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Desoldering. I'm a drunken bufoon

Started by mandrewbot3k, January 22, 2015, 10:14:06 AM

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mandrewbot3k

Quote from: Luke51411 on January 22, 2015, 11:12:27 AM
Quote from: gtr2 on January 22, 2015, 11:00:00 AM
If you want to salvage it you can send it to me and I'll desolder it for you and send it back.

Josh
Damn fine customer service!

Indeed it is.

I decided to just send it back to Josh. I'm not going to try messing with it. I'm sure I've done enough damage as-is. Plus it gives me an excuse to order more PCBs from him (not that I needed one).

This is the one build out of my 20 or so I have going right now, that I couldn't wait to get done. I've had the board for about a year now and just got back in it since I had to move all my gear out to my garage to make way for baby #2. My office/music room is now (or will be) a nursery.

Thanks again Josh!
Andrew

(Formerly roflcopter)

pickdropper

Quote from: selfdestroyer on January 22, 2015, 10:35:42 AM
Quote from: Haberdasher on January 22, 2015, 10:31:16 AM
dang i just paid way more than that for one of those engineer solder suckers on ebay.  like 30 bucks. :(

They actually came down some recently. I paid $20 from Adafruit last year.

I did find that after a few months of use you will need to oil it. I was a little frustrated with it a few weeks ago since the suction was sub par and it was to slow retracting to suck up anything. The really cool think about this thing is it is dismantleable (is that a word) easily. I used some electronic cleaner/lube spray and it now acts like new.

Cody

I grabbed one from Adafruit as well.

My main beef with it is that the clearing rod should be longer so that it can fully push out the solder that sticks in the flexible tube.  I have to take off the silicon tube frequently to clean it out.  It's possible the tube is cut too long, but this is the stock cut length as it arrived on the solder sucker.  I can cut the tube down, but I kind of like it at its current length.
Function f(x)
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Haberdasher

cody and i just bought 5 feet of high temp silicon tubing for replacement nozzles, so maybe one of us will experiment with different lengths.
if you want i can send you some when i receive it, dave.
Looking for a discontinued madbean board?  Check out my THREAD

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selfdestroyer

Quote from: pickdropper on January 22, 2015, 12:15:20 PM
Quote from: selfdestroyer on January 22, 2015, 10:35:42 AM
Quote from: Haberdasher on January 22, 2015, 10:31:16 AM
dang i just paid way more than that for one of those engineer solder suckers on ebay.  like 30 bucks. :(

They actually came down some recently. I paid $20 from Adafruit last year.

I did find that after a few months of use you will need to oil it. I was a little frustrated with it a few weeks ago since the suction was sub par and it was to slow retracting to suck up anything. The really cool think about this thing is it is dismantleable (is that a word) easily. I used some electronic cleaner/lube spray and it now acts like new.

Cody

I grabbed one from Adafruit as well.

My main beef with it is that the clearing rod should be longer so that it can fully push out the solder that sticks in the flexible tube.  I have to take off the silicon tube frequently to clean it out.  It's possible the tube is cut too long, but this is the stock cut length as it arrived on the solder sucker.  I can cut the tube down, but I kind of like it at its current length.

I do agree with you on the soldier getting stuck but it was not a deal breaker for me since the suction was really good and the seal you can make with the tip on pads. We can definitely try some different lengths of the tubing and see if that helps at all.

I wonder if we send them some emails and see if there could be an updated model with a longer extraction pin.
http://www.engineer.jp/en/products/ss01e.html

Cody

playpunk

I just got my ss-02 today. It looks cool. Way higher quality and smaller than I expected


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"my legend grows" - playpunk

alanp

I did that with a Rissole board. Well. Not just "that."

Not one rotary.

FOUR damn rotaries.

I briefly considered trying to desolder, for two heartbeats, then gave up and got another board out. Luckily, I socketed the LED/LDR pairs on that board.

For the time/money cost, I'd rather just get another board, if possible. Passive components are cheap. Admittedly, I had nineteen other Rissole boards at the time :P
"A man is not dead while his name is still spoken."
- Terry Pratchett
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blearyeyes

I gave up and bought a desoldering soldering station and my life has changed.. $149.00
http://www.circuitspecialists.com/csi701a.html

buy this and use it...

MarcFive

I get frustrated and hit it with compressed air after the solder sucker. A little preventative tape and the vaporized solder should clean up with a toothbrush. But a de-soldering station? I likes the sound of that. I'm constantly finding new ways to solder stuff the wrong way. :-\

peterc

Another thing to try, if you can get cutters in, is to clip the switch pins between the body and the PCB..... Then the pins can be de-soldered individually.

I know it means that the rotary switch will be non-useable, but it saves in other areas like self-loathing, frustration and extreme perspiration...... :-[

Sometimes its easier to cut your losses and buy a new part.

Peter
Affiliation: bizzaraudio.com

peAk

I did that exact thing with my multiplex

Luckily I was able to use one of those solder iron pump sucker and was able to get it off.

I have three different lovetone pedals I am about to build and I am praying I don't do that crap again.

blearyeyes

I did the same with a SHO NUFF. put the stomp switch on the wrong side. I had it sitting around for months and one night I picked it up and and noticed it was wrong...I have a desoldering station and it was still a PITA to get it off. I destroyed the switch but hopefully the board is still OK.. Those are the kinds of lessons you don't forget, hopefully..