Big soldering irons don't run hotter?
I've used Weller, and while they have a good product, I much prefer the
inexpensive Hakko unit, the 635. Adjustable temp, quick heat, and if well
cared for the tips last forever.
"Ed Bailen" wrote in message
...
I think the OP was closer. The wattage rating is the ability to
recover once the heat has dropped. The heat capacity is a function of
the mass of the tip.
When soldering PL-259 connectors, or homw-made brass boxes, I use a
roofer's iron. The tip is a slug of copper about one inch in diameter
and over 3 inches long. It takes about 30 minutes to come up to
temperature, but anything you touch it to is instantly at soldering
temperature.
On Thu, 23 Mar 2006 09:41:48 -0500, "JANA" wrote:
The wattage rating would be more of the heating capacity. The larger the
wattage, the greater the mass that it can heat. Use a lower wattage for
the
smaller jobs. Use a higher wattage for the larger type soldering jobs.
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