's perfectly safe.

  • @Barbarapape
    @Barbarapape Год назад

    Having used leaded solder since i was 12 years old at 68 i am still here with no related issues.
    At my peak i was going through a reel a week during the tv repair days with no precautions or protection.
    Lead free solder is horrible stuff and a cause of many failed joints on modern gear.
    I refuse to do any repairs with it.

  • @doodlebug1820
    @doodlebug1820 8 месяцев назад

    Its not just about the user its about the places and people where it comes from. Like Pitcher Oklahoma which is now uninhabitable

  • @zulumax1
    @zulumax1 2 года назад

    What should we be doing with all the old used solder wick and extracted lead solder removed by a solder sucker, or vacuum powered solder remover? Putting it in the wastepaper basket can't be proper.

  • @Centar1964
    @Centar1964 2 года назад +1

    Lead in it's metallic form isn't very dangerous, you could eat a piece without much exposure...but in it's salt form, lead sulphate, lead oxide, etc it is very dangerous. I've been using lead solder for over 40 yrs, holding it in my mouth at times, also used to hold pellets for my pellet gun when I was a teen in my mouth...

  • @tomschmidt381
    @tomschmidt381 2 года назад +1

    I continue to use lead solder for the reasons you mentioned, it works great. I actually like the smell of the flux, but then I'm not soldering all day. As you did I played with metallic mercury as a kid and dipped coins in it to make them shiny. Mercury switches were pretty common back then and I broke open a bunch and kept it in a small baby food jar. My understanding is that metallic mercury is not nearly as dangerous as vapor, so I guess I dogged a bullet growing up.

  • @xenuburger7924
    @xenuburger7924 2 года назад

    I have an uncle with serious neurological issues, probably from long term exposure to solvents.

  • @fazilkocaman9176
    @fazilkocaman9176 2 года назад +2

    Why cant whe use solder whitout lead?easy enough

    • @davba2
      @davba2 2 года назад +1

      Because it has a higher melting point, and has a tendency to crystallise. This can cause dry joints.

    • @mfbfreak
      @mfbfreak 2 года назад +1

      If you do repairs, lots of equipment has been soldered with lead containing solder. You can't mix lead and leadfree solder.
      If you make your own stuff, you can use lead based solder just fine. But it takes some practice and you need higher soldering temperatures. For inexperienced people it's really hard to make a proper connection with leadfree solder.

    • @fazilkocaman9176
      @fazilkocaman9176 2 года назад

      @@mfbfreak thank you fir explaining thats logical what you tell i agree

    • @fazilkocaman9176
      @fazilkocaman9176 2 года назад

      @@mfbfreak i have seen the phenomenon called crystalizing

  • @craigpennington1251
    @craigpennington1251 Год назад

    P.S. All of those chemicals you mentioned, we had on the carriers that I was on and used on aircraft a lot. Not to mention all of the munitions we had to hand load.

  • @ericoppel5698
    @ericoppel5698 2 года назад

    What type of Geiger counter is suitable? Could you show us what you use please?

  • @xeroinfinity
    @xeroinfinity 2 года назад

    Ive been eating and smoking lead solder for 40 yrs...i feel okay. lol

  • @charlesrg
    @charlesrg 2 года назад

    What is the name of the crank holodex at the video intro ? that will be a fun project to make with kids.

  • @notinterested8452
    @notinterested8452 2 года назад

    Hahaha all getting what you want and deserve out of life and then complaining.

  • @truckerallikatuk
    @truckerallikatuk 2 года назад

    Lead solder is better. All those lead free solders just need too much heat and they fracture too much.

  • @Andrew_Sparrow
    @Andrew_Sparrow 2 года назад

    I used to chew on solder as a kid... I'm 44 now and just fine :p

  • @thexfile.
    @thexfile. Год назад

    Back in the day, I used naphtha to clean parts, and that stuff used to make my hands hurt.

  • @bauertime
    @bauertime 2 года назад

    My dad said he use to put mercury in his mouth. He lived to 70 years old.

  • @clark9992
    @clark9992 2 года назад

    I believe that, back in the day, research chemists used to taste the new chemicals they created.

  • @paulg3336
    @paulg3336 2 года назад

    Asbestos is not cumulative.
    One exposure can lead to mesothelioma decades later. All it takes is for a few fibres to find their way inside you.
    I remember one case of a person whose only exposure to asbestos in his entire life was loading asbestos cement sheets onto a trailer 30 years earlier.
    Recently in New Zealand a woman was awarded compensation for a asbestos related disease. Her exposure was sitting in her father's lap ,while he still wore his work clothes, after he arrived home from a job that used asbestos lagging.
    Likewise, some people worked with the stuff for decades and suffered no harm at all.
    Mercury, however, is pretty innocuous, the main risk is from the vapour. If there is good flowing ventilation there is little risk. Even if you should ingest mercury metal, it will most likely pass through your digestive tract without harm. The salts are a different story ,of course.

    • @paulg3336
      @paulg3336 2 года назад

      @@coolelectronics1759 Just don't grind them up and snort them through a rolled up $20 bill and you'll be fine

  • @jonathansnodgrass2464
    @jonathansnodgrass2464 2 года назад +1

    I had no idea lead free solder had such problems. I've only ever used leaded because i had some free rolls that came with electronics. I guess the problems we've been having at work from solder joints breaking (besides the ridiculous heat stresses in this particular light) could be caused by lead free solder.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад +2

      The doomsday predictions about lead free solder didn’t come to pass. Lead solder joints fail, too.

    • @CotyRiddle
      @CotyRiddle 2 года назад

      the ROHS compliant stuff yes.. Especially on BGA mounted chips. it just cracks too Easly.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад +1

      @@CotyRiddle BGAs soldered with lead-free solder are EVERYWHERE these days, without widespread reliability problems. If they do occur, they’re in a specific chip in a specific product, which is indicative of a process failure in that product, not one with BGAs in general!

  • @THEDRAGONBOOSTER8
    @THEDRAGONBOOSTER8 2 года назад

    Lead 60/40 is all I buy .Great video.

  • @CotyRiddle
    @CotyRiddle 2 года назад

    Love leaded solder. It is far better than that crap they got now

  • @PebblesChan
    @PebblesChan 2 года назад

    After touching PbSn solder, its prudent to wash your hands prior to going to the toilet particular for #1s. Apparently there are recorded cases of testicular cancer from this cause. And of course wash your hands after using the toilet as well.

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 2 года назад

      There are recorded cases of an ambulance chaser extracting money using people who were unlucky enough to get testicular cancer. ;-)

  • @numbr6
    @numbr6 2 года назад

    I've always used 60/40 solder. I never have had a problem over the decades of electronics work. I a) never put anything in my mouth when soldering; b) always wash my hands, twice, when done. I've never used any air filters/gloves or eye protection. I'm still alive and have never had any symptoms of lead poisoning.

  • @h.s.thompsonduke8105
    @h.s.thompsonduke8105 2 года назад

    The most important preventive to lead exposure if you work around it is to keep your hands washed, don't put your hands to your face, and DO NOT SMOKE CIGARETTES!

  • @BerndFelsche
    @BerndFelsche 2 года назад

    Rosin flux is more of an immediate risk than the lead.

  • @joshuamacdonald4913
    @joshuamacdonald4913 2 года назад

    Yes may of these things we know but sometimes we need to hear it.

  • @InssiAjaton
    @InssiAjaton 2 года назад

    There are all kinds of details about the tin/lead solder and soldering irons that deserve at leas some cursory comments. For the first, the 60/40 tin/lead mix may, but probably is not eutectic. Meaning it has a range of solidifying temperatures. That then means the "ready" joint is not as well defined and you can get some last second movement induced bad solder connections. Another issue is the required soldering iron tip temperature versus usual settings on peoples' benches. The lowest required temperature is on the eutectic 63/37% version, but most people use much higher temperature tips like 700 degrees F and if they have the modern lead-free solder, possibly even higher. The tin/silver/copper version does require higher temperature in theory and due to poorer wetting may promote further pushing of the temperature up. That of course may be ignored, as there then is no lead involved. Then there is the issue of lead vapor concentration in the air and the OSHA limit. With just ordinary ventilation at the eutectic point temperature the lead vapor concentration is something like 1% of the OSHA limit. Getting up to common 700 degrees (F) temperature with the iron lingering in its station you are much closer the limit and should take precautions. Then there is the story about tin whisker growth. As I have understood, NASA still specifies true eutectic (63/37 %) solders for this reason. The tin/silver/copper alloy is OK for most hobby and industrial use, but the spacecraft cannot take even the reduced risk of whisker growth.

  • @snicker576
    @snicker576 2 года назад

    Lead also just creates better connections than lead free. Lead free solder can kind of "grow" threads over time that can cause connections you don't want

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад

      No, it doesn’t. Tin whiskers occur practically exclusively from the pure tin plating on component leads. It doesn’t take much of another element alloyed into it to prevent it, which is why the “SN100” solders contain trace amounts of other metals (or germanium) to prevent them.

  • @scottyanke655
    @scottyanke655 2 года назад

    As another guy in his 60s who's always used 60/40 solder and has never used a fume hood, I too come up negative on lead in my blood testing. Yes, lead is a concern. But because I didn't spend 40 hours a week with my soldering iron I'm probably in better shape than those who hand assembled circuit boards for a living. When soldering is a hobby people like myself tend to take it easier than those who do it as a profession.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd 2 года назад

    Everything is hazardous if you manage it wrongly enough. But that's why they're the trolls. That said, thanks for the tip about the iron filter -- I'll have to pay closer attention to where that smoke goes next time.

  • @stevenverhaegen8729
    @stevenverhaegen8729 2 года назад

    Oh, the joys when the mercury fever thermometer broke! 😄 And the lead vapors from soldering. The smells of the CCl4 cleaning solution in my dad's print shop... No wonder I sometimes think I am on the autism spectrum... 🤔

  • @spambot7110
    @spambot7110 2 года назад

    hearing about the precautions you take, i'm all the more convinced I'll be sticking with lead-free. no way I could keep up with that.

  • @craigpennington1251
    @craigpennington1251 Год назад

    All of this reminds me of my dad's acquaintance of a guy that reloaded and manufactured all of his ammunition all throughout his life. It got to him and he died of some type of cancer specifically from that ammo process. He was a great marksman with many trophies. Both have long since gone now. No matter what it is, you have guidelines you must adhere to.

  • @aldntn
    @aldntn 2 года назад

    Worked around TCE a lot years ago.

  • @TheTreegodfather
    @TheTreegodfather 2 года назад

    I'm only a hobbyist, and don't really do all that much soldering. But this is definitely food for thought, and even as a casual user it seems like some PPE is cheap insurance.

  • @noelj62
    @noelj62 2 года назад

    Interesting to know. Thanks

  • @Vermilicious
    @Vermilicious 2 года назад

    We soldered with lead in school, and we were taught the fumes were bad to breathe in, but nothing really about washing our hands and such. While we had fume extractors the first year, we didn't the second year. I remember we used to have a lot of fun with melting big blobs of solder and push it over the edge so it would make a splat on the floor. Not at all what one should do, but our teachers didn't seem to care. I haven't soldered much since, but I have a small spool for the few occasions. I never tried non-lead solder, but I think it's long overdue to stop using lead solder also for hobbyists. It's just a really bad thing to get in your body, and you can't get rid of it once you do. Silver and copper is poisonous too, but it doesn't stick around.

  • @tunderbird123
    @tunderbird123 2 года назад

    So true, thanks for the reminder.

  • @craftsman123456
    @craftsman123456 2 года назад

    Okay when you said you used to play with Mercury understand you now. Just kidding. In the 70 in school we used to play with it all the time. Roll it around in our hands etc in class. Just a few years later in High Scool a teacher spilled some and the entire Science wing was evaluated. I just laughed.

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat 2 года назад

    Old Linotype machines used an alloy of lead, antimony, and tin to make the hot metal slugs comprising a line of text for printing presses. Imagine working inches from a molten container of it for years at a time.

  • @SpydersByte
    @SpydersByte 2 года назад

    7:17 used to play with mercury too, my grandfather had a vial of it taken from old pieces of equipment in his workshop. I used to take it into school and we would play with it in physics class, putting it in our palms and coating coins in it, was lots of fun. This wasn't like forever ago either, it was like 2002-2004 which admittedly does feel like "back in the day" now but still I think quite removed from the years when playing with mercury was a normal thing :D