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164 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
164 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3235
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Title: HPR3235: Soldering Tips
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3235/hpr3235.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:17:41
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 3,235 for Friday 25 December 2020. Today's show is entitled
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Soldering Tips and is part of the series, Hobby Electronics. It is the 60th show of operator,
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and is about 8 minutes long, and carries an explicit flag. The summary is
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what little I know about the topic you will learn. This episode of HPR is brought to you by
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An Honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15,
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that's HPR15. Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Although one of the two others said that HPR15 is going to be pretty short. I'm actually
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getting ready to go do a walk, but I just wanted to go over some stuff as far as
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repairing small electronics and toys, clearly toys. I'm not an electronic person by any
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means, especially the imagination. I did one similar to this about setup and
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going over a nixie tube clock. If you just look for nixie tube, I think I went over
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that or soldering or home electronics or whatever. This is kind of like an
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offended slash update. I'm not going to talk about the gear. I'm just going to say in
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general you want the non-led free solder. You want a good solder wick. You want some
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good patch wire, like some old wire laying around, so keep some land wire and
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keep some small electronics wire that you trust. But mainly you want to get some
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contact cleaner for a lot of these because I'm fixing them in an awfully game,
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which didn't work as what? Somebody left the batteries in. There's two Halloween
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toys or noise maker things that don't work. Try to guess why? Those don't work,
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because the batteries got left in them over the year and they sat in the attic,
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it was 180 degrees up there or 130 degrees up there. Guess what happened to the
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batteries? They exploded. The biggest thing I can tell you is any electronics that
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says made in China on it or it's mostly plastic, do not leave the batteries in it,
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because they just explode. Anything that takes offline batteries, don't leave the
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batteries in it if you care about it. Now I'll say that. I say that about stuff,
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but I think it has to do with the quality of the electronics and I'm not going to
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tend to understand how this all works. But I have a light saber, Star Wars
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FX light saber, one of the first generation worms that I've had for
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10, 15, I don't even know how many years I've had it now. That thing was $100
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when it came out. That seems expensive for a white-up toy.
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What it is is a quality piece of electronics. Now it is mostly,
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the insides are all plastic, but the outside has got metal and the
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hill's metal and everything else is nice and whatever. But that's the quality
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piece of electronics and I have yet to need to lead the batteries out of that
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light saber. So it has to do with the quality of the electronics and then
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how and why it is not the battery. I mean I'm sure some of it has to do with the battery
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and the usage of the item. So if it just sits there dead for a long period
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time in a cold or hot place, yeah, that's probably more likely. But I mean
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there's times I we don't push the light saber for six months to a year
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or whatever. So like I don't understand why some stuff
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crashed out and some stuff doesn't. But anyways, like this little thing has
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a light switch on it or has a switch on it that was off, I'm sure.
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Inside of the monopoly box for a thousand years and never got used,
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but even though the light, the switch was off because of the batteries weren't
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being used and they exploded. The same for all the Halloween stuff.
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That was just a year and we had that stuff out just just less than a year ago.
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So I don't understand why it's already creeping out. So you want like a
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voltmeter to check along the path of power to make sure you're getting
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power to the device. This one had lots of crews in on it and I thought I had
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cleaned it, but it still wasn't clean. The whole thing apart
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and one of the leads had fallen off. So a lot of it has to do with power.
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The thing's not getting power. The thing's not getting power. The thing's not getting power.
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Very rarely have I taken anything apart. And it's been something not
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power now. I had like a Wii, Nintendo Wii remote that it actually
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got cut. Like something happened, you know, the batteries started leaking.
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Something happened, something short happened somewhere on the board.
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And the thing wouldn't, it wouldn't turn on.
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It wouldn't connect to anything. You're seeing here, you know,
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there's a lot of the things that face here.
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Just some emotion plus pieces of the character.
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So let's just kind of climb short of it.
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I did discover this stuff with the tape.
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If you ever had rubber cement.
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Like rubber cement?
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But it's more of a liquid electric tape.
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That's really good to use on terminals.
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Which I should have put on this little plastic piece of junk that the terminal's a lot.
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If you're into the terminals falling off or something, you know,
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crappy wiring or whatever.
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You can substitute that with just like looner all down with,
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looner all down with epoxy or not with epoxy.
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But the electric tape we're using like a,
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using like a glue gun that will help with that.
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I actually forgot to protect my soldering iron here.
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So I'm going to heat it back up so that I can put a bunch of solder on there to store it.
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Oh wow.
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I pull this thing out every, I would say on average,
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every, every, every other month.
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I'm not any good at it, but I have learned that if you don't take care of your tips
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or you try to take that same piece of sandpaper to them.
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I got forbid.
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I'm going to bother googling that.
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It's not a thing.
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You would think you could just, you know, solder the tip.
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Now you can't do that with copper, like the garbage copper tips.
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You can do that.
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But in general, you don't want to solder the tips.
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Now this tip I have, I'll say the tip of it is about,
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I have one that's sharper.
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But the tip of this one is like the tip of a thick,
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a thick one of the big paper clips.
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The tip of it is about that, that sharp.
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But what I, what I realize is that it's not about the sharpness of the tip.
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It's the gun, how hot it is.
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What the leads are, the pads are on the, what you're soldering,
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you know, how hot it is with all the other components around it.
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You don't have to do with your success.
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It's not about that.
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It's not about that, it's not much.
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What's the things put together?
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The magnet bolt here is required to put all the screws in the magnet bolt
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and then you have parts hooked over and you can give it a more focus.
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That's pretty much it.
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I just wanted to say that, you know, it's not hard to fix these small,
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I'm trying to fix them.
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I've probably spent an hour fixing this thing,
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which is probably about the same time.
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It's like, it's a plated one.
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What's the price of that?
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So I'm basically spending a lot of time,
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you know, playing it at this point.
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It's been thrown in a way and I'm excited to learn
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how to have something work in you.
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Something not working.
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But anyways, you can also roll it out.
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I think this thing is to take a bit of time.
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I think it's a timer and something else.
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But you can always, you know, you can, with Android and phones now,
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you can always substitute.
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You can get a die, a simulator, you know.
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A bi-unilator or sometimes a frame, whatever emulator.
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So you can pretty much emulate any of these old studio electronics
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that are a timer or switches or whatever they do.
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But at the end of the day, you know,
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it's not that hard to fix these things.
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It's kind of interesting to wires
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and make sure there's continuity from one lead to the next.
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And I kind of go over here.
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Anyways.
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I don't know, I don't know.
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I don't know.
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I don't know.
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I don't know.
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I don't know.
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I don't know.
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I don't know.
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I don't know.
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You've been listening to HECKA Public Radio at HECKA Public Radio.org.
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