ajs
Established Member
Precisely what kind of issues are you having? If you can try and describe the problem it would help diagnosis.
What kind of iron are you using and what bit? I recall there was mention earlier of filing bits down, I must admit I grimaced when I saw that - modern bits are invariably iron plated to stop the bit bronzing (copper from bit and tin from solder) which creates a truly awful surface to solder on. If you see the solder beading on the tip that's a bad sign.
As for technique yes blutack, modelling clay or similar is what I'd use for positioning. If I was really having difficulty I'd probably consider a jig of some sort, probably starting with a jig to hold the rungs and a U-shaped side to do the first side, obviously trim ends of the side off after.
You will want a reasonably refined technique doing this, you want to work quickly especially with brass so the heat doesn't transfer to and melt neighbouring joints - if the joint hasn't formed in a second or two remove the iron and let it cool before considering how to go forward.
General soldering tips: everything to be clean before starting, components, bit and iron. If you don't have a soldering sponge to keep your bit clean a damp piece of scrap denim makes a reasonable substitute. Apply a small quantity of solder to the bit before it touches the joint, that isn't the solder to form the joint per se but forms a 'bath' for the joint to sit in for effective heat transfer. Feed extra solder in from the opposite side of the joint to the bit to supply extra solder and fresh flux.
I would strongly prefer fresh, cored, fine gauge solder for this but working with what you have I'd experiment with applying flux to either the solder or the joint prior to soldering. Even if your solder is cored to start with - the shelf life of cored solder is good but not infinite.
Final point I'd consider is unique to this kind of work. Most pliers will leave a vee edge on both sides of the cut, some side cutters are orientated differently and one side is much flatter, you want that on the end section to be soldered. If you don't have such a pair of cutters square off the end using a needle file, grinding disc in a Dremel, or even the side of a fine sharpening stone - yes the gap to be filled created by the vee is smal but it's large compared to the desired size of the joint.
What kind of iron are you using and what bit? I recall there was mention earlier of filing bits down, I must admit I grimaced when I saw that - modern bits are invariably iron plated to stop the bit bronzing (copper from bit and tin from solder) which creates a truly awful surface to solder on. If you see the solder beading on the tip that's a bad sign.
As for technique yes blutack, modelling clay or similar is what I'd use for positioning. If I was really having difficulty I'd probably consider a jig of some sort, probably starting with a jig to hold the rungs and a U-shaped side to do the first side, obviously trim ends of the side off after.
You will want a reasonably refined technique doing this, you want to work quickly especially with brass so the heat doesn't transfer to and melt neighbouring joints - if the joint hasn't formed in a second or two remove the iron and let it cool before considering how to go forward.
General soldering tips: everything to be clean before starting, components, bit and iron. If you don't have a soldering sponge to keep your bit clean a damp piece of scrap denim makes a reasonable substitute. Apply a small quantity of solder to the bit before it touches the joint, that isn't the solder to form the joint per se but forms a 'bath' for the joint to sit in for effective heat transfer. Feed extra solder in from the opposite side of the joint to the bit to supply extra solder and fresh flux.
I would strongly prefer fresh, cored, fine gauge solder for this but working with what you have I'd experiment with applying flux to either the solder or the joint prior to soldering. Even if your solder is cored to start with - the shelf life of cored solder is good but not infinite.
Final point I'd consider is unique to this kind of work. Most pliers will leave a vee edge on both sides of the cut, some side cutters are orientated differently and one side is much flatter, you want that on the end section to be soldered. If you don't have such a pair of cutters square off the end using a needle file, grinding disc in a Dremel, or even the side of a fine sharpening stone - yes the gap to be filled created by the vee is smal but it's large compared to the desired size of the joint.
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