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  • Saubär! Prima Idee!!

  • hi geht es auch mit einem anderm Bügeleisen auch .Wenn ja ein bügeleisen mit mit keramik ? bitte eine schnell antwort !!!!!!! 

  • subscribd!

  • great way to salvage components.

  • Hi how can I desolder and solder an xbox 360 GPU without expensive equipment?

  • @unrewritable One way is to use a heat gun. Look up "how to hot air reflow components" on YouTube and see how it's done.

  • Neat idea!

  • How dos the plastic not melt?

  • So flux would be good if you have any troubles desoldering... I have also tried this method with major success... But It may be harder if board is soldered with leadless solder...

    This way of desoldering is Godlike... but a total fail with double layer populated boards...

    Still considering the heatgun is the best cost effective way to got... But haven't tried yet ;-)

    Keep it up pal!!! ;-D

  • @TrickyNekro flux is the latin word for flow, so therefore it is so it cleans and helps the solder flow onto it. Flux is of no importance if you are taking the solder off (desoldering)

  • @kwizatch

    I know what flux means.... But apart from its name, it's grease... It helps the tin flow generally, soldering or desordering. And believe me it's particularly useful went you work with a suck pump or try to clean component pins...

  • Crikey, I didn't know clothes irons got that hot.

  • me too...the fastest desoldering method i've seen so far without using freakisly expensive equipment...

  • @fronkenpoop Or maybe you didn't realize the melting point of solder. It is pretty low really...

  • hahahaha... thats frekin' awesome...

  • wow... maybe i'm wrong, who knows... but this seems like it would fry a board really quickly if you aren't careful.

  • @mvandeven Yes and no, The technique is not suppost to be used for full rework like this. Normaly the board is preheated on a heat pad to half the solder melting temp then heated the rest of the way with hotair focused on one part at the time to prevent cooking out the boards adhesive and mask.

    Reflowing on the otherhand can be done this way, Where you heat the board to solder melting temp just long enough to reflow the joints. normaly toaster ovens are used as cheap means for this.

  • good idea

  • echt toll mit welcher Hitze machst du das?

  • Wow why didnt i think of that dayum

    Save myself hours today if i did that!

  • cool ^^ thx

  • I tried this and didn't work. How many watt your iron produce ?

  • you need more than 300 °C, how many watt depends on the size of your iron.

  • @krux02 or how hot you can get it

  • does it damages the ic and what temperature or number you set it on?

  • thanks man.

  • lol Great! :D

  • brilliant and moronic at the same time!!!

    innovation!

  • just what i was thinking

  • thats nice but wont it fk up the shit on the bottom?

  • will it explode?

  • I'm impressed. It seems some irons are better than others. Hotplates work well too  ;)

  • very good, messy though i can see it for component extraction but not fitting

  • woo hoo..that makes me laugh, well done this the iron, I just wasted £20 buying a toaster oven just to find that the heat is not evenly distributed and it's impossible to that parts off once you open the oven dooras the cold air rushes onto the pcb....and there you are, plucking the parts off the pcb like they weren't soldered....well done

  • Thats a great idea! I'll try that now on my project!

  • This is very good, I need to remove a surface mount chip for a hard drive pcb to another at what temp was your iron set at? and did this cause any damage to pcb or pcb tracks?

  • The temperature was set to maximum. I have succesfully desoldered an Ethernet-MAC and some Atmel-Controllers without any damage. There was no noticeable change on the pcb.

    However, i think it is a good idea to make some tries with an old pcb first.

    See link in description for some additional pictures.

  • yes, but do the components survive?

  • the components are soldered to the pcb with similar temperatures. Why not?

  • true, keep in mind though, that the more dense ic takes much less heat inside due to low thermal conductivity of the insulating cover whereas the small lower mass pins absorbe the heat first and faster due to exposure, and conductivity. I do not know about the assembly or manufacturing techniques, so as you say it may be totally acceptable

  • guter trick . nur meine mutter würde mich hauen;-)

  • cool

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