Sunday, November 01, 2009

First of all : Soldering

We will teach you how to solder here :

Whatever it is you are soldering, you should 'tin' both contacts before you attempt to solder them. This coats or fills the wires or connector contacts with solder so you can easily melt them together.
To tin a wire, apply the tip of your iron to the wire for a second or two, then apply the solder to the wire. The solder should flow freely onto the wire and coat it (if it's stranded wire the solder should flow into it, and fill the wire). You may need to snip the end off afterwards, particularly if you have put a little too much solder on and it has formed a little ball at the end of the wire.

Be careful not to overheat the wire, as the insulation will start to melt. On cheaper cable the insulation can 'shrink back' if heated too much, and expose more copper core that you intended. You can cut the wire back after you have tinned it, but it's best simply not to over heat it.

The larger the copper core, the longer it will take to heat up enough to draw the solder in, so use a higher temperature soldering iron for larger cables if you can.
To tin a contact on an audio XLR connector, hold the iron on the outside of the the contact for a second or two, then apply the solder into the cavity of the contact. Once again, the solder should flow freely and fill the contact. Connectors such as jacks have contacts that are just holes in a flat part of the connector. To tin these you put your iron on it, and apply the solder to where the iron is touching. The solder should flow and cover the hole.
Once you have tinned both parts, you are ready to solder them together.

To solder them, you simply need to place your soldering iron onto the contact to melt the solder.
When the solder in the contact melts, slide the wire into the contact.
Remove the iron and hold the wire still while the solder solidifies again.
You will see the solder 'set' as it goes hard.
This should all take around 1-3 seconds.
  • A good solder joint will be smooth and shiny.
  • If the joint is dull and crinkly, the wire probably moved during soldering.
  • If you have taken too long it will have have solder spikes.
If it does not go so well, you may find the insulation has melted, or there is too much stripped wire showing. If this is the case, you should desolder the joint and start again.








Source : http://www.mediacollege.com/misc/solder/

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