more precise way. put little pieces of solder(unmelted) on the spots, and put the board in an oven for a bit.
turf7227 1 year ago
@turf7227
A even more precise way is not to use a oven at all and invest into hotair rework station.
Lokivoid 1 year ago
Just buy liquid tin
ClaudioArrau 2 years ago 2
Yeah this method just seems sloppy
RetroRepair 2 years ago
Don't you run the risk of clogging up a through hole with solder?
Penfold8 2 years ago
@Penfold8 There's no such risk, since anyone tinning a board would already know how to circumvent this.
gushhnet 1 year ago
@Penfold8
Fluxing for the most part will prevent that issue.
more precise way. put little pieces of solder(unmelted) on the spots, and put the board in an oven for a bit.
turf7227 1 year ago
@turf7227
A even more precise way is not to use a oven at all and invest into hotair rework station.
Lokivoid 1 year ago
Just buy liquid tin
ClaudioArrau 2 years ago 2
Yeah this method just seems sloppy
RetroRepair 2 years ago
Don't you run the risk of clogging up a through hole with solder?
Penfold8 2 years ago
@Penfold8 There's no such risk, since anyone tinning a board would already know how to circumvent this.
gushhnet 1 year ago
@Penfold8
Fluxing for the most part will prevent that issue.
Lokivoid 1 year ago