209 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
209 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1047
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Title: HPR1047: Soldering Part 2: An audio demonstration of soldering
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1047/hpr1047.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 17:55:00
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---
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Hello, Hacker, probably do audience. My name is Mr X and welcome to my second podcast
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in soldering. Hopefully it hasn't been too long since she heard the first part and
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it managed to gather together all the bits and pieces that I mentioned in the last podcast.
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This podcast is going to be a bit more free-flowing than previous podcasts so I may tend to ramble
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a bit and um and all and things like that so I apologise in advance. I don't really know
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how this is going to work because this was really ideally it should be done with a video
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camera and at least taking pictures but I thought I'd just have an attempt to talk through
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shoulder joints, making a shoulder joint. Okay so I've got everything gathered together
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ready to try some soldering. I thought today we would talk about how to keep your
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shoulder in there and clean and how to produce a good joint and probably the most common
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thing you'll do is remove a wire from a circuit board and reattach it perhaps or perhaps
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join two pieces of wire together or maybe fit a simple component such as a resistor
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onto a circuit board, something like that. We'll tag one through that sort of thing.
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Okay so what I've got here I've got my soldering in front of me and you can stand here that's
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satisfying click, marvellous. Right, okay now we also have a solder sponge, small work
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cutters. I've actually got a pair of long nose pliers that can kind of be handy sometimes.
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I've got a pair of tweezers and I've got an eyeglass because I've got one key eyesight
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these days. Right, oh and not forgetting of course the most important thing I've got
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a multi core flux impregnated shoulder and a few resistors as well just to try soldering
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those. Okay so the first thing you need to do is obviously switch on your soldering
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amp so we'll do that now. Okay and I've set it mind to 330 degrees and it's now reading
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65 degrees and all of a sudden it'll start climbing off so I've got a way in that heating
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up. Yep that's hot already. Not a temperature though. Right, I'm just going to heat it up.
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So how do you go up to the temperature? I've now got up to the temperature and I've had
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a few seconds, I've got up and down now. Right, okay so before you start the first thing
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that's important is your soldering amp has to be clean. Now when I look at my soldering
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amp I'm the tips lovely and shiny and you should be the same. If it isn't then you can
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tin the soldering amp and I'll tin the tip or wait the tip, whichever you want, whatever
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you want to call it. Well that entails doing is you basically cover the tip and solder,
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sit a bit a few seconds, so I'll cover it just a wee bit and take the amp so it goes all the way
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around the thing and then wipe it off. Okay and then it's lovely clean silver tip. If you haven't got
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a temperature control down or thermosatically controlled down then you may find your iron runs a
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bit hot and it may be a bit black and not very easy to keep clean. That's one of the problems
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with non-temperature controlled iron's I'm afraid. Okay so that's a nice and clean. Okay so the
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secret to soldering is flux. You can get flux in various formats, you can get wee bottles of
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liquid flux. I remember seeing these over the place at my work in the early days when I was
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doing soldering. You can also get, I remember they also came in kind of metal tins, small metal tins
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which you could get your iron into. But none of that is really necessary for the home user. You just need
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you just need multi-core flux impregnated solder and I guess that most of the solder you get these
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days in the shops will be multi-core flux impregnated solder. Now the thing about that is that when
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you apply solder to the tip of the iron the flux very quickly burns off and less than 20 seconds
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it's burned off and then it's useless again. So you've only got 20 seconds it will probably
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really you should you've only got a few seconds to tidy the truth. Okay first of all make sure
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the soldering sponge is wet and basically just run it under that till it's soaked through and then
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ring it tight and it really shouldn't be jipping with water in like just sort of damp really I guess
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you know ring it out reasonably tight and then place it in the soldering stand. So right there are
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six steps to soldering and it really doesn't matter what kind of soldering job you're doing whether
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you're attaching wire onto circuit board or attaching two pieces of wire or perhaps if I think I can
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want it onto circuit board the six steps are exactly the same. So step one is you add a tiny bit
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of solder onto the tip of your iron. Step two wipe it off on the sponge. Step three add another tiny
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bit of solder onto the tip. Step four apply the soldering iron tip to the joint you're trying to make
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wait a few seconds till the joint starts to melt and then keep adding wee pieces of small bits of
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solder until you think you've got enough but the important thing is that once you add the last
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piece of solder to the joint you really once the moment you take the solder away from the joint
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you really should try to take the soldering iron away from the joint maybe another two or three
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seconds after you've removed the solder. So you always add a little bit of solder, take solder away
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and then within a second or two remove the soldering iron because the flux in the joint will
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will be burnt off and prevent you from creating a good quality joint and that's the main reason why
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you end up with see a dull joint or a lumpy joint or something like that is because there was no
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flux all burnt away and if you find that that's happened all you need to do is heat the joint up
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again add another bit of solder and within a second or so remove the soldering iron before that
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flux burns off. It's amazing how little solder you actually need to freshen a joint up.
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Just a small amount is all that is required to freshen that joint if it is a indeed a bad joint
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obviously you can go you can go madden have a big blobby joint but at least your big blobby joint
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will be cleaning shiny and not dull and spiky. Also when you take the soldering iron away from the
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joint you want to do fairly quickly because if you do it too slowly again it can pull spikes off
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the joint but it's far less likely if you follow the guide that you apply the last bit of solder
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and then fairly quickly take the soldering iron away within a second or so off of the last
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piece of solder that you add. So you can keep repeating this as much as you like until you get a good
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joint and until you get the required amount of solder on a joint I should say it's when you
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you linger on the joint and you haven't put any fresh solder on that you end up with lumpy
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dull joints. That's basically the secret.
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Telesrics extent confidence helps but much less than you would think and you know when you take
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the soldering iron away from the joint I know you should do it reasonably quickly you know
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you don't have to fly away from the joint but you certainly don't want to take away very slowly
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or you end up with lumps.
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okay the first thing we need to do is remove a wire from a circuit board and I've just
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basically attached a piece of wire to a piece of a perth board which is or a bread board
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whatever you want to call it. It's basically just a couple of strips that run in one direction
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with gaps between the strips and holds obviously for the components to fit through from the top.
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So we basically take that out step one and wipe it on the apply a little bit of solder first of
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all to this soldering tip wipe it in the soldering sponge apply another piece of solder to the tip
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okay heat the joint remove this wire apply a little bit of solder to the to the joint and remove
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the soldering iron here you go and obviously put the soldering iron back in its stand
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that's produced a good good joint there. So the soldering iron stays on the joint the whole time
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it's the last thing to be removed and as I say really it should be removed within a second or so
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if you're removing the solder from the joint. Obviously you can take as long as you like heating
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the joint other than you may destroy the component if it gets too hot and you may lift the copper
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track from the circuit board if it gets too hot that's the other danger of course but other than
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that you know it's not a race the only thing you have to be quick with is that you take the
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soldering iron away from the solder joint within a second or so for removing the solder okay so
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that's removing a wire from a circuit board to attach a wire to the circuit board it's the same
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sort of process you basically wipe the soldering iron apply a little bit of solder to the tip
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okay heat the joint place the sold place the wire onto the joint place the iron maybe on top of
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the the wire to hold it in place play a little bit of fresh solder to the joint hold the wire
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and take the soldering iron away and there you go a fresh joint you really should avoid if you
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can it looks not always possible to you know some people create a joint by applying quite a bit
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of solder to the soldering iron and heating the joint up and it kind of flows onto the joint and
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taking away the trouble with that is that by the time the solder flows down the joint a lot of
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the flux can be burnt off the joint and hence you take it away I end up with a joint that's either
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dull or lumpy or whatever I guess if you do cooking if you can almost get away with that and
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sometimes you have to do it because you you know you haven't got to have hands to hold everything
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in place when you're applying the solder but when you're doing it that way which is not the
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best way to do it then you've really got to be quick quick because obviously you know you put the
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solder on the soldering tip it's burning away and then you put it onto the joint and then
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and it heats up and it's still all burning away and then you apply the the wire into the joint
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and it's still burning away then finally you take the soldering iron away by this point it's been
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sitting on the on the joint and iron for you know several seconds maybe even longer
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right so that's why I attached to the circuit board I'll just take that joint back off again
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heat it up okay we've got to apply a little bit of fresh solder to the joint take it off
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wipe that and the tip should always stay clean you should always be working with a clean shiny tip
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on your iron okay so let's imagine we're going to join two pieces of wire together
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I've got one piece of wire here and second piece here now I guess usually you'd be working with
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multi core wire as opposed to single strand wire which is quite rigid and if it's multi strand
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and it's probably worthwhile then turning the wire before you attach the two pieces together
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so I'll just turn this piece of wire and how you do that is you basically hang it over the edge of your
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desk and pick up your soldering iron and add a bit of solder to your soldering tip of course
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okay wipe it off add a bit more solder to the tip hold the wire with your in the x-finger
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start the back of the joint and heat the wire up with the solder now after a few seconds
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apply a little bit of solder and with the solder and the solder now tip to follow it along the
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hole into the wire until you get to the end and that'll coat the whole wire and then take both away
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let's wipe the soldering iron clean again put it back in the stand and that then coats the wire
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tins it coats it in solder so that when you're trying to work with a thing it doesn't all
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split out and get a bit of a mess now I tend to make a 90 degree bend on the bare wire end
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on both pieces of wire do that with this one and with that one okay two 90 degree bends in the wire
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then I push and I sit one on top one top the other and then I rotate both in opposite directions to
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to kind of lock the two together and then it perhaps give it a wee twist just to bind the two
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together twist the two pieces to two pieces of wire together okay hang over the edge of the desk
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like last time so you've got a mechanical you should really always try and get a mechanical joint
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before you solder so obviously by twisting them together you've got this mechanical joint
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get the soldering iron out about wipe play a bit of solder do the tip
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finger on the wire and apply a little bit heat to the joint like some fresh solder
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remove the soldering iron clean the tip of the soldering iron back in the stand and there we have
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it a clean tidy joint now you may find you know that you've got some loose ends from that but
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you from the piece you folded over you can trim these with your wire cutters if you like
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just do that now there we go of course I forgot to mention heat shrink slaring and you know you're
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often making up a cable and you'll attach the wires or whatever and you think ah where's the
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heat shrink and you forgot to put it on so then you've been done soldering all again then
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put the heat shrink on and then resolder it so remember to put the heat shrink on first
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in place slide it over the joint if you've got heat gun use that if not use the old toaster technique
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that I mentioned in the previous episode unfortunately I don't have a toaster here to hand to
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demonstrate that okay so that's joined two pieces of wire together we're going to try soldering
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a resistor untrust onto the printed circuit board or piece of per board that I've got here
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so turn the per board over so you so that it's on the the non copper side
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uh sit it on the board so you can work out where the uh where you need to put the uh the legs through
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and try and set the component kind of halfway between the two holes that needs to pass down through
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keeps it nice and neat and then what I like to do is I take my small nose pliers I've got here
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and just go back a little bit from the hole that I'm looking for grip it and bend it
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bend the one leg 90 degrees down okay so that's one leg bent 90 degrees then I can place that
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into one of the holes in this circuit board to check that it sits okay then have a then have a
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look to see where the second hole is going to be and remember you've already lined up halfway so it
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should be quite equally spaced so again I'm going to put my uh small nose pliers just before the
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hole grip it take the component out again and bend it again through 90 degrees that's it and now
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the component has got nice two neat bends in it I mean you don't need to do that you can just
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pass it through and pull it through but you end up with a need to job if you do it this way
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and in place the component back into the two holes that you previously had it in
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you should line up hopefully now of course you're you're kind of running out of hands
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here to hold the component in place while soldering it and you so what you can do is I'm holding
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the board in one hand and using my index finger to hold the resistor in place turn the board over
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left the end of the solder up so that I can put a little bit of solder onto the tip of the iron
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take the iron out at the stand and apply a little bit of solder to the tip
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wipe it off find another fresh bit of solder onto the tip a bit more of this time and
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heat up one of the joints where the resistor is for a few seconds
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and take it away now you'll find you'll have made probably a rather
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message joint there it's just been what they're called tacked on but that doesn't matter because
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it now holds the component in place and now I like the solder for soldering iron okay now that
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is held in place I can take my solder take my soldering iron take it out the stand wipe it
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apply a little bit of solder to the tip wipe it off apply some fresh solder go to the other end
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of the of the resistor apply the tip between the track and the leg of the component
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so he's heating both things up and after a few seconds apply a bit heat on the other side of
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this the leg keep applying wee bits at a time all the time holding the solder now on the joint
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when you think you've got enough take the solder away and remove the iron wipe the iron clean
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back in the stand so as I say you can keep adding wee dabs of solder if you like as as you keep
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the iron on the joint the whole time until you see you think you've got enough solder and
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bone thing as you take the iron away last and you do it within a few seconds of adding the last
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bit of solder I can't stress that enough really okay so we'll just cut the top of this leg off
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okay and the first joint that you made it's actually a lumpy and a bit well lumpy and messy it
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doesn't have enough solder on it and we can fix that so take the soldering iron out
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wipe the tip wipe wee bit of solder wipe the tip some more fresh solder on the tip
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onto the joint that was messy first joint keep it up a few seconds add a wee bit of solder
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a wee bit more solder that seems to be enough take the iron away
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and that's produced a nice tidy clean joint I'll just cut the end off the component and that's it
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and really that's all there is to the soldering it's it's far less about skilding you would think
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it's just down to the fact you have to have flux on the joint and there's more than enough flux
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and in multi core solder to do that you know you don't need bottles of flux as I say there
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or anything like that you must take the soldering iron away from the joint
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within a few seconds of adding the last piece of solder that's the most important thing of all
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well I don't know how this is worked and I may have rambled a hell of a lot to hope you enjoyed it
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and they'll give soldering a go it's the sort of thing you don't do very often probably but
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it's certainly a very handy skill to have show notes for this podcast are available at HPR
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with a list of relevant links and further information I can be contacted at mrx at hpr at googlemail.com
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that's mrx at hpr the at symbol googlemail.com so until next time thank you and goodbye
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio it's Hacker Public Radio does our
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we are a community podcast network the Belisa shows every weekday Monday through Friday
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