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  2. Soldering iron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldering_iron

    Electric soldering iron for electronic work. In 1946, Carl E. Weller applied for a patent for his soldering gun that could heat instantaneously and began production of the "Speedy Iron" in Pennsylvania. [12] It was manufactured through the Weller Manufacturing Company, and this product was the first instantaneous thermal soldering gun.

  3. Soldering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldering

    Resistance soldering is soldering in which the heat required to melt the solder is created by passing an electric current through the parts to be soldered. When electric current is conducted through any metal, heat is generated; when that current is confined to a smaller cross-sectional area, the heat produced in the entire circuit is ...

  4. Rework (electronics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rework_(electronics)

    A hot air gun or hot air station is used to heat devices and melt solder, and specialised tools are used to pick up and position often tiny components. A rework station is a place to do this work—the tools and supplies for this work, typically on a workbench .

  5. ColdHeat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ColdHeat

    The tip of this apparatus is split into two sections that completes an electrical circuit when a low electrical resistance is placed across the tip; e.g. metallic contacts, or solder. [1] With a current flowing, the resistance of both the solder and the tip produces enough heat to increase the temperature beyond the melting point of solder.

  6. Desoldering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desoldering

    The stubs are then easy to melt off and clean with a soldering iron. Obviously this technique entails the destruction of the IC. Another method is to use a heat gun or pencil butane torch and heat up a corner, and gently pry it off, working the torch down the leads. This method often leads to traces getting lifted off the PCB where a lead did ...

  7. Soldering gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldering_gun

    Soldering guns are used where more heat is needed than from the lower-power soldering irons. They can be used for heavy electrical connections, stained glass assembly, and light sheet-metal work. Typical soldering guns are rated at 100 to 240 watts power. A gun may include a two-stage trigger to give two heat settings.

  8. Soldering station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldering_station

    The most common are the models with 50-80 W power. The higher is the power the more amount of heat you may transmit for the same time. It allows reducing the temperature on the heating element to the minimal possible value for melting the solder alloy. And vice versa – the lower is the power the higher temperature you need to melt the solder.

  9. Ultrasonic soldering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrasonic_soldering

    Ultrasonic soldering iron tips can heat (up to 450 °C) while mechanically oscillating at 20—60 kHz. This soldering tip can melt solder filler metals as acoustic vibrations are induced in the molten solder pool. The vibration and cavitation in the molten solder then permits solders to wet and adhere to many metal surfaces.